The Parish Church of Fenchurch St Paul which features in The Nine Tailors by Dorothy. L. Sayer’s is like Ely Cathedral it dominates the fenland landscape where the novel is set.
In seeking what church was the inspiration behind St Paul’s in Fenchurch St Paul a cautionary approach is needed. If you take to literally approach you could argue, as Lord Peter Wimsey and Bunter came to grief on a snowy New Year’s eve while crossing the Thirty Foot Drain at Frogs Bridge, therefore in reality if you turn left at Bedlham Bridge and traverse along the Sixteen Foot Bank you will discover that once upon a time there was an Inn called the Wheatsheaf on your right hand side, now a private dwelling.
If you continue a little further on you will find a turning to the village of Christchurch where Dorothy’s father was rector after leaving Bluntisham until his death in 1928.
“Bunter turned his torch upon the signpost and read upon the sign, Fenchurch St Paul, there was no other direction ahead, the road marched on side by side into an eternity of winter”
So it is safe to deduce that Christ Church in the village of Christchurch is a good choice but…….
Although as you can see it is a fine place of worship and has its own distinct charm it does not fit the description or the drawings by the Architect W. J. Redhead in the book, so we will have to look in another direction.
Hear lies the problem there are a number of good candidates, Walpole St Peters for example which was used in the 1974 TV adaptation, but still it does not quite meet all the criteria.
Rather than carrying on and on, perhaps if below I display a collage of pictures which could be listed as possibilities you can select your own preference.
- St Peter’s Upwell, Norfolk. I believe would be the most popular choice, with its balconies, angle hammer beam roof and impressive exterior.
- St Peters Church, Walpole St Peters, Norfolk.
- St Clement’s Church, Terrington St Clement, Norfolk.
- St Clement’s Church, Terrington St Clement, Norfolk.
- Angle Roof, St Wendreda’s Church, March, Cambridgeshire
- St Wendreda’s Church, March, Cambridgeshire.
- St Marys Church, Bluntisham, Cambridgeshire where the Sayer’s family moved to from Oxford and Dorothy spent her early years. It is said that the names on some of the grave stones in the churchyard were used in The Nine Tailors. The Reverend Sayer’s was responsible in starting the restoration of The Church Bells.
It is more than likely that the Parish Church of Fenchurch St Paul is a composite of many or is it a church in the mind’s eye and imagination of the creator.
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