The Cambridge Camden Society One of the main driving forces for the restoration of churches was the
Cambridge Camden Society (CCS), which was founded in 1839 by two
Cambridge undergraduates,
John Mason Neale and
Benjamin Webb, as a club for those who shared a common interest in Gothic church design. It rapidly became popular: its membership increased from 8 to 180 in its first 12 months. Although initially a society for recording and discussing medieval church features, the members of the CCS soon began to expostulate in their journal
The Ecclesiologist and particularly in their
Few Words to Church-builders of 1844 that the only "correct" form for a church building was the "middle pointed" or "
Decorated" style, in which churches had been built during the hundred years centred on 1300. Ecclesiology obviously struck a chord in society: it was closely linked with the ongoing interest in
medievalism and the
Gothic Revival. The CCS's firm insistence on one style being correct proved to be a beacon for those who were no longer able to judge for themselves what was "good" in architecture—the certainties of the
Vitruvian rules having lost their power during the
Romantic movement that had been in vogue since the middle of the 18th century. The CCS stated that there were two possible ways in which a church could be restored. As
Kenneth Clark put it, they said that one could "either restore each of the various alterations and additions in its own style, or restore the whole church to the best and purest style of which traces remain". The Society wholeheartedly recommended the second option and since virtually every medieval church had at least some small remnant of decorated style, maybe a porch or even just a window, the whole church would be "restored" to match it. If the earliest portions were too late, then it was a candidate for a complete rebuild in the "correct" style. "To restore,"
The Ecclesiologist declared, "is to revive the original appearance ... lost by decay, accident or ill-judged alteration". They did later admit, though, that such "restoration" might create an ideal state that the building had never been in.
Oxford Movement Church restorations were also strongly influenced by the
Oxford Movement, which advocated moving the centre of importance in the church from preaching to the
sacrament of the
Eucharist: from the
pulpit to the
altar. Consequences of this included moving the pulpit from a more central position to the side of the church, replacing
box pews with open pews, creating a central
aisle to give a better view of the altar, and the removal of galleries. Another consequence was that a larger
chancel was required for the associated ritual.{{Citation , with Butterfield's restorations ==Activities==