Church Of All Saints is a Grade II listed building in the Sheffield local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 June 1973. Church.
Church Of All Saints
- WRENN ID
- open-entrance-cobweb
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Sheffield
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 28 June 1973
- Type
- Church
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Parish church. Built in 1789, remodelled in 1843. Transepts, chancel, vestries and south chapel were added between 1906 and 1908 by Temple Moore. The interior was remodelled in 1964 and 1971 by GG Pace. The building has an ashlar west end and rubble east end with ashlar dressings, beneath slate roofs.
The plan comprises a chancel with clerestory, south chapel, north vestries, and transepts all with undercroft and with round and square headed openings. There is a porched aisleless nave and west tower.
The exterior shows early 20th-century additions with buttresses and coped gables and single lancet windows. The chancel east end displays three chamfered lancets, above which are three larger graduated lancets with hoodmoulds. On the north and south sides, the clerestory contains eight lancets. The south chapel has three lancets to the south and a single one to the east, with hoodmould. The vestries feature a canted north-east corner with two lancets and a square corner stack, with three lancets to the north and above, to the west, a single lancet. The south transept has five lancets with linked hoodmould and a clerestory with three lancets to the east and two to the west. To the east is a lean-to projection with a lancet to the south and to the east. The north transept has similar fenestration with three lancets with hoodmoulds. In the transept return angles are square flat-roofed porches with shouldered Norman style doorways. The five bay nave has a plinth, sillband, chamfered eaves, coped gables and west clasping buttresses. On either side are five single lancets with hoodmoulds. The west end has a round-headed window on each floor on either side of the tower. The unbuttressed square west tower of three stages has a plinth, quoins, string courses, corbel table, crenellated parapet and pyramidal slate roof. The first stage has to the west a Norman style doorway with shafts and above it a round-headed window, also with shafts. To the south is a chamfered doorway. The second stage has a trefoil to the west and a clock to the north and south. The bell stage has a single lancet opening on each side with shafts and hoodmould.
The interior of the chancel has a double chamfered arch with hoodmould and clustered shafts, and a segmental arched wooden roof. The north side has a three bay arcade with a smaller central pointed arch flanked by a larger segmental arch to the left and a round one to the right, all with hoodmoulds, and round piers with flanking shafts. Above is an eight bay arcade with five windows and three arches with wooden screens from 1926. The south side has a similar arcade with a smaller central arch flanked by segmental arches, and above, an arcade with eight windows. The east end has two sillbands and a seven bay arcade with three windows with shafts and hoodmoulds. Above is a graduated triple lancet with hoodmoulds and below are two doors. The south chapel contains stained glass windows from the early 19th century. The vestries have wooden screens, cross beam ceilings and stained glass windows. The transepts and crossing have a continuous roof similar to the chancel. The north transept has stained glass windows to the north and a segment-headed double door to the west. The east side has a pointed arch and a round arch, both with hoodmoulds, with an octagonal pier. Above is a triple arcade with wooden screen from 1926. The south transept has a similar west door and stained glass windows to all sides. The east side has a round arch and a smaller pointed arch with a clustered pier and hoodmoulds. Above are three partly blocked lancets. The nave has a triangular vaulted ceiling carried on steel columns. The east end has a double chamfered crossing arch with triple shaft imposts. The side passages have double chamfered eastern arches and 19th-century stained glass windows. The west end has a central doorway, with another door above to the former gallery, and a single round-headed window on each floor at each side, the lower ones with stained glass.
Fittings include an ashlar font by GG Pace from 1964, and a 19th-century traceried octagonal pulpit and lectern. Memorials include numerous mid and late 19th-century wall tablets and World Wars memorial tablets on oak panel.
Detailed Attributes
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