A silent witness
Country Life UK|March 27, 2024
In the first of two articles, John Goodall looks at the recent completion of the chapel of Lancing College, one of the great landmarks of the Sussex coast
John Goodall
A silent witness

LANCING COLLEGE CHAPEL was begun in 1868 with the intention that it should be one of the defining landmarks of the Sussex coastline. That ambition—it claims today to be the fourth-tallest ecclesiastical building in the British Isles—would in the ordinary run of things surely have doomed it to incompletion and abandonment. There was nothing ordinary, however, either about this astonishing building or the man who conceived it, clergyman Nathaniel Woodard. Construction has continued in fits and starts through several changes of design and the chapel was finally completed, after 154 years, on April 23, 2022, with the dedication of a new western porch designed by the architect Michael Drury.

Woodard was born in 1811, the ninth of 12 children of an Essex farmer, and absorbed a strong religious devotion from his mother, which included a particular care for those at sea. Financial difficulties delayed his attempts to enter the Church, but, in 1834, he married and secured a place at Oxford. At this moment, the established Church not only faced internal calls for reform, but felt outwardly beset by the rise of non-conformity, irreligion in Britain’s burgeoning industrial cities and Catholic emancipation. Indeed, as Woodard began his university studies, the Oxford Movement, which would carry a cohort of celebrated clergy—and some of his friends —over to Rome, was already under way.

This story is from the March 27, 2024 edition of Country Life UK.

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This story is from the March 27, 2024 edition of Country Life UK.

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