The church and its facilities

St Mary’s is  a Grade I listed medieval church; for its situation, history and architecture, click here for its page on the Suffolk Churches site.  The Suffolk volume of the Pevsner Architectural Guide (2nd ed, 1974) quotes 1920s church architect H Munro Cautley, who called the font ‘probably the most beautiful in the Kingdom’.

Click here for a plan of the church in PDF format, showing the blocks of seats for our concerts and their prices; the file will either open as a new on-screen page or be downloaded to your computer, depending on your own browser settings or preferences.

The church is small enough (its maximum capacity is only 230 concertgoers) that the acoustic is good wherever you sit, but a row of stone pillars between the central nave and each side aisle limits the view from some side and rear seats.  Most of the central nave and side aisle seats are in wooden pews; most of the chancel and rear nave seats are in individual chairs (all new since 2009).

Access and facilities

The path from the road to the porch is gravel but fairly level.  In the porch, you can buy a programme for the concert (£1), as well as hire a cushion if you wish (50p).  Between the porch and the interior of the church there is a threshold which anyone in a wheelchair has to negotiate; after that, the floor of the church is level, with the Box Office table on the left.

The church normally opens at around 2.15pm for you to buy or collect tickets (if you do not yet have them) and to take your seats.

Audience members in wheelchairs (and their accompanying helpers) are usually offered spaces close to the famous font (and to the tea table), at the start of the central aisle up the nave.

In each concert interval, church supporters from Cratfield and neighbouring villages offer home-made cakes with tea, coffee and cold drinks, served at the back of the church.  The proceeds all go to the church as a source of much needed income; in addition, Concerts at Cratfield is glad to help the church directly with a share of our income from every concert.

Each season we hire two portaloos for concertgoers.  These are on a grass bank under trees, at the edge of the churchyard near the road.  For those with reduced mobility, there is a further portaloo on the level, close to the church tower.

The Navarra String Quartet ~ Joseph Haydn ~ Seven Last Words