Yorkshire Post

Book that opens a window on the region’s history

A celebratio­n of stained glass features York Minster splendour, the Mayflower, and cheese

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp. newsdesk@ jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ yorkshirep­ost

THE STORY of mankind, from the bible to the present, via the Industrial Revolution and two world wars is revealed on stained glass window panes across the four corners of Yorkshire.

From York Minster to depictions of famous landmarks at a university, they are documented in a new book, Yorkshire’s History In Stained Glass.

The author, the Reverend William Thackray, who is retired and living in Northaller­ton, is certainly qualified to do write about the subject, having commission­ed a window in his former church.

But as he toured the medieval cities and county towns of the Ridings with his camera, the breadth and diversity of the storytelli­ng surprised even him.

“Stained glass is a curious thing. You can walk past windows and hardly notice them. But for every window there was an artist with a purpose,” said Mr Thackray, who has compiled his photograph­s of the choicest examples in a self- published coffee- table book.

The scale ranges from the majestic – the 14th century Great West Window at York Minster – to the modest – the 19th century Dales church of St Margaret at Hawes, which enshrines cheesemaki­ng and the old livestock market.

Nor is stained glass an exclusivel­y ecclesiast­ical preserve. Some of the most striking modern examples were commission­ed for the School of Civil Engineerin­g at Leeds University, where the local artist Joann Eisenberg chose as her subjects the Humber Bridge, the Ribblehead Viaduct and the TV mast at Emley Moor.

Even those windows installed in churches are not necessaril­y biblical. At the Venetian- styled St John and St Mary Magdalene in Goldthorpe, between Doncaster and Barnsley, the York artist Martha Maguire depicts the union banners and pitheads of the vanished colliery landscape that was once its backdrop.

But it is a more obscure piece of local history on which Mr Thackray was able to shed light, when he was vicar of Bawtry on the southernmo­st tip of Yorkshire in the 1980s.

His parish took in the village of Austerfiel­d, where William Bradford, one of the founding fathers of the United States, was baptised and from where in 1620 he began his journey to the new world on board the Mayflower. Bradford’s diary is the principal surviving record of the voyage – the 400th anniversar­y of which should have been a tourism bonanza this year, but with the world in lockdown, few modern- day disciples made the pilgrimage.

“Someone had the idea of commission­ing a window telling Bradford’s story. I can’t remember what it cost but it didn’t come cheap,” Mr Thackray said. “But we raised funds locally and we had links with some of Bradford’s family in Alaska.”

The parish commission­ed the Yorkshire stained glass artist Sep Waugh, who had created windows for seven Archbishop­s

of York, to produce the panes, which replaced a plain glass window at the Norman church of St Helena. They depict the signing on board of the Mayflower Compact, the first governing document of the Plymouth Colony establishe­d by the Puritan settlers.

“That is probably my favourite window of all,” said Mr Thackray. “Americans regard the Compact

as one of the key events in the establishm­ent of democracy. So meeting the artist, deciding what was going to go into the window, and then seeing visitors from the USA admiring it made the congregati­on feel very special. We had a special service attended by someone from the American Embassy.”

Of the windows less familiar to him, the one that surprised him most was the 2015 work by the artist Helen Whittaker at the stately and Grade I listed All Saints Pavement in York. It commemorat­es members of the British forces killed in Afghanista­n, including three from the city. “That one quite took my breath away,” said Mr Thackray, who described his book as having been made “for my own amusement”.

For every window there was an artist with a purpose. The Rev William Thackray, who was compiled a book on Yorkshire’s stained glass windows.

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 ?? PICTURE: TONY JOHNSON ?? BREADTH OF STORYTELLI­NG: The Rev William Thackray, in St Helen’s Church, Ainderby Steeple, Northaller­ton. He has written a book about Yorkshire’s history in stained glass.
PICTURE: TONY JOHNSON BREADTH OF STORYTELLI­NG: The Rev William Thackray, in St Helen’s Church, Ainderby Steeple, Northaller­ton. He has written a book about Yorkshire’s history in stained glass.
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 ?? PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON/ WILLIAM THACKRAY ?? HISTORY: Above, the Rev Thackray and a photograph from the book – Queen Mary grants the burgesses a charter, 1554, Sheffield Cathedral; left, pane in St Cuthbert’s, Kildale.
PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON/ WILLIAM THACKRAY HISTORY: Above, the Rev Thackray and a photograph from the book – Queen Mary grants the burgesses a charter, 1554, Sheffield Cathedral; left, pane in St Cuthbert’s, Kildale.

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