Church of St Cynfarch and St Mary is a Grade II* listed building in the Denbighshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 19 July 1966. A Victorian Church.

Church of St Cynfarch and St Mary

WRENN ID
salt-spire-vale
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Denbighshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
19 July 1966
Type
Church
Period
Victorian
Source
Cadw listing

Description

Church of St Cynfarch and St Mary

A large church characteristic of the double-naved layout favoured in the Vale of Clwyd. The masonry is mainly local limestone, axe-dressed and coursed, with some admixture of sandstone. The tower masonry and the 19th-century restorer's masonry at the heads of the walls and in the renewed buttresses at the east end is in similar limestone. The roofs are slate with tile ridges and stone finial crosses.

The blocked north doorway is in local sandstone and has a four-centred chamfered arch; it was blocked in the 19th-century restoration with monumental stone fragments. All the windows are four-centred, having been renewed in the restoration or given new tracery following their original designs. The south door, within the porch, was redesigned in the restoration. The east window of the nave is of five main lights, with quatrefoil panels at the foot; early grotesque heads were retained as finials to the label mould. The east window of the aisle is much smaller, of five main lights, featuring brattished transoms; the second window on the south side is similar. The first window to the south is in four main lights with ogee heads. The other windows are of three lights.

The interior consists of a main nave and a south nave of equal size, separated by an arcade of six arches. The arches are of two orders, chamfered, on octagonal columns. Both have similar 19th-century-reconstructed roofs of seven bays, using original timbers, plus a ceilinged part of barrel shape over the chancel of each. The trusses have high collars, arched braces, and quatrefoil and trefoil apertures at top. The celures have decorated longitudinal fascias and close-set lateral plain ribs. The floor is of red quarry tiles laid diagonally, plus Goodwin's encaustic tiles in the chancel and sanctuary of the main nave. The pews throughout are in a plain Gothic style with very little decoration.

Both chancels are defined by a single step and a low oak Gothic screen, that in the south nave being a remnant of the rood screen. The pulpit and choirstalls are 19th-century Gothic, the panels pierced with miniature tracery, conforming to the style of the rood screen remnants. The reredos is a frieze of ogee-headed panels said to be alabaster, now painted; it has a cross at centre flanked by the Archangel and the Virgin. The altar rails are of brass on bronze decorative standards, and have a removable centre section instead of a gate. There are no stalls in the chancel of the south nave: here the east wall is panelled; the altar rails are of oak, also with a removable centre section. A brass plaque against the east wall records the formation of the war memorial chapel here. A low oak screen in the first bay of the arcade separates the two sanctuaries. Each has a 19th-century aumbry at right, that of the main altar being ogee-headed.

Mediaeval glass from the east window, including a fragment indicating the date 1503, is preserved in mixed condition in the second window on the south side. The east window now has a large representation of the Crucifixion with angels in the top lights and the Last Supper beneath (to John and Mary Puleston, 1872). The first window on the south side shows St James, St Mary, St John and St Winnifred, with scenes of the Nativity beneath, by Kempe (Wynne and Goodrich families, 1890). The first and second windows on the north side are to members of the Preston family of Llwyn-ynn. The first is by Westlake, 1873, showing the risen Christ; the second shows St Anne, the Virgin and Child and St Elizabeth, dated 1880. West of the porch is a window by Whall, 1893, with Christ and children, with its side lights filled with earlier flowered quarries. The other windows have textured and coloured glass.

St Mary's has a good set of wall monuments. The earliest is to Thomas ab Rice, dated 1582, at the west, with a coat of arms, and a later monument of the same family above. Against the south wall is a monument inscribed in Latin, with an eared architrave and rounded pediment, erected by the prominent Jacobite Sir Watkin Williams Wynne to commemorate his former teacher, the Reverend Henry Price, dated 1748, headmaster of Ruthin school, who also resisted the Hanoverian succession. To the east on the north wall is a Gothic alabaster monument to Sir John and Margaret Puleston, dated 1908.

In the floor of the north chancel, north of the altar, is a slab to David son of Madoc: a shield charged with a leopard and roses, in front of a drawn sword, dating from the mid 14th century. In the south nave there is a fine late-mediaeval parish chest.

Detailed Attributes

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