I used to live in Holcombe from aged 6 to 21. I used to frequent this church. There is so much history regarding this place...for example the plague...and the nursery rhyme ring o ring o roses.. we all fall down (dead)..which is about people dieing from the plague. Also Scott from the Antarctic's ancestors have a tomb stone here, as his family were locals. There is also a tombstone dedicated to a horrendous tragedy of three local children drowning from falling through ice on a pond.
Here is some information I found -
A mile from its village down a farm track through fields, Holcombe Old Church is set beautifully against a backdrop of tall trees, with the great Abbey of Downside towering beyond.
The church is in a tranquil setting surrounded by a peaceful church yard containing a memorial to Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott whose father ran a brewery in the village. The church yard also has a tragic grave memorial to five children who perished in 1899 when ice gave way on a local pond.
The original village surrounding the church was abandoned and buried during the Great Plague (1665-1666) and the mounds in the fields around the church bear testament to this. A local myth is that the rhyme Ring a Ring o' Roses began here.
This small, atmospheric church is of late Saxon/Norman origin and was rebuilt in C16th.
The nave has a delightful pre-ecclesiology feel with flagstone floors, plastered walls and wagon roof, Georgian box pews, Jacobean pulpit, C18th western gallery, hat pegs and Royal Arms dated 1726. The chancel roof and most of its furnishings are C19th and include choir stalls, altar rails and altar table.
Although dedicated to St Andrew the church is called Holcombe Old Church to distinguish it from the parish church of St Andrew's in Holcombe village. It became a Redundant church in 1985 and was adopted by the Churches Conservation Trust in 1987.
Since being a location in the TV series Poldark, Holcombe Old Church has experienced an uptick in visitors. read more