Church Of All Saints is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 June 1966. Church.
Church Of All Saints
- WRENN ID
- forgotten-hearth-jay
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 30 June 1966
- Type
- Church
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Church of All Saints is a church built in 1863, with a 20th-century extension, designed by W B Stewart. It features dressed limestone on a moulded chamfered plinth, limestone ashlar dressings, and a slate roof. The west end includes a bellcote, a four-bay aisled nave, and a south porch, along with a chancel and vestry. The extension is located on the north side of the nave. The west end has dwarf offset-buttresses and lancet windows with chamfered sill bands, separated by a central buttress, and a trefoil light in the gable end. The gabled bellcote sits on a chamfered plinth and has two pointed arches on colonnettes, along with a clock face on the east side. The gabled porch features a chamfered pointed opening and two early corbel heads that have been reset inside. A double-chamfered doorway leads to a pointed door with fine wrought-iron hinges. The buttressed nave has three pairs of lancets: one to the west of the porch and two to the east, all above a chamfered sill band. The north side of the nave has lancets on either side of the extension. The chancel has an angle buttress at the east end and a pointed priest's door flanked by lancets, with the east window consisting of three stepped lancets over a chamfered sill band. All openings, except those in the nave's north wall, feature corbelled hoodmoulds. The church has coped gables and shaped kneelers on its steeply pitched roofs, with gablets on the bellcote.
Inside, the north arcade consists of double-chamfered pointed arches on cylindrical piers with moulded capitals. The double-chamfered pointed chancel arch has a corbelled inner order and a corbelled hoodmould. A pillar piscina is preserved at the east end of the aisle, and there is a Norman tub font on a 19th-century pedestal. Additionally, there is a wall monument to members of the Russell family, created by Skelton of York around 1846.
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