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

Church Of All Saints

WRENN ID
winter-forge-pine
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
East Riding of Yorkshire
Country
England
Type
Church
Period
Medieval
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The Church of All Saints is a Grade II* listed building located in North Dalton. It features a nave dating from the 12th century, an early 13th-century chancel, and a 15th-century west tower, which was restored in 1872. The church is constructed of ashlar stone and has graduated slate roofs.

The west tower consists of three stages, with a moulded plinth and string-courses, and is supported by diagonal buttresses. It has pointed two-light belfry openings adorned with ogee tracery, which are set beneath hood-moulds with heraldic stops. The tower is topped with a pierced crenellated parapet and features 19th-century corner pinnacles. The west façade includes a two-light pointed window with Perpendicular tracery that has two brattished transoms.

The nave has 19th-century paired lancets on the west side and three additional 19th-century lancets on the east side, all under a continuous hood-mould. The south door is elaborately designed with three orders and attached shafts, featuring a capital on the west side with human busts under arcading, and a capital on the east side with inverted ash leaves. The door has square inner orders with chevron decoration and a shallow outer order with roll moulding. The pointed north door is also under a hood-mould and has nailhead and human head stops. Inside, there is a pre-Conquest interlace slab set into the west wall on the north side.

The chancel contains two lancets under hood-moulds with foliage stops, along with three 19th-century lancets in the east gable. The chancel arch is elliptical and dates from the 12th century, featuring plain reveals, imposts with saltire crosses, and chevrons on the extrados and soffit. There is a round-headed Priest's door in the north wall with hollow-chamfered imposts and a hood-mould. The chancel also includes aumbries on the north and south sides and five diapered panels behind the altar. A 12th-century tub font with a constricted waist is also present in the church.

More on this building

Sign in or create a free account to unlock:

  • No EPC on record for this property
  • No sale records on file
  • No related consent applications matched
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
Create free account

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.

Nearby listed buildings

  1. Dovecote at the Manor House Grade II 59 m
  2. Gate-Piers to the Manor House Grade II 70 m
  3. Ransomes Row Grade II 265 m
  4. Church of St. Andrew Grade II* 2.9 km
  5. Stables Barn and Pigeoncote to Manor Farm Grade II 3.0 km
  6. Manor Farmhouse Grade II 3.0 km
  7. Coach-House and Stables to the Old Rectory Grade II 3.0 km
  8. Church of St Andrew Grade I 3.0 km
  9. The Old Rectory Grade II 3.1 km
  10. Warter Farmhouse Grade II 3.3 km