Church Of All Saints is a Grade II* listed building in the East Riding of Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 7 February 1968. A Medieval Church.

Church Of All Saints

WRENN ID
still-storey-martin
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
East Riding of Yorkshire
Country
England
Date first listed
7 February 1968
Type
Church
Period
Medieval
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The Church of All Saints is a church that dates from the 14th century, featuring a nave and chancel from that period, a south porch from the 16th to early 17th century, and a west tower built in 1904. The church underwent extensive restoration by Brodick, Lowther and Walker in the same year. It is constructed of ashlar stone, with brick used for the south porch and pebbledash on the porch and chancel, topped with a flat tile roof.

The west tower has three stages and diagonal buttresses, with a quatrefoil window in the ringing chamber and two square-headed cinquefoil lights in the belfry. It is crowned by a crenellated parapet with eight crocketed pinnacles. The nave consists of three bays and includes a south porch, while the chancel has two bays. The west window of the nave features two lights with Perpendicular tracery and there is a clock present. The nave also has two pointed windows with early 20th-century curvilinear tracery, and the south door has a segmental head on plain reveals.

The south porch contains a double hollow chamfered segmental-headed door, with lancet windows on the north and south sides. The north elevation features a lancet window to the west and a pointed north door with a continuous hollow chamfer. The chancel has two 2-light windows with curvilinear tracery and a pointed priests' door with a continuous chamfer. Both the nave and chancel have coped gables with cross finials. The pointed east window consists of three lights with reticulated tracery and a hoodmould that has face-mask stops.

Inside, the chancel features an early 15th-century brass in the southeast corner dedicated to Sir John and Lady Agnes Routh, depicting two figures in prayer under a double canopy of crocketed ogees. In the northeast corner, there is a damaged early 14th-century effigy of a knight with crossed legs. Additionally, there is an early 18th-century pulpit with raised and fielded bolection-moulded panels.

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