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

Church Of All Saints

WRENN ID
rooted-spandrel-linden
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
East Lindsey
Country
England
Type
Church
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The Church of All Saints is a parish church with origins in the 12th century, and significant development in the early 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries. It was largely restored in 1903, with the chancel, vestry, and porch rebuilt at that time. The church is constructed of dressed greenstone, with some red brick and render, and half-timbered sections. The roof is lead, with plain tiles to the porch.

The building comprises a nave with a west bellcote, a south porch, a chancel, and a north vestry. The south aisle and tower have been demolished. The bellcote is gabled with a single arch for the bell. The west nave wall is slightly set back and features a single arched window with three trefoil-arched and cusped lights, and two vertical rows of quoins below. The north nave wall has a blocked doorway, and to its right, a window with three trefoil-arched and cusped lights. The west wall of the vestry has a doorway with a plank door, and the north and east walls each have a single window with two arched lights. The east chancel has a large arched window with three cinquefoil-arched and cusped lights. The south chancel has two windows, the one on the right featuring two trefoil-arched and cusped lights, and the one on the left with three similar lights. The south nave wall has a heavily restored 15th-century arched window with two lights and panel tracery. To the left of this is a 20th-century gabled, half-timbered porch, with decorative bargeboards and an arched doorway with a double door flanked by decorative trefoil-arched lights with lead lozenge panes. An inner, chamfered arched doorway, reset from the early 13th century, features continuous imposts, a hood mould, and a worn human head label stop on the right.

Inside the church, there is a double-chamfered chancel arch, the inner order supported on circular responds. A heavily restored 15th-century chancel screen has cusped panel tracery. A chamfered arch separates the chancel and vestry, appearing foreshortened to the west. On the west wall of the nave are the remains of continuous imposts from the 12th century. Evidence of single responds, likely from the 14th century, are visible in the east and west corners of the south nave wall, indicating the former location of an aisle.

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