St Botolph's Church and Priory
Priory Street, Colchester, Essex, CO2 7EE
Today, all that remains of St Botolph's Priory is the ruined nave of the church. This was the first Augustinian priory in Britain, built between 1100 and 1170. At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 1530s, the priory became a parish church and was badly damaged during the Civil War Siege of Colchester in 1648. Although ruined, the church continued to be used for burials in the 18th and 19th centuries. Several tombs are still visible, including those of Dr Roger Nunn (1783-1844), the first doctor to work at Colchester's earliest hospital in 1820, and William Warwick Hawkins MP (1816-68) an Essex railway builder. In the churchyard is a memorial to Capt. Jesse Jones (1788-1868) who was wounded at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
In 1836-7, a new church in the Norman revival style was built by William Mason (1810-97), who was born in Ipswich and later emigrated to New Zealand. The church was altered in 1882 when the chancel was enlarged. The interior retains its galleries, and there is an imposing memorial to William Hawkins (d. 1843) with a life-size female figure representing Hope. The building has recently been partially restored.
The Priory is now in the care of English Heritage and managed by Colchester City Council. The Church is in regular use for Anglican worship.
Priory Street, Colchester, Essex, CO2 7EE
Most areas fine for wheelchair access, but slopes in places in the Priory ruins.