A small
chapel was built off the existing church dedicated to
Mary, which was given a new dedication of Mary and Walstan. He is venerated as a saint of farms and farm workers, and his
shrine and the wells associated with him were visited by local farmers and farm laborers throughout the Middle Ages. In 1309 the revenues generated at Bawburgh by pilgrims could provide an income for six
priests and the church
vicar, in addition to providing the finances needed to rebuild the
chancel. In later decades the shrine became ruinous; it was rebuilt in the 15th century. After the
Dissolution of the Monasteries, the church once again fell into disrepair. During the 19th century, the village church regained its prosperity when miracles were associated with the water obtained from the well. In 1913 the
Eastern Daily Press named it the "Lourdes of Norfolk". The well at Bawburgh can still be seen. At Costessey, the second place where Walstan's hearse rested, the well there had dried up by 1750. In April 1978 it was recorded as being a deep circular pit about across, with lumps of flint wall at the base, and filled with fallen trees. By January 2015 the depression was still visible, and a plan was proposed to fence off the site of the well and place a plaque there. The site of the well, now located on the grounds of a golf course, has been marked with a sign. Walstan is represented in
religious art by a crown and
sceptre (his generic emblems)—at least five figures from medieval
rood screens depict him in this way—and with a scythe in his hand and cattle near him (his specific emblems). Churches dedicated to Walstan dating from before the
English Reformation are found in Norfolk. Uniquely outside England, a church in
Rongai,
Kenya, is dedicated to Walstan. The historian Kellie Robertson has said that during the Middle Ages, Walstan was a "good example of a localized cult exemplifying the vibrancy of lay popular piety" and "an exemplar of filial love, charity, devotion to work, and obedience to the Church. His absence from medieval
liturgical calendars is thought to be a reflection of the local nature of the
cult that appeared after his death. Robertson connects Walstan's popularity in the mid 15th century with the popular unrest in
East Anglia during this period, caused by restrictive laws on agricultural workers in the aftermath of the
Black Death that swept across the country in 1349. That he only appears as a saint in the 16th century—and in a revision of an earlier version of
Sanctilogium angliae—implies he was relatively unimportant at the time it was first compiled, and his cult revived in the mid 15th century. St Walstan's Day is celebrated each year in Bawburgh, when a special Patronal Service takes place on the nearest Sunday to 30 May, his feast date. St. Walstan's Day occurred on 28 December in some 17th and 18th century
saints' calendars. ==Notes==