Great Bradley Church Bells

In the church tower hang three bells. 

        The Guinness book of Records states: "The oldest tower bell in Great Britain is one of 50kg (1cwt) at St Botolph, Hardham, Sussex, still in use and dated AD 1100. The oldest inscribed bell is the Gargate bell at Caversfield church, Oxfordshire and is dated c1200-1210. The oldest dated bell in England is one hanging in Lisset church near Bridlington, East Yorkshire bearing the date MCCLIIII (1254)" 

 

 

The motif used is a pair of arrows through a crown. It was the Tonni workshop mark and was linked to St Edmund. The foundry had been established from just 1570. The church at nearby Woodditton has two bells made by the same foundry, one of which was previously in Westerly Waterless until the tower collapsed.



Motif of the Tonni foundry in Bury St Edmunds

 

For more information on the bells and their state of repair, as of 1981, click here to see a fascinating document recording the care and maintenance of the bells.

 

 

Carvings on stones in the Bell Tower, apparently from 1813 and 1601

WD could refer to William Day, born in 1789 and the only person with these initials recorded on the 1851 census. Click here for more on the census


Church in the snow, December 2005

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Thank you to the Suffolk Guild of Ringers for kindly providing some of this information. Do visit their website.