St Laurence Church St. Laurence Church is located at Church End. It is a Grade II
listed building with mid to late-12th century foundations. It is possible that it was originally built for Lady Godiva, as she had "several churches built in the area at this time that were dedicated to
St Laurence, after Abbot Laurence, a trusted friend." Whether the name should be spelt Laurence or Lawrence has been a "bone of contention for many centuries". It is currently spelt with a ‘u’. In 1206 William de Hardreshulle, Lord of Hartshill (d.1261) and 1902. A west gallery was removed in 1931. On one column there is a "grotesque carving of two monsters striving for possession of a man". There are the remains of Norman hinges on a door, dating from around 1150. In the churchyard is a Parish Room, an on-site function room, by Kenneth Holmes Associates (2003), The church’s financial situation has varied considerably through the centuries, but was particularly parlous in 1837, when the vicar of St Laurence, whose annual salary was £116 – far below the national average of £285 – appealed to the bishop to be ‘non-resident’ in Ansley, citing an "unfit residence". By 1884, the vicar’s annual income was £236, but had fallen again to £160 by 1904. The church was submitted to the
Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings to be considered for inclusion in their list of historic buildings in 1898, 1908 and 1913. It received its Grade II* status in 1968. Temporary girders were added to the church interior by the
National Coal Board for the period between 1960 and 1968, to prevent subsidence from coal mining directly underneath. In 1973, seven weeks before their wedding, and amid much secrecy,
Mark Phillips and
Princess Anne visited St Laurence Church to attend the funeral of Phillips’ grandmother, Mrs
Dorothea Phillips. When the couple married, the parishioners of Ansley gave them "an inscribed telephone notepad". St John’s Church in Ansley Common, built in 1927, is now twinned with St Laurence Church.
Bells and windows There are six bells in the tower: Bell 1: Made by Thomas Newcombe (c.1580) named ‘Margareta’ and is marked with their shield and a cross Bell 2: Made by Robert, Thomas and William Newcombe (1609) Bell 3: Made by George Oldfield (1669) stamped with
Feare God Honour The King 1669 Bells 4-6: Three trebles made by
John Taylor & Co (1976). These modern bells were funded by Ansley parishioners, from fund-raising barbeques held at Red House Farm and by Frederick and Daisy Cartwright in memory of the Cartwright family of Ansley.
Restoration Day (29 May) and the
Sovereign’s birthday. The north window in the chancel contains fragments of 15th century glass from Coventry. There are also windows by Jones and Willis (1872),
Clayton and Bell (1897), two by
William Morris & Co (1921 and 1928) and a
Woolliscroft Commemorative Window (2015) by Claire Williamson. In 1931 a window designed by
Karl Parsons,
Christ in Majesty, together with a new screen, choir stalls and electric lights, were dedicated to the memory of William Garside Phillips, who had been the managing director of Ansley Hall Colliery since 1879, and his wife. File: Ansley Window by Parsons 2.jpg| Karl Parsons, 1931 File: Ansley Window by Parsons 1.jpg| Detail, Parsons window File: Ansley Window by Parsons 4.jpg|Detail, Parsons window File: Ansley Window by Parsons 5.jpg|Detail, Parsons window
Other places of worship Over the years, Ansley has had the following additional places of worship, all now closed: •
Ansley Congregational Chapel on Birmingham Road was established 1822. A new chapel was built in 1904 •
Providence Independent Chapel, a small chapel, was built in 1823 • In early 1826 the
Church of Christ began holding open air services in Ansley, with up to 1,200 people in regular attendance. These large turnouts led to money being collected to build a permanent place of worship, with contributions received from "many pious persons in London and in the country". Land was purchased and a chapel was erected to accommodate about 300 people where a first service was held on 14 July 1826, with however only twelve members. Ansley appeared in the church’s
Evangelical Magazine and Missionary Chronicle in June 1827, where its population was described as "remarkable for ignorance and profaneness" and "remarkable for its moral darkness, and desperate wickedness". It was reported that "very few persons belonging to the village attended" the chapel "and from that time to the present [June 1827] the enemies of truth have exerted all their energies to prevent the success of the Gospel at Ansley." •
Wesleyan Chapel, Ridge Lane, a new chapel was built on the site of a former chapel in 1931 •
Birchley Heath Primitive Methodist Meeting Place was founded in 1826 with capacity for 60 people. •
Ansley United Reformed Church was in operation by 1881 •
Mission Church of St John, Ansley Common, in operation by 1912 ==WWI and WWII==