St Clement Danes

atonetel alantaylor at o...
Fri Apr 2 22:48:39 BST 2004


________________________________________________________________________
How very interesting David. I was quoting directly from the official church
history of the bells. I would have thought the picture itself suggests that
the bells fell.

Also, I wonder if the burning timbers would have cracked the bells? There is
no mention of water cracking the bells.

Alan


From: "David Cawley" 

In response to A. Taylor, here is chapter and verse, in a letter to
Prebendary Wellard, Rector of St Andrew-by-the-Wardrobe who was considering
having those bells taken down (as they were):

"Mears & Stainbank Whitechapel
Bell Foundry
 
15th May 1941

Dear Prebendary Wellard

St Andrew Undershaft

These bells are a ring of six, Tenor weighing about 12 1/2 cwt. The 5th was
recast in 1650 by Bryan Eldridge of Chertsey, and the other were cast here,
the Tenor and 3rd in 1597, the 4th in 1600 and the treble in 1669.

[The cost of dismantling and lowering] storing them at the base of the tower
would be
£43. 10. 0

After what happened at St Clement Danes, I am wondering whether it would not
be safer to leave the bells against one of the outside walls. St Clement
Danes bells were stored at the base of the Tower and the mass of burning
timber which fell lodged on them last Saturday night has resulted in serval
of them becoming cracked. 

Take another case, St Andrew's, Holborn. These bells are fitted with iron
headstocks,adn hung in an iron bell-frame. The Tower is gutted right through
but the bells are still hanging in their framework, although every bit of
the timber made fittings is destroyed. The bells are however cracked, due to
the heat.

It is because of these two cases that I am wondering which is the greater
risk, i.e. inside the building from fire or outside from H.E. I am inclined
to think the former is the greater risk.

Yours sincerely,

A. A. HUGHES"

It was Mr W. A. Hughes who informed me that Mears took the St Clement Danes
bells down and that they were buried beneath the tower; also that water was
played on them. Whether or not the latter staement is accurate, it is clear
from A.A.H.'s letter that the bells were already down and stored.


I have a copy of the picture of which Richard speaks, taken following the
destruction of St Clement Danes on May 10th, 1941. It shows some the bells
(on iron stocks) with the clock and Oranges and Lemons chiming mechanism
heaped on top of them.

DLC    
----- Original Message ----- 
From: alan taylor 
To: bellhistorians at yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Thursday, April 01, 2004 11:37 PM
Subject: [Bell Historians] St Clement Danes




DLC wrote

St Clement Danes (Westminster) were taken down and buried - but water was
hosed onto the spot when the church was blitzed "to cool them down".......



Not quite correct. The bell frame was destroyed and the bells crashed to
the
ground. Eight of the bells had been visible cracked and the remaining two
were suspected of hairline fractures. To prevent pilfering, a brick shed
was
constructed in the base of the tower and the bells buried in sand within
it.

Alan Taylor










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