All Saints & St Nicholas
Icklesham, Sussex
Beautiful Grade I listed church sitting just of the 1066 path in Icklesham, East Sussex.
Winchelsea was built as a new, planned, town in 1288 after the old town was destroyed by the sea and the church was given a large and prestigious plot within a very large churchyard.
Winchelsea, Sussex
Quite what it looked like when complete we don't know, as the town was devastated in French raids several times in the 14th century, suffered terribly in the plagues of the same century, and then fell into further decay when the harbour silted up. What remains of St Thomas's today is the chancel, rebuilt tower and an intriguing jumble of ruins.
The chancel is superb, and is packed with some of the finest tombs in England, hinting at what the church may have been like when it was complete.
The architecture is from about 1300, while the five tombs date from a little later. They are memorials to members of the Alard family, who had founded chantry chapels here. The magnificent effigies lie beneath sumptuous carved canopies.
Icklesham, Sussex
Beautiful Grade I listed church sitting just of the 1066 path in Icklesham, East Sussex.
Rye, Sussex
Set in the heart of Rye, surrounded by narrow streets lined with picturesque houses, St Mary's is a natural magnet for visitors to the ancient Cinque port.
Pett Level, Sussex
St Nicholas, 15 yards from the shingle beach at Pett Level, was until 1935 the home of the Life Saving Rocket Launcher for the Coastguard.