• Mark Brittle
    2
    I am looking for a (brief) account of the views and effects of Victorian Ecclesiologists on bell ringing. I have found their views are ‘widely known’ but I have not yet found a factual history that appertains.
    Any suggestions of works to consult much appreciated. Even the most arcane publications are likely available on line. With thanks in advance.
  • Lucy Chandhial
    136
    Here’s one link which might help: https://www.whitingsociety.org.uk/old-ringing-books/ellacombe-bells-somerset.html
    I’ve definitely read articles on this topic in the Ringing World so it would be worth searching their archives and I think John Harrison will have some advice on sources.
  • Mark Brittle
    2
    Lucy, Thank you so much. By coincidence I found that today!! . ‘ The Use and abuse of the church bells Blunt W., Joseph Masters 1846’ - is on the Whiting Society page. It has all the ridiculous piety I was looking for…
    The text is actually briefly mentioned in Clarke’s Gothic Revival masterpiece which I only thought of skimming today.
    Kind regards
    Mark
  • John de Overa
    614
    See also The Ringer's True Guide by Rev. S. Beaufoy, which has a foreword by Ellacombe.

    They generally go to the ale-house and spend it in waste. At such times filthy conversation and swearing, lying and quarrelling, frequently abound among them. Intoxication often ensues, and each man's share of liquor, in one night, is very often as much as would refresh a man and his family a whole week, yea, more than many get in a month. - Some of these ringers are out of order the next day; they visit the publican again-spend more money - and lose more time

    And much, much more besides.

    https://www.whitingsociety.org.uk/old-ringing-books/beaufoy-the-ringers-true-guide.html
  • John de Overa
    614
    More:

    A Company of Ringers may attend a neighbouring Church rightly and usefully, as may a Choir, or a private family of worshippers. But if they habitually go out to ring they do wrong, because the practice involves a failure of principle. It amounts to treating the Lord's house and the Lord's day as our own wholly for our own amusement and without reference to His service.

    https://www.whitingsociety.org.uk/old-ringing-books/wigram-change-ringing-07.pdf
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