Skip to content

Church Micro 6730...North Walsham - St Nicholas Multi-cache

This cache has been archived.

Hanoosh: As the owner has not responded to my previous log requesting that they check this cache I am archiving it.

Regards

Brenda
Hanoosh - Volunteer UK Reviewer www.geocaching.com
Geocaching Guidelines
Geocaching Help Center
UK Geocaching Information

More
Hidden : 11/16/2014
Difficulty:
3 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:

A micro cache hidden next to North Walsham church. Part of a series of caches along the Paston Way. This cache should be quite hard to find but please be carefull when trying to retreave it as this is a very high muggle area. The coordinates are for the church not the cache. Permission has kindly been granted for this cache by the vicar.


North Walsham Church: St Nicholas.

 
 The market towns of Norfolk are rarely as large and grand as those of adjacent Lincolnshire, or as beautiful and interesting as those of Suffolk, to the south. There are several reasons for this, not least that Norwich is a magnetic centre to its county in a way that Lincoln and Ipswich are not. Norfolk's market towns tend to be small - there are only six centres of population in the county with more than 10,000 people. But the size of the county, and its relative emptiness, gives them something that those in Suffolk, at least, rarely have: a sense of independence, and the facilities you'd expect of a much larger place. Take North Walsham, for example. Here in the heart of beautiful north Norfolk, removed from the tourist area of the Broads and the holiday coast, it's a Norfolk town for Norfolk people. At the heart of the town is the market place and its magnificent parish church.

The thing you always remember the church for, and perhaps the town, is the collapsed west tower of St Nicholas. It is not unique in Norfolk by any means, but no other ruin of a tower is on such a huge church. And this is a great barn of a building, the chancel and nave running under one continuous roof with aisles right to the east wall. The tower came down in successive collapses in the 18th and 19th century, and there is a functional vestry built into the base. I have a vivid memory of standing under this ruin at the age of about twelve, and being completely awed by it.

The vast 14th century porch is in proportion, and you step through it into the vastness. The width of the interior is accentuated by the elegance of the arcades, and also by there being no clerestory, which makes the roof seem almost oppressive in its lowness. Fortunately, the building is full of light, because the Perpendicular windows to south and north have mostly clear glass surrounding coloured images of good quality. This is, as Sam Mortlock observed, a grand town church, with much of interest.

The great treasure of St Nicholas is the rood screen dado with its painted Saints. That there are twenty panels between the arcades gives some idea of the width of the nave. Some are Apostles, and some are female martyrs, but the two best and most interesting panels depict the Annunciation, an unusual feature on a rood screen; there are only about half a dozen of them in East Anglia. On one panel, St Gabriel bends his knee, and lifts his hand in an elegant gesture, while in the other the Blessed Virgin looks on and listens demurely. Among the women are St Catherine, St Barbara, St Margaret and St Mary Magdalene. I liked St Jude with his boat very much - he seems a jolly character.

In the north chancel aisle there are parts of another screen, presumably once a parclose. It is not as beautiful, but is perhaps more interesting, not least for being later. This time, the Apostles are carved into the spandrels, and the dedicatory inscription that runs along it has been vandalised by iconoclasts, probably in the 1540s, which would have been not long after it was made. In the other chancel aisle there are some good misericords, including a magnificent woodwose, an East Anglian wild man, setting off to hunt lions with his rough-hewn club.

One of North Walsham's most famous residents sleeps on up in the chancel. He is William Paston, founder of the grammar school, who died in 1608, and he rests in full armour on his side within an elegant and not overwhelming monument. Mortlock points out that, as a sign of Paston's meticulous nature, he designed the memorial himself before he died. Well, it's best to know what you're getting.

Back at the west end, the towering 15th century font cover is reminiscent of Suffolk's finest at Ufford, more than it is of the one at Elsing, not far off. Other medieval survivals include a number of brass inscriptions, as well as no less than two chalice brasses to early 16th century Priests.

I often moan about town churches. Often, they are Victorianised to within an inch of their lives, and would not be out of place as Anglican churches in Melbourne or Calcutta. And sometimes, they are kept locked, creating a deadness that kills the feeling of a small town. Let it be said then, that not only is St Nicholas fascinating, it is one of the most welcoming churches in Norfolk, and that, although we were in here for almost an hour, not once did we find ourselves alone in the building. All the time, people were popping in for a wander or a quick pray, as if this were some provincial cathedral city rather than a small market town. At one point, I looked around to count a dozen other visitors, which is exactly as it should be, and for which the parish should be warmly congratulated.

(info from http://www.norfolkchurches.co.uk/northwalsham/northwalsham.htm)

Paston way

The Paston Way is a 22 mile walk between Cromer and North Walsham, discovering the area’s beautiful medieval churches. Each church has its own hidden history and one was even moved brick by brick from a cliff top to save it from the sea.

To visit all 14 of the fine churches on the Paston Way, the trail covers 29.5 miles..

In travelling church to church, the trail ambles down quiet lanes, through picturesque towns and villages, across vast arable fields, disused railway lines and quiet grazing pastures with views of the North Sea. Keep a look out for seals on the stretches of beach walk too.

The Paston Way takes its name from the Paston family who during the Medieval and Tudor periods were the dominant and wealthy landowners in the area through which much of the trail passes. The Paston family in turn had taken their name from the small village of Paston on the north east Norfolk coast. They also wrote the famous Paston Letters.

(info from http://www.norfolk.gov.uk/Leisure_and_culture/Norfolk_Trails/Long_distance_trails/Paston_Way/index.htm)

The cache is hidden at N52 4a.b(c-1)d E001 2b.efe. a=The choir stalls came from Norwich Cathedral in 19?7. b=How many Smiths' died in WW1? c=Saint Nicholas, Saint Edmund and Saint Benet (Benedict) appear in a stained glass window. How many other representations of Saint Nicholas are there in the church? d= Number of gargoyles at the back of church multiplied by 3. e= How many additional words have been added to the Communion Table in the Lady Chapel? f= The number of ionic capitals on Sir William Paston's memorial +1

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

zntargvp

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)