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St Michael's Church, Upton Cressett

12th-century church buildings in England13th-century church buildings in EnglandChurch of England church buildings in ShropshireChurches preserved by the Churches Conservation TrustEnglish churches with Norman architecture
Grade I listed churches in Shropshire
St Michael's Church geograph.org.uk 423560
St Michael's Church geograph.org.uk 423560

St Michael's Church, Upton Cressett, is a redundant Anglican church. It stands on a remote hillside adjacent to Upton Cressett Hall, some 5 km west of the town of Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England (grid reference SO655924). It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building, and is under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Michael's Church, Upton Cressett (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Michael's Church, Upton Cressett

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Latitude Longitude
N 52.5289 ° E -2.5085 °
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WV16 6UH
England, United Kingdom
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St Michael's Church geograph.org.uk 423560
St Michael's Church geograph.org.uk 423560
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Nearby Places

Morville Hall
Morville Hall

Morville Hall is a grade I listed country house and gardens in the care of the National Trust in the county of Shropshire, England, United Kingdom. Morville Hall is located at the junction of the A458 road and the B4368 road, three miles outside the market town of Bridgnorth. It is a large grey stone mansion with projecting wings, originally built in two storeys in the 16th-century but increased to three as part of an 18th-century enlargement. Once part of the Aldenham estate, the house stands on the site of the abandoned Morville Priory. Morville Hall was originally an Elizabethan country house dating from 1546, at the time the site was acquired by Roger Smyth, who married into the local Cressett family. It was enlarged and expanded around 1750 by Arthur Weaver, MP for Bridgnorth. The gardens are the main attraction for many visitors and incorporates the Dower house Gardens and features such as a Cloister garden and Elizabethan knot garden. The gardens have been a 15-year project for Katherine Swift who wanted to show how gardens have developed and evolved through history. Each section of her garden relates to a previous occupant of the Hall, from the Elizabethan Smyths through to the 18th century Weavers, and finally to the seven Victorian age Warren sisters who lived on in the house long after the death of their father, the last one, Juliana, dying in the 1920s. The property has belonged to the National Trust since 1965.