
February2012

The first mention of a church in Poulton is in a document of 1094 but there could well have been a church here in Anglo Saxon times; the church is dedicated to St Chad, an Anglo Saxon bishop who died in 627 AD.
The earliest documentary reference to a church at Poulton-
St Chad's church is in the Diocese of Blackburn and is one of the largest parishes in the Diocese with more than 20,000 people living in the parish of Poulton. In the past the Poulton parish stretched from the River Wyre in the north to Squires Gate Lane in the south where it met the parish of St Cuthbert's, Lytham.








The article from which the above is taken was published in ˜The Lancashire Local Historian, the Journal of the Lancashire Local History Federation. vol 10 1995 Christine Storey.
St Chad’s Parish Church Poulton-
The tower dates from the 17th century, the exact date of building is unknown. There are eight bells in the tower
The semi-
Styles of worship had altered and it was important for the altar to be set apart from the main body of the church.
The building of the apse was paid for by the Vicar of the time the Revd Thomas Clarke.
This is one of four round windows which had to be taken out of the east wall when
the apse was built. They are now in a window on the stairca
se which leads to the
gallery
One of the Fleetwood family hatchments being returned to the church after cleaning
and restoration undertaken by Pat Allois Pat worked on each of the six hatchments
and returned them to their original condition. St Chad’s is extremely grateful to
Pat for her work -
At the time of the Reformation the Fleetwood family were made patrons of the church in 1538.
Set in to the south wall of the church is the door to the Fleetwood Hesketh vault
Around thirty members of the family are buried there, the first -
St Chad's is unusual in that it has six hatchments, showing the coats of arms of members of the Fleetwood Hesketh family. These were painted and carried in a funeral procession then hung in the parish church.
The pulpit is made up of a series of panels and dates from the early eighteenth century.
During alterations to the church in the 1880s this pulpit was taken apart and hung in panels on the wall. It was replaced by a wrought iron pulpit which was very fashionable at the time.
In 1955 alterations took place again and the wooden pulpit replaced the one of wrought iron.




Although Victorian antiquarians wrote that the church was demolished and rebuilt
in 1751, research based on new evidence which has come to light in recent years suggests
that the church was not completely demolished but rather drastically re-
Inside St Chad’s is a typical church of the mid 18th century. The sermon was the most important part of the church service so the pulpit would be in the middle of the church, with galleries so people could look down on the speaker. The altar was against the east wall and there were no choir stalls. Churches like this are often called ‘Georgian preaching boxes’
Since the 1750s when St Chad’s was redesigned an apse has been added to the east wall and the Georgian box pews have been removed from the ground floor. The galleries remain.
At the back of the church, now forming part of the choir vestry, are a carved wooden
pew screen and a small door, both dating from the 17th century. They originally formed
part of the family pews of the Fleetwoods and Rigbys, and were sited near to the
chancel steps in a position now occupied by the choir stalls. In the mid 1880s, when
the orignal box pews were being replaced, two sides of the Fleetwood pew screen -
The four main windows, two each in the north and south walls, are not in alignment
with each other. if the church had been newly-
It seems very improbable that this ancient remnant of the earlier building would
have been saved and re-
As late as the 1870s a local newspaper journalist, writing about St Chad's, referred
to the box pews, and the Fleetwood family pew in particular, as looking like 'a cross
between a railway carriage and a gondola', and by 1751 the early 17th century woodwork
would have seemed laughably old-
Nevertheless, the first-
In contrast with other ancient parish churches of the Fylde -
Along with the tower, there are a few traces of the 17th century in the church. Fixed to the wall behind the choir stalls are some 17th century grave memorial plates, and in the choir vestry two plaques commemorate the long service of the vicar Peter White (1622) and the initials of the churchwardens of 1638. The apparent absence of any other earlier work would be explained if the visitor read in the older histories that in 1751 the medieval red sandstone building was completely demolished (presumably with the exception of the tower) and a new church erected in a style fashionable at the time. The visitor would conclude that the work in 1751 must have been so thorough that virtually all trace of the old church was erased.
The fact that the main building of the church is now known to be of red sandstone, not of ashlar, and that the probable line of the medieval roof survives, makes it almost certain that the work of 1751 involved adapting the existing structure It was very much cheaper to do this, retaining the original walls, door spaces and window spaces. The superficial absence of medieval work and fabric of the 16th and 17th centuries is deceptive, for there is more than meets the eye.
The present windows, which reach from about five feet above the ground almost to the roof must surely have been in existence before the erection of the side galleries, which are simply attached (rather precariously) to the wall by beams, leaving a large gap between the galleries and the windows.
But all is not what it seems. Recent exciting discoveries made during repair and restoration work, and a new look at the sources upon which the Victorian historians based their claim that the church was 'levelled with the ground' in 1751, have resulted in the rewriting of the history of the parish church. Contrary to appearances, St Chad's is still, underneath the Georgian gloss, a medieval church.
Repair work in he 1990s brought to light the red sandstone of which the church is
built -
The discovery that the body of the church actually consists of red sandstone, which
-