[Bell Historians] Bickenhall
c.j.pickford.t21 at X7tvWoPGlyGT6l8C158QIULBPbJvyfawf6ZuCEvqUrr3CHycx-Ln6vZU8qYSHu9HXQO4pMaSoNbFJ_-_uTNz1vyVQzyVwA.yahoo.invalid
c.j.pickford.t21 at X7tvWoPGlyGT6l8C158QIULBPbJvyfawf6ZuCEvqUrr3CHycx-Ln6vZU8qYSHu9HXQO4pMaSoNbFJ_-_uTNz1vyVQzyVwA.yahoo.invalid
Wed Mar 23 12:12:44 GMT 2011
Am away from desk but know that there was one bell 1847. Before that three I think - one a Rudhall. Fairly sure the chances of finding much more on old bells are slim
C
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-----Original Message-----
From: "Mike Chester" <mike at mikechester.demon.co.uk>
Sender: bellhistorians at yahoogroups.com
Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2011 12:04:02
To: <bellhistorians at yahoogroups.com>
Reply-To: bellhistorians at yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Bell Historians] Bickenhall
Sam Napper samnapper at rocketmail.com writes on Change Ringers
I am very keen to trace the whereabouts of the bells that were hung in a church, demolished in the 1840's. The church in question was at Bickenhall, in Somerset.
Does anyone know a good place to start? I assume the bells did go somewhere and not for scrap, especially as the mid-Victorian period seems to have been a popular time for adding and augmenting.
Think he is a bit optimistic in the last paragraph! Can anyone help him?
Mike
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