English Heritage sites near Abbey Dore Parish
LONGTOWN CASTLE
5 miles from Abbey Dore Parish
A powerful thick-walled round keep of c.1150 on a large earthen mound within a stone-walled bailey. Set in the beautiful Olchon valley, with magnificent views of the Black Mountains.
ARTHUR'S STONE
8 miles from Abbey Dore Parish
An atmospheric Neolithic burial chamber, made of great stone slabs in the hills above Herefordshire's Golden Valley.
ROTHERWAS CHAPEL
10 miles from Abbey Dore Parish
Family chapel of the Bodenham family. The originally simple medieval building has a fine Elizabethan timber roof, 18th century tower and striking Victorian interior decoration and furnishings.
GOODRICH CASTLE
14 miles from Abbey Dore Parish
Goodrich stands majestically on a wooded hill commanding the passage of the River Wye into the picturesque valley of Symonds Yat.
ST MARY'S CHURCH, KEMPLEY
17 miles from Abbey Dore Parish
Delightful Norman church, displaying one of the most outstandingly complete and well preserved sets of medieval wall paintings in England, dating from the 12th and 14th centuries.
ST BRIAVELS CASTLE
20 miles from Abbey Dore Parish
The fine twin-towered gatehouse, built by Edward I in 1292, once defended a crossbow bolt factory which used local iron. Once a prison, now a youth hostel in wonderful walking country.
Churches in Abbey Dore Parish
Cockyard Mission Hall
Abbeydore
Hereford
07432873422
https://www.abbeydoredeanery.org/
The Mission Hall is part of the Parish of Abbeydore (Holy Trinity & St Mary's Abbeydore - Dore Abbey - www.doreabbey.org.uk) in the Ewyas Harold Group of Parishes.
Cockyard Mission Hall was a blacksmith's forge and shop until the occupant, Mr Hancocks, moved his business to Hungerford shortly after the end of the First World War. The premises belong to Whitfield Estate and are loaned (firstly by Lady Mary Clive of Whitfield Court) to the people of the Cockyard as a place of worship and for community use. The blacksmith's anvil survives as a table near the door. Although there is a dearth of recorded detail, it has been verified from eye witness accounts that the Mission Hall was in use for a Sunday School in 1924. It was also used for special events such as Christmas parties etc. The ladies of the Cockyard set up and ran the Mission Hall; these included Emily Powell, wife of Edward, a groom at Whitfield Court, and later, and for many years until her death, Nellie Price, who was cook there.
Dore Abbey
Abbeydore
Hereford
http://www.doreabbey.org.uk
Please visit our website: doreabbey.org.uk
Holy Trinity & St Mary's Abbeydore (Dore Abbey) is part of the Ewyas Harold Group of Parishes. The Cockyard Mission Hall is also part of our parish with an afternoon service on the first Sunday of the month; see separate ACNY entry). See below for our normal and seasonal services.
Dore Abbey stands in a beautiful part of Herefordshire's Golden Valley. The present church was once the chancel, crossing, transepts, chapels and ambulatory of the medieval Cistercian monastery whose domestic buildings and chapter house can still be traced. The cloister garden is a lovely place to sit to enjoy the tranquillity of the site. The white robed monks first came here in 1147 and their skill in gardening is commemorated in the stylised foliage of the capitals. By the 13th-14th centuries the wool from Dore's sheep was the best quality in Europe, fetching the highest prices and selling as far away as Italy. The profit paid for the church to be enlarged, decorated and re-painted. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries by King Henry VIII, the current building was saved from total destruction and was restored in the 1630s by John, Viscount Scudamore. It is a rare, surviving example of a Laudian Church and one of the very few British Cistercian Abbeys still used for regular Christian worship. Among the many points to note are the lovely bosses (saved from the medieval roof because the King's Commissioners were sympathetic), the original high altar top, the 17thC carved screen, the newly restored stained glass and the wall texts. More information can be found in the guidebook on sale in the Abbey. Guided tours can be arranged. Facilities - portaloo toilets are available in the summer months.
The six bells were originally cast in 1710/1712 by the first Abraham Rudhall at his Gloucester foundry. Four were recast: the treble by Thomas Rudhall in 1770, the tenor by Charles and John Rudhall in 1782, the fourth by Thomas Rudhall in 1810, and the second by Llewellins and James in Bristol in 1892. The bells were restored and re-hung in a new bell frame in 2013.
The Newsletter of The Friends of Dore Abbey has further information on Church Services and Events - see www.doreabbey.org.uk
Also available: The Definitive History of Dore Abbey edited by Ron Shoesmith and Ruth E. Richardson; the fifteen contributors cover all aspects of the Abbey. Contact the Treasurer of The Friends of Dore Abbey.
For tours and visits please contact Peter Rostron - [email protected] - 01981 570628; or Geoff Loosemore on [email protected].