St. Andrews Church
Main Sunday service 11 am.
Services are mostly traditional from "The Book
of Common Prayer" although on one Sunday each month there is a modern
language service from Order 1 and there is a regular CW Service of the
Word.
The church has a ring of six good bells and a
keen team of bellringers. Bellringing practices are on Tuesdays at 7.30pm.
St Andrew's Church, South Stoke, was built in the
early 1200s although it is believed there may have been an earlier church.
It is one of the most
beautiful
churches in the district with a large and well-kept churchyard. The
Parish of South Stoke cum Woodcote is believed to have been founded in Anglo-Saxon
times, possibly by St. Birinus. In 1984 South Stoke became a separate
parish in The United Benefice of Goring with South Stoke.
The church is built of local flint rubble with stone dressings and comprises
a nave, north and south aisles, south porch, vestry and a western tower.
It occupies a prominent position in the village, which has about 450
residents. The two lancet windows in the north wall and south aisle
are from the earliest
period. Since the church's foundation there have been many alterations
and restorations. The east window was installed in 1875 and depicts
the patron
saint, St. Andrew, standing to the right of Our Lord with his brother,
St. Peter, standing to the left. The church contains some interesting
memorials. On the north wall of the chancel there is a fine 17th century
memorial
in
Latin
for Dr. Griffiths Higgs, formerly Chaplain to Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia
and Dean of Lichfield. He founded a charity which continues today.
The war memorial
was erected in 1920 and the clock was also installed in that year.
The lych-gate was built in 1937. Both the clock and lych-gate are in
memory
of previous
incumbents of the parish. Floodlighting was installed in 1999 in order
to herald the new
millennium.
Up to the mid-20th century South Stoke was an agricultural village.
In 1366 there were 32 tenant landholders. In Victorian times there
were
11 farms.
Today, while the village retains its agricultural connections, it is
largely a dormitory
village for people working in the surrounding districts and London,
and for the retired.