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St John's Church - St John on the wall Bristol UK walkinbristol

St John's Church

Broad St, Bristol BS1 2EZ

Official website: 

https://www.visitchurches.org.uk/visit/church-listing/st-john-on-the-wall-bristol.html

Tel: 0117 929 1766

 

St John on the Wall in Bristol is a historic church in the care of heritage charity The Churches Conservation Trust. The upper church and its medieval vaulted crypt is located at the lower end of Broad Street and is built into the old city's medieval walls.

Opening times:

Opened daily by volunteers, usually between 11am and 2pm. Call Ed McGregor Volunteering Officer 07872 502 118 in advance to ensure that the church will be open for your visit.

 

5 Nearest Attraction

60349010_2409497405781133_83352467035442

 

1. Palestine Museum & Culural Centre

BS1 2HG

    (82 foot  - 1 min walking)

2. St Stephen's Church 

BS1 1EQ

    (0,1 mile - 2 min walking)

3. St Nicholas Markets 

BS1 1JQ

    (0,2 mile - 3 min walking)

4. Christmas Steps

BS1 5BS

    (0,1 mile- 3 min walking) 

5. Bristol Beacon  

BS1 5AR

    (0,3 mile - 6 min walking)

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Click to the postcode to check the map .

Nearest Public Toilet

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Watershed

(Community Toilet Scheme)

Accessible
1 Cannons Road, Harbourside, Bristol, BS1 5TX
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Richie's opinion :

"If you walk on Quay Street or the Broad Street, you can find easy this church, its got different , but interesting view from both streets.
With its pointed tower and gates it is a wonderful historical attraction.
Unfortunately, I haven't had a chance to see it inside, although I'm curious about it, and I wait to the time, when I can visit it..  ;) 
"

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St John's church Bristol UK walkinbristol 2023.jpg

History

The church was built in the 14th century (and heavily modified in the 19th century) with the tower and steeple over St John's Gate, the last remaining city gateway.

The church is very narrow as it is built into and alongside the city walls.

Consequently, it is also known as St John's on the Wall.

The rood stair entrance high up on the wall shows where the earlier great rood screen would have stood.

Similar rood stair entrances can be seen at St Peter's, St Philip and Jacob, St Stephen's and Temple.

 Beneath the church is a vaulted crypt, which was dedicated to the Holy Cross.

A conduit has supplied water from Brandon Hill since 1374, and the course of the pipe is marked in places by small plaques set into the pavements.

Among the monuments in the church are those of Walter Frampton (died 1357), thrice Mayor of Bristol and a great benefactor of the church, and a brass commemorating Thomas Rowley (died c. 1478), whose name was used by the 18th-century teenage poet Thomas Chatterton as a pseudonym under which to write his forgeries of medieval poetry.

On the south side of the gate, there are statues of the legendary founders of Bristol, Brennus and Belinus, facing up Broad Street; it is possible that they are actually older than the fabric of the gate.

After the bombing of St Mary le Port Church in 1940 the congregation of this historically evangelical, Protestant and Calvinist church, and their rector, William Dodgson-Sykes, moved to St John on the Wall Church, where the congregation remained, in gradually declining numbers, until the building was closed for worship by the Church Commissioners in 1984,  (after a protracted struggle by the congregation).

The remaining congregation then moved to the Chapel of Foster's Almshouses, and joined the Church of England (Continuing) in 1995.

The C of E (Continuing) no longer lists a congregation in Bristol - some of the congregation joined with the new Free Presbyterian Church (Ulster) congregation in Horfield, Bristol.

The interiors of the two arches either side of the main gateway are now covered in commissioned graffiti murals.

The burial ground of St John's survives; it is visible from John Street and the entrance gate is in Tailors Court which is accessed from Broad Street.

The burial ground is closed to the public.

St. John on the Wall is cared for by The Churches Conservation Trust, the national heritage charity.

It is open daily for free tours and interactive visitor displays telling the story of medieval Bristol.

St John on the Wall hosts a small programme of free family events, gigs, exhibitions and concerts.

It's recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.

The church was vested in the Trust on 25 June 1985.

The Churches Conservation Trust promote 'The Crypt' as an atmospheric art space for hire as a live music venue and art gallery.

It can also been used as a filming location.

You can find more informations in the Church's guidebook.

 

Download a copy of the church guidebook

You can access a free online audio guide to the church here.

About St John's Church

St John's is part of the very fabric of Bristol - it was built into the city walls in the fourteenth century as a place for travellers to offer prayers before a journey.

In the twelfth century there were five churches built into Bristol's city walls, acting both as part of the city's defences, and as places for travellers to offer prayers before a journey. St John's is the only one that remains.

Access

Church is situated on the junction of Broad Street and Quay Street. Entrance to upper church is on the Broad Street side and entrance to crypt on Quay Street/Nelson Street via a small door. Metered car parking on Broad Street and multiple city centre car parks nearby. Due to the churches location it can not remain unlocked outside of volunteer opening times.

The Grand Hotel is located nearby and the Guildhall is the closest landmark.

Steps to the church are worn and steep. The crypt entrance is narrower and lower than a modern door.

 

Opening Times

It is generally open Tues-Fri 1100-1600 from April to October.

 

Parking

 

There is limited parking but there are public carparks closeby.

The nearest car park is The Galleries Bristol which has the postcode BS1 3DQ. Please click on the link below for more information; www.galleriesbristol.co.uk/get-in/

Alternatively, the next nearest car park is Cabot Circus Bristol which has the postcode BS2 9AB.

Please click on the link below for more information;

www.cabotcircus.com/visitor-info/parking

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Contact :

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The Churches Conservation Trust West region is managed by Matt Hart and covers Bristol and the counties of Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Herefordshire, Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Somerset, Wiltshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire.

Office: St Thomas' Church, Thomas Lane, Bristol, BS1 6JG
Email: 
west@thecct.org.uk
Phone: 0117 9291766

 

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