St Peter's Church, Barnburgh

St Peter's Church, Barnburgh
53°31′24″N 1°16′16″W / 53.5234°N 1.2712°W / 53.5234; -1.2712Coordinates: 53°31′24″N 1°16′16″W / 53.5234°N 1.2712°W / 53.5234; -1.2712
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Broad Church
Website www.barnburghandharlington.co.uk
History
Dedication St Peter
Administration
Parish Barnburgh
Deanery Wath
Archdeaconry Doncaster
Diocese Sheffield
Province York
Clergy
Priest(s) Interregnum

St Peter's Church, Barnburgh, is a parish church of the Church of England in Barnburgh, famous for the legend of the 'Cat and Man'.

Background

The Church of St Peter is situated at the centre of the village of Barnburgh, near Doncaster, in South Yorkshire, and serves the communities of Barnburgh and Harlington.

Construction

St Peter's consists of a tower of four stages surmounted by a small, squat spire, a nave with north and south aisles with a porch, and a chancel with a north aisle or chapel. The church is built of a mixture of sandstone and magnesium limestone.

Although there has been a church on this site since c. 1150 AD, nothing remains of the original church.[1]

There is a private chantry chapel north of the chancel for the Cresacre family, who were Lords of Barnburgh from the 13th to the 16th century. Most of this chapel is taken up by the tomb of Sir Percival Cresacre (who died in 1477) and his wife, Alice (died 1450).[2]

Cat and Man Legend

The Cat and Man Legend tells of events said to have occurred before the fifteenth century. There was formerly a hall at Barnburgh[3] which was in the possession of the Cresacre family. A knight of the Cresacre family (reputedly Sir Percival Cresacre, but disputed)[4] was returning home late on the heavily wooded track from Doncaster through Sprotborough and High Melton.

As he approached Barnburgh, a wild cat (or lynx) reputedly sprang out of the branches of a tree and landed on the back of his horse. The horse threw its rider to the ground and fled. The cat then turned on the knight and there followed a long, deadly struggle between the two which continued all the way from Ludwell Hill to Barnburgh.

After fighting the cat the mile's distance to the village of Barnburgh, the knight made for the porch of St Peter's Church, presumably to try to get inside the church and close the door on the animal. The fight had reputedly been so fierce, however, that Sir Percival fell dying in the church porch and, in his last, dying struggle, stretched out his feet and crushed the cat against the wall of the porch.

Thus, the legend goes, the cat killed the man and the man killed the cat. They were found some time later by the search party that went out after the knight's horse had returned home riderless.

Stones in the floor of the porch of St Peter's are tainted with red. There is also a cat at the feet of the Cresacre effigy in the north aisle of the church.

References

  1. "South Yorkshire" (A History of the Deanery of Doncaster), Hunter, Revd. J., Volume I, 1828.
  2. Doncaster Family History Society
  3. History of Barnburgh Hall
  4. Legend of Cat and Man Given the likelihood that wild cats had become extinct in this area by the time of Sir Percival Cresacre, it has been suggested that the events happened much earlier.
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