Church building

Holy Innocents Church, Southwater

United Kingdom Southwater Grade II listed building
Holy Innocents Church, Southwater
Holy Innocents Church, Southwater · Wikipedia

About

Holy Innocents Church is the Anglican parish church of Southwater, a village in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England. Built in 1849, the church has a cruciform footprint. Inside there are many stained glass windows, donated to the church by the Piper family and the Old Blues of Christ's Hospital School.

The church grounds include the church, its graveyards, a house, a church room and a Scout and Guide hut. The present building is the first parish church in the village of Southwater. It is almost entirely Victorian, built to accommodate the few residents of what was then a long and straggling village based on several farms, including Great House Farm and College Farm.

Much of the land was then, and remains now, in the ownership of the Fletcher family, which gave the land on which the church was built. Most of the walls are of local Horsham Stone. It was one of a number of churches designed by James Park Harrison (1817-1902).

The building was constructed largely of local materials from a quarry at Stammerham (Griggs Farm), a pit on Great House Farm and the quarry at St. Leonard's Forest. The cost was said to be ‘in the region of £1,800’.

The foundation stone was laid on 28...