All Saints' Church, Gresford

All Saints' Church
Painting in the church commemorating the Gresford disaster of 1934, above a book with the names of the 266 who died.

All Saints' Church (Welsh: Eglwys yr Holl Saint) stands in the former coal mining village of Gresford in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. It is a large, mainly late 15th-century church in a slightly red sandstone, in many ways more typical of nearby Cheshire churches.[1] It has been described as the finest parish church in Wales, and has the most surviving medieval stained glass of any Welsh church.[2]

The bells of the parish church of All Saints are one of the traditional Seven Wonders of Wales. Not only are the peal of bells of note, listed it is said for the purity of their tone, but the church itself is remarkable for its size, beauty, interior church monuments, and its churchyard yew trees. The bells are commemorated in an anonymous rhyme:

Pistyll Rhaeadr and Wrexham steeple,
Snowdon's mountain without its people,
Overton yew trees, St Winefride wells,
Llangollen bridge and Gresford bells.

The church was designated as a Grade I listed building on 7 June 1963, as "an exceptional example of a late-medieval church with fine medieval glass and furnishings".[3]

  1. ^ *"Parish history": www.allsaintschurchgresford.org.uk, "History" tab
  2. ^ All Saints' Church, Gresford, Imaging the Bible
  3. ^ *"Cadw": Cadw, "Parish Church of All Saints (Grade I) (1591)", National Historic Assets of Wales, retrieved 2 April 2019