Church bell that rang for 150 years silenced after a single noise complaint

19 March 2024, 12:10

St John the Baptist in Witheridge
St John the Baptist in Witheridge. Picture: Roger Cornfoot / Church of St John the Baptist, Witheridge / CC BY-SA 2.0

By Kit Heren

A village church bell that had rung for 150 years was silenced after a noise complaint from one local resident.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

The clock on St John the Baptist church in the Devon village of Witheridge used to ring every 15 minutes, 24 hours a day. But it was muffled last December after the noise complaint.

The clock has since been allowed to chime again in the daytime, with the parish council installing a £2,000 silencer, meaning the bell will ring out once an hour between 7am and 11pm.

The unnamed complainant had contacted North Devon council, who slapped the parish with a a noise abatement order on December 22.

Local residents started a petition for the church bell to be allowed to ring again, gaining 300 signatures.

Read more: Kate's return? Princess could take part in traditional Easter Sunday walk to church with family

Read more: Church of England is hiring a £36k-a-year 'anti-racism' officer to 'deconstruct whiteness'

The church bell has resumed ringing once an hour in the daytime
The church bell has resumed ringing once an hour in the daytime. Picture: Google Maps

"I believe one person’s grievance should not change or affect the joy of many," one petition signer said.

“For hundreds of years the bells have chimed, and it’s criminal to silence them now!”

Another resident added: "It’s a church clock – it’s meant to chime!

A third said: "We should keep the clock chiming. It’s a part of the church and a traditional part of village life.

Rev Adrian Wells, the church’s vicar, said that the silencer was a "good compromise".

He told the BBC: “It is lovely to have the chimes and bells back during the day. The clock is a real focal point for the village.”

Rev Wells added: "Its original purpose was to call people in from their work in the fields, so I accept it is probably quite loud, but I have got used to it."

A spokesperson for North Devon Council said that its environmental protection team had taken on the case.

“They considered the loudness, the frequency and duration of the noise – it was considered that the chime every 15 minutes was likely to wake or disturb the sleep of the complainant and other residents nearby," the spokesperson said.

“The council has been contacted by other residents expressing disappointment at the silencing of the clock bells.

“However, most of these were not in close proximity to the bells and unlikely to be significantly impacted by the noise.”

One local resident said in response: "It is disappointing when we see all these little traditions that we have got used to over a long period of time to be eroded by some of these laws that were developed in the modern era".

The grade-I listed Anglican church was built in the 1500s and restored twice in the 1800s.

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

Israel Palestinians

International Criminal Court seeks arrest warrants for Israeli and Hamas leaders

Hardline 'Butcher of Tehran' Ebrahim Raisi's death opens door for escalating Iran-West confrontation

Hardline 'Butcher of Tehran' Ebrahim Raisi's death opens door for escalating Iran-West confrontation

Why everyone in their twenties seems to be running - and why I’m one of them

Why everyone in their twenties seems to be running - and why I’m one of them

Rishi Sunak has apologised for the infected blood scandal.

'This is a day of shame': Rishi Sunak apologises ‘wholeheartedly’ for infected blood scandal after 'chilling' report

Kate Roughley, 37, strapped the Genevieve Meehan face down on to a bean bag

Parents will 'never forgive' nursery worker who killed daughter by strapping her face down and ignoring cries

Children were used as "objects for research" the final report of the Infected Blood Inquiry has found.

The school where dozens died: Only 30 of 122 boys at Treloar College are alive after experiments with infected blood

Pictures of the Week-North America-Photo Gallery

Cohen says he stole from Trump’s company as key hush money trial witness quizzed

Japan Mount Fuji

Japan imposes new rules to climb Mount Fuji to combat tourism and littering

Dame Judi Dench has placed the first seedling from the Sycamore Gap in the National Trust's Chelsea Flower Show garden

Dame Judi Dench places first Sycamore Gap seedling in Chelsea Flower Show garden

Grant Wagster pushed his wife down the stairs after expressing frustration over his internet connection

Tree surgeon avoids jail after pushing wife down stairs and breaking her hip in rage over WiFi connection

Passengers queuing to get on Eurostar trains at St Pancras

Exact date for new EU Eurostar checks set and how much earlier you need to arrive revealed

Benjamin Netanyahu

International Criminal Court seeks arrest warrant for Netanyahu and Hamas chiefs

Lloyd Austin

Pentagon vows to keep weapons moving to Ukraine as Kyiv faces renewed assault

Kate Roughley, 37, strapped the baby girl face down on to a bean bag

Nursery worker who strapped baby face down to beanbag and left her for 90 minutes found guilty of manslaughter

Infected blood campaigners meeting in Parliament Square ahead of the publication of the report into the scandal

What is the infected blood scandal, who is responsible, and will victims be compensated?

Fishermen scouring the seabed

Philippines blames China for loss of giant clams in disputed shoal