In the Middle Ages, Dunston was subject ecclesiastically to the large and important Collegiate Church of St. Michael at
Penkridge, a
royal peculiar whose
dean was from 1215 the
Archbishop of Dublin. The
prebend of Dunston, land amounting to perhaps 50 acres, supported one of the canons of St. Michael's. The prebend was established some time before 1261 and was worth £5 6s. 8d. in 1291. The village church has been dedicated to
Leonard of Noblac, a saint concerned with the liberation of prisoners, since at least the 15th century, as
Richard Talbot, the dean and archbishop, confirmed this dedication in 1445 whilst declaring a hundred-day indulgence for all who would visit it and make a contribution to it The
prebendaries of Dunston were responsible for the
cure of souls in the village. Prebendaries in royal chapels were generally absentees and paid
vicars to do their work for them, but no vicarage was apparently established for Dunston – a situation that persisted long after the
Reformation. 's church, May 2008 In 1548 the Penkridge college under the terms of the
Chantries Act 1547, a crucial part of the Reformation legislation of
Edward VI's reign. A vicar was appointed at Penkridge, along with an assistant, and this arrangement persisted for several centuries. Ultimate control, however, rested with the successors to the royal peculiar. From 1585, this was the Littleton family of
Pillaton Hall, soon to become the
Littleton Baronets, and later
Barons Hatherton. They had
advowson, the right to appoint clergy in the parish, and were not subject to the
ordinary, the
Bishop of Lichfield. Between 1876 and 1878 the old chapel was finally demolished and a new church erected on the same site. It is a stone building in 14th century style and consists of nave, chancel, transepts, vestry, and a spired west tower. In 1887, a new churchyard, given by the family of a former parishioner, was consecrated, previous burials having been carried out at Penkridge. In 1907, the vestry was added and a new organ installed. The church contains memorial tablets to Thomas Perry (d. 1861), in whose memory the church was built, to his widow Mary (d. 1881), and to later members of the Perry family who lived at nearby Dunston Hall. There are memorial windows and a tablet to members of the Hand family including Charles Frederic Hand (d. 1900), also tablets to John Taylor Duce (d. 1886), Albert Pickstock (d. 1926), and three members of the Thorneycroft family (d. 1913, 1924, and 1943). The two bells of the ancient chapel in 1553, were replaced by one bell in the new church by 1889. This arrangement was then replaced in 1890 by a
carillon of eight tubular bells, rung from a keyboard, donated by Mrs. Perry of Dunston Hall. ==School==