Skip to content

Church Micro 11004...Northney - St Peter Multi-cache

This cache has been archived.

LeMecque: Checked today, cache was gone. Thanks to those who visited.

More
Hidden : 7/20/2017
Difficulty:
2.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Related Web Page

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

Geocache Description:

St Peter's Church, Northney
St Peter's is a historic church in a picturesque setting in the village of Northney in the north-east of Hayling Island, located between Portsmouth and the Thorney Island peninsula. Getting to St Peter's can have its moments, especially if you are coming from the mainland. It is not unknown for people to be late for a service due to having to wait for cows to cross the road to be milked.


History
The earliest firm evidence of Christianity on Hayling Island dates back to Anglo-Saxon times, although it is quite possible that the religion was practised on the island in the last century or two of Roman rule. There was a Saxon church dedicated to All Saints, which probably now lies under water following the loss of a sizeable portion of the island to the sea in 1324.

Queen Emma, wife first of Ethelred the Unready and then of Canute, gave the manor of Hayling to the monks of St Swithun at Winchester Cathedral. After the Norman conquest, William the Conqueror granted most of Hayling to the Benedictine Abbey of Jumièges in Normandy, which received its agricultural income. There followed a long period of legal disputes between Jumièges Abbey and the Winchester Monks, who held on to a small part of northern Hayling. At various times over the next few centuries, during times of hostility with France, English monarchs took control of priories owned by French abbeys, including that of Hayling Island.

The Church
Although St Peter's is over a century older than St Mary's Church further South on the island, it was originally built in about 1140 by the monks of Jumièges Abbey not as a parish church but as a chapel of ease, Northwode Chapel, to serve the people of North Hayling for whom going to their parish church of All Saints in the south of the island was not convenient. The original building probably occupied most of what is now the nave, and was apparently built without foundations; the central pillars rested on large sarsen stones (boulders probably deposited by glaciers during the Ice Ages). Buttresses were added later to help support the walls. In the early 13th century the building was expanded to its present dimensions, with the porch being added later. It is believed that St Peter's three bells are one of the oldest peals in England, on suspended wooden axles and half wheels. The tenor bell has been dated by the Whitechapel Foundry as from about 1350.

The church is partially surrounded by a ditch, and has a substantial graveyard. Among those buried there is Princess Yourievsky (1878-1959), a natural daughter of Tsar Alexander II of Russia who was legitimised by her parents' marriage and who spent the last 27 years of her life on Hayling Island, dying in relative poverty.

The font, like the church, dates back to the 12th century. Near it is an oak chest which is also probably from the same era. There are two carvings of heraldic beasts on the chevron in the nave, of a yale and a griffin: these are thought to be 17th-century.

There are some interesting features on the exterior of the church. On the south wall and south-east buttresses are sundials, used in former times as "mass clocks" to determine the timing of services - one of these is on a blocked-up priest's door to the chancel. On the south-east buttress there is also a carving in the form of a pentagram, often associated with witchcraft, but also in medieval times a symbol of the five wounds Jesus suffered on the Cross.

At the rear of the church is a modern extension, the Ark, which serves as a church hall. It won the Borough of Havant Design Award in 2000 and the Royal Institute of British Architects South Conservation Award in 2002. The RIBA judges said, "The extension lifts the spirit and adds value to the building, fitting within the constraints of a mature churchyard and a very ancient yew tree."

The Cache

Go to stage 1 at the published co-ordinates where you will find a Russian (Orthodox) cross on the grave of Elena and Afanasy. On the principal crossbeam are written 2 words.

  • How many letters in the first word? = A
  • How many letters in the second word? = B

Then make your way to stage 2 (S27891K) where you will find the war memorial. Counting the surnames from BOTH wars:

  • How many surnames begin with the letter F? = C
  • How many surnames begin with the letter N? = D

Now make your way around the church to stage 3 (S37891K) and find the stone dedicated to Mr Haddock.

  • What is the last digit of his year of birth? = E

Lastly, go to stage 4 (S47891K) where you will find the gravestone of Thomas and Ruth, who share the name of a large Scottish city.

  • Thomas died on 12.4.200F
  • Ruth lived from 10.11.191G to H.10.2010

There are also a number of bible verses on Thomas and Ruth's gravestone.

  • The quotation from the book of Revelation, Chapter 3 is verse J

You can find the cache at N 50° 4(E+H).(B-C)(A-E)(H+F) W 000° 5J.(B-H)(C+F)(G-A-D). The checksum for all 15 digits of the final co-ordinates is 52. Alternatively here is a geochecker. You are looking for a small camo container big enough for small swaps and trackables.

****************** ********************
For full information on how you can expand the Church Micro series by sadexploration please read the Place your own Church Micro page before you contact him at churchmicro.co.uk

See also the Church Micro Statistics and Home pages for further information about the series.
****************** *******************

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

[Please rehide well] Ol jbbq ba Fbhgu fvqr

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)