Baker, 90, raises £30k for church window repairs

Ninety-year-old Gerry Smith raised £30,000 to help replace windows in his local church
- Published
A baker said it was "incredible" he had helped raise £30,000 with his bakes toward replacing a church's windows.
Six years ago St Mary's Church, in Market Weston on the Suffolk-Norfolk border close to Bury St Edmunds, started a project to replace its worn out Victorian windows.
However it faced a cost of £100,000, something churchwarden Richard Chatham said they "could never have envisaged".
Gerry Smith, 90, decided to help by selling cakes and sausage rolls, raising thousands toward the project which has now been completed.

The church started with one window before moving on to the others
"The Victorian windows that were put in had buckled and were very frail," Mr Chatham explained.
"They were held in position with iron bars. The iron bars had rusted and had forced and separated all the masonry holding them up."
The church used props to support the windows, but they knew they would need to be replaced.
After initially focusing on one large window, Mr Chatham said interest gathered in fundraising to work on more.
"Once people could see a window was under way and we were able to do another, it gathered momentum and we achieved our goal over the next six years - we've just finished," he added.

Churchwarden Richard Chatham praised Mr Smith's efforts as well as the wider community's
Mr Smith, who lives in the village, only learned how to bake when he was about 82.
"A Victoria sponge costs £6 on my stall and I made £30,000 plus the sausage rolls and steak and Guinness pies," he said.
This meant he sold 5,000 cakes over the project and he added he never thought he'd be able to sell so much.
"It's God-given, the gift that I can bake," he continued. "I must be good at it because people buy it.
"It's just been incredible, there's been a lot of praise."

Twelve windows at St Mary's Church in Market Weston have been replaced thanks to a community effort and grants
Mr Chatham said Mr Smith had been a "great catalyst" for the project.
"Everybody has contributed in different ways, but Gerry's baking has underpinned that all the way through," he said.
"We're really grateful... it's been a wonderful process and really beyond our dreams that it has come to fruition."
The project was also supported by grants including from the Suffolk Historic Churches Trust and the Alfred Williams Charitable Trust.
LISTEN: 90-year-old's sweet treats save church windows
Get in touch
Do you have a story suggestion for Suffolk?
Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, external, Instagram, external and X, external.
Related topics
Stories like this
- Published17 January
- Published20 January
- Published14 February 2024