St Hubert’s has outlasted Idsworth, the village it used to serve. If you visit the Grade I Listed church today, you will find no trace of the settlement, which was thought to have been established in the 9th century. It was abandoned during the 14th century – most likely due to the Black Death.
500 years of human habitation gone without a trace. But the church endured.
The small much-loved Hampshire church survived the plague, but just recently, its future started to look more uncertain.
The gutters and downpipes at the church required urgent attention. Instead of directing water away from the building, rain was cascading down the exterior walls and pooling underneath. Water started slowly seeping inside. And damp put their nationally significant wall paintings inside at risk. These wall paintings, a national treasure, date back to 1330, and include a depiction of Salome with the head of St John the Baptist.
Church repairs fall onto the shoulders of local people to fundraise for. There is no consistent form of funding available from the UK Government to fix these buildings – even though they are of huge historical significance. A vital link to our past, yet still relevant today as places of worship, tourist destinations and spaces where communities can come together, for support and connection.
Thankfully, help was on hand for St Hubert’s. The National Churches Trust was able to award the church £16,000 for urgent repairs, to keep this building open and in use.