circa 1942 of St. Sidwell’s Church, Exeter, after the Blitz. In the early hours of 4th May 1942 a 250kg bomb fell directly on St Sidwells. The church tower was left standing but was so badly damaged that it was pulled down shortly after. A replacement church was built on the site The
cultus of Sidwell has been active at
Exeter from Anglo-Saxon times.
Pilgrims were visiting her shrine by 1000, and their activity is mentioned both by
John Leland and
William Worcester. Sidwell's
feast day is variously given as 31 July, 1 August or 2 August. One of the main streets in Exeter is Sidwell Street. A church at
Laneast in
Cornwall is dedicated to Sidwell. Here, too, is a holy well.
Iconography In art, Sidwell is represented with a
scythe and a well at her side.
St Sidwells, formerly a village now part of Exeter, bears her name and she appears in
stained glass in
Exeter Cathedral as well as in the chapel at
Oxford's
All Souls College and the
parish church of
Ashton in
Devon. She is also depicted on at least seven painted
rood screens around the same county. There is also a statue of her in the Sacred Heart Church in South Street in Exeter. The sculpture in Sidwell Street was created by
Bideford artist Fred Irving in 1969 and is made of fibreglass. ==References==