Church Of All Saints is a Grade II listed building in the West Lindsey local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 November 1966. Church.
Church Of All Saints
- WRENN ID
- ragged-lantern-swift
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- West Lindsey
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 30 November 1966
- Type
- Church
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Church of All Saints is a parish church built in 1857 by T.C. Hine. It features rock-faced ashlar stone, stone-coped gables, and slate roofs. The church includes a nave, chancel, south porch, north chapel, and a south-west bell tower. The west end has three buttresses and a plinth with paired lancet windows, topped by a trefoil light in a circular surround. The octagonal bell tower at the south-west corner rises above a smaller lancet and has cusped lights in ashlar surrounds with a pointed roof.
On the north wall of the nave, there is a single lancet and a two-light window with a quatrefoil above. The north chapel has a single lancet in its west wall, a two-light window, and another single lancet on its north wall, with two gables on that side. The east wall of the chapel features a single lancet. The chancel's east wall has a three-light window with a cusped quatrefoil at the top. The south wall of the chancel has a pointed, single chamfered priest's door with elaborate ironwork, flanked by single lancets. The south wall of the nave has a two-light window and a single lancet.
The south porch has an outer pointed chamfered doorway with ogee-headed side lights, and the inner doorway matches the outer. All windows have cusped tracery at the heads, hood moulds, and decorative label stops. Inside, there is a pointed chancel arch with double chamfers, octagonal responds, and capitals. A double chamfered pointed arch leads into the north chapel. Texts are painted above the south doorway, the chancel arch, and the priest's door. The north chapel is divided into two parts: the eastern chamber connects with the choir, while the western chamber contains pews. Between them is a two-light opening with Early English style shafts and pointed heads. The eastern chamber is accessed through a second pointed arch from the chancel. All fittings, including the unusual altar table supported on turned balusters, choir stalls, and lectern, date from 1857.
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