St Michael & All Angels Bulley St Andrews Churcham Huntley All Saints Longhope All Saints May Hill

Forest Edge Group, Anglican Churches, Gloucestershire, UK

Moved site to http://fedgeg.net46.net/index.html

on 24 Oct 2009

Sunday Service Times, Monthly - Weeks 1 to 4

Huntley and Longhope have 2 services some Sundays.

St Michael & All Angels Bulley - 6pm, 9.30am, 6pm HC, 11am HC
St Andrews Churcham - 9.30am HC, 6pm, 11am HC, 10am
St Johns Huntley - 11am weekly, + 6pm on 3rd, 8am HC on 4th Sunday
All Saints Longhope - 9.30am weekly, + HC 6pm on 1st, 8am on 2nd Sunday
All Saints May Hill - 9.30am each week.

Pages for the Huntley, May Hill and Longhope Trinity Festival 13-15 June 2003
have been moved to http://www.oocities.org/fedgeg2/
Longhope tombstones are at http://www.oocities.org/longedgeg/

Site Plan for each Centre

Bulley Church
Bulley Church
Bigland burial records before 1780,
Register pages 1674-1749 and 1750-1813
Some family groups eg Hooper, Phelps, Young
1851 Census straight and sorted
Margaret's father's view of Bulley
Churcham Church
Churcham Church
Men in armour 1522 and in 1608,
Bigland burial records before 1780,
1851 Census straight and sorted
Morris Commercial Directory 1876
North wall of the Church, Birdwood plaques
Huntley Church
Huntley Church
Men in armour 1522 and in 1608,
Bigland burial records before 1780,
Census of 1851by G.W. Beavington
Morris Commercial Directory 1876
Longhope Church
Longhope Church
Around the outside and inside Walls
Men in armour 1522 and in 1608,
Bigland burial records before 1780,
1851 Census straight and sorted
Morris Commercial Directory 1876
Longhope
First 300 surviving gravestones
Longhope residents 1800 - 1881
May Hill Church
May Hill Church
with Malcolm's photographs as the second half of this page.
Christianity was introduced into Gloucestershire within 12 years of its start.
To quote from Ken Beck's letter published on Page 24, Gloucestershire Family History Society Journal Number 97 - June 2003.
Aulus Plautius was the Roman General who conquered and held this district. His wife was a Christian put on trial in Rome. An officer of the court of Plautius was known as Pudens, married to Claudia the daughter of a local British chief and had a son named Linus.
The family were Christians and are thought to have gone to Rome, becoming the three friends refered to in St Paul's Second Epistle to Timothy chapter 4, verse 21,
(Timothy) "do your best to come before the winter. Eubulus sends greetings to you, as do Pudens, Linus and Claudia."


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