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List Entry Summary

This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.

Name: CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS

List Entry Number: 1315379

Location

CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS, CHURCH LANE

The building may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

County: 
District: North Yorkshire
District Type: Unitary Authority
Parish: Wighill

National Park: Not applicable to this List entry.

Grade: I

Date first listed: 30-Mar-1966

Date of most recent amendment: Not applicable to this List entry.


Legacy System Information

The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

Legacy System: LBS

UID: 331752


Asset Groupings

This List entry does not comprise part of an Asset Grouping. Asset Groupings are not part of the official record but are added later for information.


List Entry Description

Summary of Building

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Reasons for Designation

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

History

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Details

NORTH YORKSHIRE HARROGATE 5338

SE 44 NE WIGHILL CHURCH LANE (east side)

8/50 Church of All Saints

30.3.66

GV I

Church. C12, and C15; with C17 fittings, restored 1912 by W H Brierley. Coursed limestone rubble and ashlar, graduated stone slate roof. Nave of 4 bays with south porch bay 2, north aisle and 3-stage west tower; 3-bay chancel. C15 tower: plinth; cusped window in deeply chamfered surround to first stage, south side; each side has a belfry window of 2 cusped lights in shallow pointed arch; battlemented parapet with finely detailed gargoyles and crocketed pinnacles. The west window is of 3 cusped lights; north stair tower. The south porch has a 2-piece lintel to the chamfered outer arch, the door is of wide planks, the date 1721 deeply cut in it; the flanking nave windows are paired cambered-arched lights in recessed chamfered square- headed surrounds; a similar window to chancel bay 1.Square-headed window with trefoil- headed paired lights to nave bay 3 and chancel bay 3. A narrow shouldered arch to chancel door between bays 1 and 2, and tall single-light window to right. Decorated 3-light east window. Stone copings to gables. The nave north doorway has a narrow moulded pointed arch; the nave and chancel north windows are similar to those on the south. Interior porch: 2 arch-braced trusses with shield bosses; the C12 nave doorway is exceptionally fine, with 2 orders of colonnettes; capitals carved with scenes from the crucifixion and with foliage; the round arch has 4 orders, from the outside: zigzag, beakhead, pictorial scenes and a roll moulding. The pictorial scenes are well preserved and include masks, human and animal figures, some fighting. The left colonnette is carved with dates and initials of the C17 and C18, the date 1672 appears twice. Nave: north arcade of 4 double-chamfered round arches on short quatrefoil piers; the roll mouldings and plain capitals appear to have been retooled. The chancel arch cut back, probably in 1912 when the chancel was reroofed and the nave considerably restored - a few old timbers remain in the arch-braced roof trusses. The chancel south wall has a section with 3 ogee arches, a piscina with restored bowl and remains of an aumbry. Octagonal font near the north door; the low chancel screen and altar rail have re-set late C17 balusters. The pulpit is C17 with bands of blind arcading to the panels. The nave walls are lined with panelling said to be from box-pews; the fielded panels on the south wall date from the C18; those on the north wall are C17. 6 rows of pews are probably C15 - the bench ends with crudely carved poppy-heads, some with punched decoration; the backs are also original. Remaining woodwork dates from 1912. Memorials: in the west end of the north aisle a very fine marble chest tomb to Robert Stapylton, d1634. He is in full armour and has his feet on a Turk's head, his family crest. The chest has black Ionic colonnettes and 6 kneeling figures of his children. The tomb is railed off with thick wrought-iron railings set into the stonework; it was removed from the north side of the chancel (now the vestry) in 1912 and appears to have been altered; the north side of the tomb chest is crudely sealed over with rendering and there are several pieces of carved stone of varying dates in the railed-off area. On the south wall of the chancel is a marble tablet to Henry Stapylton (1779) by J Fisher of York, with an urn with ramshead and a painted coat of arms. Below this, on the floor of the chancel, is a large C14 indent which contained figures of a knight in armour and his wife with a border inscription and shields. In the south wall there is a fragment of a C10 cross with interlace carvings. 3 boards, painted with the royal arms of George III and funeral hatchments of the Stapleton family hang on the west and north walls.

Listing NGR: SE4735846580


Selected Sources

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details

Map

National Grid Reference: SE 47360 46577


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This copy shows the entry on 21-May-2024 at 03:32:19.