Vicar: Rev'd Nigel Mason
01892 852536
Services:
8.00am 2nd and 4th Sunday
11.15am every Sunday
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St Mark's Church is part of the Rotherfield Parish. The Rev'd Nigel Mason
looks after this village church and the parish church St Denys in Rotherfield.
Mark Cross being the junction of the three parishes of Mayfield, Rotherfield
and Wadhurst, which ceded territory to form the new ecclesiastical parish
of Mark Cross embracing some 3,500 acres in 1873.
Mark Cross parish church was built in 1851, not as a church, but as a
national school for village children aged between 4 and 11. This explains
why it doesn't have the customary east/west alignment. Being one of the
largest buildings in the village, it also served as a community meeting
place in which church services were held on Sundays.
In 1873 a new larger school was built on land bought and endowed by a
school governor, Mr Henry Dixon of Frankham Park, who also built the adjacent
vicarage. This new building formed the nucleus of the present Church of
England Primary school. The old school building was then adapted and extended
to provide a chapel and consecrated as the parish church, dedicated to
St Mark. The first baptism recorded being that of Kate Ellen Parsons on
10th August 1873. The Rev. Herbert Hunter Phelps was the officiating minister.
He had been appointed to the living by Mr Henry Dixon who had been largely
instrumental in the creation of the new parish and, having contributed
a capital sum towards the endowment, had been granted the advowson, the
right to nominate successors to the ministry of St Mark's. The list of
vicars displayed in the church reveals that one, the Rev. James Price,
served the parish faithfully for 50 years. His annual stipend was £202
6s 10d in 1887.
Built of red brick with stone dressings, a large `east' window of plain
glass set in ornate stone carving and a bell-cote housing the original
school bell, this beautifully simple church was originally furnished with
seating for 100 people. It is, and always has been, treasured and cared
for by the parishioners of Mark Cross.
The Churchyard is consecrated ground and has a Garden of Remembrance at
the `east' end with provision for the burial of ashes. Standing within
it is a seat dedicated to the memory of Margaret Walter, last in a long
line of members of the Walter family from the Mark Cross area. Thanks to
Margaret's generosity the church has been renovated and the side chapel
adapted for use as both a place of prayer and meeting. A Book of Remembrance
stands there, in which are recorded the names of departed loved ones.
The interior of the church displays remarkably few memorials considering
the devotion which parishioners have shown to it down the years. But their
gifts are there and are used in the regular worship of the church as they
would have wished. The memorial gifts include the reading desk, lectern,
hymn and psalm boards, altar cross, candle sticks and vases, Holy Communion
silver, sanctuary chairs, bell wheel chandelier, and flagpole and Baptismal
ewer. The altar frontals in use at present were once in the stable chapel
of Peter Ball a former Bishop of Lewes. When his official residence was
moved to Eastbourne, these hangings were given to St Mark's because of
the close and affectionate relationship the parish had with the Bishop.
The side altar frontal, hand painted on silk, represents St Mark. It was
worked, in memory of Mark Staniforth, by his sister. The only wall tablet
is the War Memorial erected in memory of Mark Cross men who died in the
Great War 1914-1918.
The remarkable church clock was given by the parishioners and their friends
to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria. The clock face is
mounted over the front entry door and the mechanism is installed in the
vestry at the back of the church. The ingenious overhead linkage is worthy
of particular note.
To mark the millennium, the church bell was reinstated in a newly strengthened
tower. Also in the millennium year, along with many other churches, a commemorative
yew tree was planted in the churchyard. At its base a time capsule was
buried. It contains the prayers and hopes of all the children then at Mark
Cross School, to be opened in fifty years time.
The hassocks and altar cushions were covered with tapestry by parishioners,
to commemorate the church centenary in 1973. The work took eight years
and the altar cushions and seventy hassocks were dedicated at Easter 1981.
The organ, built by Hopkins of York is a single manual instrument, originally
hand blown, and dates from the end of the last century.
The last resident vicar of Mark Cross died in 1975. The vicarage was then
sold and the Parish linked with Rotherfield in a Combined Benefice in 1984,
from that date until 1994 it was cared for by successive rectors of Rotherfield
assisted by retired clergy and layreaders.
Colourful memories remain among the current congregation. For example
the regular 6.00pm evensong, the chiming of the one church bell, the original
school one later replaced (for a time) by the sound of an amplified recording
of a peal of bells, the amplifier being hung on a tree in the then vicarage,
garden (now Brandywell Nursery) and of the pumping of the hand blown organ
with all the associated catastrophes!
As with many small Sussex villages, basic alterations in the social life
and population have created many changes. The most notable perhaps, in
recent years, being at the end of the 1950s when the new road to Eastbourne
cut right through the cricket pitch, and in some ways cut the village in
half. During the next twenty five years there was a steady loss of many
of the local personalities and the closure of shops and businesses, but
paradoxically this period of gentle decline caused the parish church to
become involved in far more than just "hatch match and despatch".
With no full time clergy, more and more lay members found themselves, often
to their own astonishment, representing the Church and helping to organise
things, probably the most important of these being the Silver Jubilee celebrations
of 1977. All the necessary planning and fundraising led to the rebirth
of the village cricket team and the formation of several other organisations,
as well as producing some memorable fetes, fairs, horse and dog shows.
Parish life goes from strength to strength and the round of worship has
continued unbroken. The ties between church and school continue to be strong,
the school's 1995 development scheme even leading to a temporary classroom
being made in the side chapel! Collective school worship is held daily
in the church and there are regular visits from the Vicar.
The Church is the family of Christians meeting together to worship God
and to find fellowship together in prayer and learning. A parish church
by its very nature exists to offer all this in the locality for which it
is responsible. Details of the services are on the notice boards. A Sunday
Club, Youth Club, Prayer Group and regular Bible study Groups are provided.
Information on these, as well as all other village activities, may be found
in the monthly magazine, available in the church and in various outlets
in the village. You are most welcome to join us. Those who do so are often
surprised to discover such a thriving, all-age, family orientated community.

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