alms dish การใช้
- In 1906, a survey of church plate within the Bangor diocese recorded that St Nidan's had a silver chalice and alms dish.
- Also produced in the factory were highly-finished brass " church furniture " : crosses, candlesticks, vases, alms dishes and lecterns.
- There is an alms dish in the church which was lost in 1873 and found its way back to Dorset from Bideford in Devon in 1938.
- A disastrous fire occurred on 6 April 1904, when damage was done to the vestry and the roof of the inner vestry, causing the loss of an ancient brass alms dish, prayer books and a cupboard full of clerical robes.
- Items donated by the congregation were the altar cloth, altar rails and standards, alms dish and collecting bags, brass pulpit desk and lights, oak chairs, brass lectern and a new font carved by sculptor George Dyson of Crosland Moor.
- In the latter half of the 19th century there came an increasing demand for ecclesiastical work in England; lecterns, alms dishes, processional crosses and altar furniture were made of brass; the designs were for the greater part adaptations of older work and without any great originality.