St Chad's Well, at St Chad's Church, Lichfield. I'm sure it is much nicer in summer, when the vine growing over the roof is green, but at the moment it looks like a haystack on legs. |
Today is the
Feast of St Chad, so for my Saturday Snapshot I have some photos of his well, and a couple of old photos to show what it used to like in the past. Before moving to this area I’d never heard
of Chad, but it’s difficult to live here and not stumble across him somewhere,
for he was Bishop of the ancient Saxon kingdom of Mercia. Tamworth, where I
live, was the capital of this realm, and St Chad established his Episcopal seat
at Lichfield, where I once worked on the local paper, and now volunteer in the
Oxfam book shop.
I think about
him sometimes when I’m on one of my daily walks because, according to Bede in ‘A
History of the English Church and People’, he went about on foot rather than on
horseback, and was reluctant to change this ‘pious exercise’,
which he loved. His archbishop considered it more fitting that Chad should
ride, and on one occasion insisted on helping him on to a horse, but I like to
imagine the saint flouting the order when his superior was out of the way, and
continuing to stride about the countryside.
St Chad's Well, drawn by William Stukeley in 1736. |
He became Bishop
of Mercia in 669 and immediately made Lichfield the centre of his see (rather
than Repton, in Derbyshire). He built a house near the church and close by a
spring fed a pool where, according to 16th century antiquarian John Leland, ‘St
Chad was wont naked to stand in the water and pray’.
There is
still a well in the churchyard at St Chad’s, presumably fed by the spring, but its
location and form seem to have changed over the years. In 1833, local physician James Rawson described it as having
‘degenerated into a most undignified puddle, more than 6 feet deep’ and said it
was choked with ‘mud and filth’. Thanks to him, the water supply was improved,
and a protective octagonal building erected, which must have been far more
attractive than the lacklustre garden feature erected at the end of 1940s, when
the well seems to have been moved. There’s a small square of water set into drab
paving slabs, covered by an unimaginative tiled roof, which perches on top of
four wooden supports.
The 19th century building which covered the well. |
St Chad died on
March 2, 672 . Bede, writing some 60 years later, tells us that the burial
place was covered in a wooden tomb in form of little house, with a small opening,
so people could put a hand through to take some of the dust. “They mix this in water
and give it to sick men or beasts to drink, by which means their ailment is
quickly relieved and they are restored to the longed for joys of health,” he
adds - but doesn’t say whether they used water from the well to create this macabre
medicine.
Bede also
describes how a wandering ‘madman’ spent a night in the church where the body
was housed, and was miraculously found to be ‘in his right mind’ the following
morning!
The well: people thrown coins into the water, and make a wish, but my wish would be for it to look more like a well! |
During the
Medieval period, pilgrims flocked to Lichfield Cathedral to see Chad’s shrine, but
his relics were moved during the Reformation, although you can still see the
Chapel of St Chad’s Head, where the Saint’s head was once displayed to the
faithful, which strikes me as being a particularly grisly custom. Bones now
housed at St Chad’s Cathedral in Birmingham – the Gothic extravaganza created
by Pugin – are said to be those of the saint.
Saturday
Snapshot is hosted by Alyce at http://athomewithbooks.net/ where
you can see photos from other participants all over the world.
A statue of St Chad stands in a niche above the door to St Chad's Church. |
Sources: http://lichfieldlore.co.uk/2012/03/18/well-being/
(an excellent site on Lichfield’s rich heritage); http://www.stchads.org.uk/ (St Chad’s
Church has a website and a fascinating guidebook); http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/arch-841-1/dissemination/pdf/oxfordar1-50626_1.pdf (report of archeological dig at the well
site)
What a great story! Thanks for sharing the details about the well, and the photos.
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting my blog.
Glad you liked it. There were plans fo some kind of visitor here, but nothing came of the idea, which is a shame.
DeleteI love the photos and the history surrounding the well!
ReplyDeleteI've always rather liked St Chad, and this was one of those places I had never really looked at, let alone thought about the history.
DeleteWhat a wonderful tour and history lesson. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThere is an information plaque there, but it's not what you'd expect for a Saintly Well!
DeleteHow neat to have all that history near you!
ReplyDeleteI know!I keep saying how lucky I am. I'm combining my daily walk (which is sill going strong) with my love of history.
DeleteIt does look rather like a cut off haystack! What a pity the 19th century shrine is no longer there. I hadn't heard of St Chad - he sounds a character, standing in the water naked to pray!
ReplyDeleteAt one stage he must have been really well known, because his shrine at Lichfield was one of the most popular spots for pilgrims right up until the reformation.
DeleteWhat a great history lesson! So interesting!
ReplyDeleteThank you Sarah. I had so much information about him, and the various places he's associated with, that it was difficult deciding what to write.
DeleteLove it!
ReplyDeleteIt's a very odd well, but I do rather like Chad.
DeleteI would have never guessed that was a well. It looks like a little reflecting pond.
ReplyDeleteI think you could be forgiven for not realising, because it doesn't look like a well. If you moved into a house with a garden pond like that, I'm sure you'd want to redesign it!
DeleteI've been in St. Chad's Cathedral in Brimingham but was not aware of his story, thanks for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteSt Chad's Cathedral is amazing - a riot of colour and pattern, quite unlike any other religious place I've ever been in. I have some photos I took there, so I might use them in a future Snapshot.
DeleteNeat photos...thanks.
ReplyDeleteElizabeth
Silver's Reviews
My Saturday Snapshot
Glad you liked them Elizabeth. Thanks for popping by.
DeleteVery interesting! I knew nothing of St Chad, so was quite intrigued by all these pictures. I agree that the 19th C. shrine is much prettier than the current one.
ReplyDeleteI think he was regarded as a major figure in the early Christian Church, and in Medieval times, but now he seems to be unknown outside his own area.
DeleteLoved the story about the picture so interesting!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed it Sheila. He rather intrigues me.
DeleteWhat an interesting story to caption the pictures!
ReplyDeleteThank you Melissa. I like history and the way things we see every day can connect us to the past.
DeleteFascinating! Thanks for sharing the photos and the stories.
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to imagine how seriously people took their religion in times gone by, but I like the fact that there are still links to Chad in this area.
DeleteI hadn't heard of him before. Nice to see some real life images to go with the story!
ReplyDeleteAlyce, like lots of other saints I think he was abandoned and forgotten after Henry VIII dismantled so many of England's monasteries, churches etc. Before that pilgrims travelled to his shrine from all over England - apparently, pilgrims brought a lot of trade to Lichfield.
DeleteMost interesting♫ Thanks for sharing, and have a great week-end♥
ReplyDeleteI'm pleased you found it interesting. You have a great weekend as well.
DeleteYou live in a place not only beautiful but also rich in history. I'm grateful for your narrative and photos and giving us the story of St. Chad.
ReplyDeleteI would love to see the "haystack" in green.
I'll go back in the summer, so I can do 'then and now' photos.
DeleteVery interesting. Thanks for sharing, I love to learn new things.
ReplyDeleteThank you. I may have a St Chad tour, and see other places he's connected with!
DeleteA lovely well and a charming story to go with it. Here's Mine
ReplyDeleteYay! Someone liked the well as it is! I'm glad you enjoyed the post Paulita.
Delete“a haystack on legs” - I like it. Cool photo too.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this informative post.
I'm sure it must get pruned back at some point, and by the time it starts sprouting leaves and greening over it will look completely different - but it doesn't have much to recommend it at the moment!
DeleteWhat wonderful history, and local too.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy exploring the local area and discovering its history.
DeleteI so love to visit your snapshot posts, as I always learn something new and interesting! I love all things English so your little history lessons and photo commentary is just such fun for me! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteSusan, that is a lovely comment, which means a lot to me. Thank you.
DeleteVery cool!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteSo fascinating! The photo is unusual (it does look like a haystack!) and the story is so interesting. Thanks for sharing. :)
ReplyDeleteI will return in the summer for a better photo when it will green!
DeleteHow interesting! I love the "haystack on legs" description. :-0 Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you liked it Martha. Thanks for dropping by.
DeleteNever heard of this saint. Chad is such a modern-sounding name.
ReplyDeleteI think that these days he's known locally, but not much further afield, which is sad when he was once venerated by pilgrims who travelled many miles to see his shrine at Lichfield.
Delete