Church Of All Saints is a Grade II listed building in the Cheshire East local planning authority area, England. Church.

Church Of All Saints

WRENN ID
veiled-cupola-storm
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheshire East
Country
England
Type
Church
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The Church of All Saints is a church built around 1840, with a chancel added in 1893. It is constructed of red Flemish bond brick with ashlar dressings and features a roof made of fishscale tiles. The building includes a nave, a north-eastern vestry, and a chancel.

The western front has a central gabled porch with an ashlar kneeler and coping. It features a central pointed arch with a double-chamfered rebate and a hood mould above, which has floral label stops. At the top of the gable, there is an ashlar projecting panel surmounted by a cross. Above this panel, a triple lancet window with a hood mould and label stops projects into the gable. Square buttressing pieces at either corner transition to octagonal upper bodies. There is also an ashlar roundel at the upper gable, which may have once been a clock face, and a bell turret sits atop the gable.

The south front has an ashlar plinth and an ashlar panel above, supporting four lancet windows with chamfered reveals and ashlar hood moulds featuring rudimentary label stops. Similar square buttresses at the corners transition to octagonal upper bodies. The northern facade mirrors this design, with the exception of the vestry on the left side.

The chancel is apsidal and contains five windows, with the central window topped by a gablet. All chancel windows have Ruabon brick quoins and are topped by a parapet made of similar brick.

Inside, the nave has plastered walls, while the chancel reveals exposed brown and yellow brick. The chancel windows are late works by Morris and Co., with the central three from 1924 depicting Christ crucified, flanked by the Virgin Mary on the left and St John on the right. The two flanking windows from 1928 show St Peter and St Paul on the left and right, respectively.

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