Brindle No. 2 / Brumhull / Brunehill / Brunhill / Bryndill / Burnhull / Burnul

INFORMATION

FontID: 12556BRI
Object Type: Baptismal Font1?
Church/Chapel: Parish Church of St. James [originally St. Helen's]
Church Patron Saints: St. James [originally St. Helen]
Church Location: Water St, Brindle, Chorley PR6 8NG, UK
Country Name: England
Location: Lancashire, North West
Directions to Site: Located off the B5256, SE of the M61-M65 junction, 6-7 km SE of Preston, 10 km WSW of Blackburn
Ecclesiastic Region: Diocese of Blackburn
Font Location in Church: [reported in the parsonage ca. 1848]
Century and Period: 13th century, Early English
Font Notes:
No individual entry for Brindle found in the Domesday survey. Lewis' Dictionary of 1848 reports "an ancient font" in the parsonage [NB: we have no update on this information]. The entry for this parish in the Victoria County History (Lancaster, vol. 6, 1911) notes: "Only the tower and chapel, however, are old, being of 15th-century date, and the latter has been so much restored in recent years as to deprive it of nearly all its archaeological interest. The nave of the old church was pulled down and the present one built in 1817 [...] The font now in use is a modern Gothic one, octagonal in shape, but the church contains three other fonts, and there is a fifth in the rectory garden. Of those in the church the oldest is a circular stone one 2 ft. in diameter, probably of 12th-century date, standing on a made-up base at the west end of the nave. Close to it is a four-sided font with chamfered angles, apparently dating from the early 16th century, having panelled sides, on one of which is the sacred monogram and on another a four-leafed flower. The other two sides are defaced and plain. The remaining font inside the building is a plain 18th-century one on a circular pedestal, but the one in the rectory garden is of greater interest. It is seven-sided and of rough stone, and is only 16 in. in diameter. It was recovered in the village in 1907, and may have belonged to St. Helen's well. The bowl is 12 in. wide and 7 in. deep, and there is no pedestal." [cf. Index entry for Brindle No. 2 for a Late-Perpendicular font of the 16th or 17th century in this church -- the church has also a Georgian baluster-type font not included in this Index on account of its late date]

COORDINATES

Church Latitude & Longitude Decimal: 53.7134, -2.6088
Church Latitude & Longitude DMS: 53° 42′ 48.24″ N, 2° 36′ 31.68″ W
UTM: 30U 525819 5951706

MEDIUM AND MEASUREMENTS

Material: stone
Font Shape: heptagonal
Basin Interior Shape: round
Basin Exterior Shape: heptagonal
Diameter (inside rim): 30.48 cm*
Diameter (includes rim): 40.64 cm*
Basin Depth: 17.78 cm*
Notes on Measurements: * in. in the VCH entry [cf. FontNotes]

REFERENCES

Victoria County History [online], University of London, 1993-. Accessed: 2019-03-12 00:00:00. URL: https://www.british-history.ac.uk.
Lewis, Samuel, A Topographical Dictionary of England, Comprising the Several Counties, Cities, Boroughs, Corporate and Market Towns, Parishes, Chapelries, and Townships, and the Islands of Guernsy, Jersey, and Man, with Historical and Statistical Descriptions [...], London: S. Lewis, 1831