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The Church plate is all modern, with the exception of a very fine Elizabethan chalice of silver, lacking its cover. It bears no maker's name or other stamp.
The Registers are of some interest and date from 1584. the entries for several years are missing and the early pages have been carelessly bound in a single volume without regard to chronological order.
The Bells. There are six bells, of which the following are particulars : (1) Inscription : JOHN TAYLOR & CO. LOUGHBOROUGH 1871. RECAST 1904. W. F. W. WESTBROOKE VICAR F.R.S. GAMAN R. J. WATSON CHURCHWARDENS. Diameter 30 inches. (2) Inscription : JAMES HARRISON OF BARTON FOUNDER 1833. Diameter 31¼ inches. (3) Same inscription as (2), but different decoration. Diameter 32¾ inches. Both were purchased with money left for the purpose by Mr Martin Munday, of Caistor, who died on Lady Day, 1832. His tombstone, near the north-east corner of the Church, records the benefaction. (4) Inscription : 7661 SW snedraW hcruhC WOT iroM otnemeM. This inscription has been reversed by the letters being impressed the wrong way (i.e. the right way for reading) on the mould. W.S. stands for W. Sellars or Seller, coppersmith and bellfounder, of York. The other initials denote the Churchwardens in 1667, viz., T.O., Thomas Osburn ; W. William Ashton, the initial of whose surname is hidden. Diameter 34¼ inches. (5) Inscription : sane te petre (In Old English lettering) Diameter 39 inches. This bell, dedicated in honour of St Peter, one of the patron saints of the Church, bears the stamp of the Oldfields, famous bellfounders of Nottingham, and probably dates from the early sixteenth century. (6) Inscription : GLORIA IN EXCELSIS DEO 1712. Diameter 42½ inches. This bell bears the stamp of Samuel Smith of York. Its weight is approximately 14½ cwt. There were many peculiar uses of these bells until recent times, but, unfortunately, as is the case all over England, local customs are rapidly dying out. No.3 was formerly rung daily at 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. It is
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