Church Of St Bartholomew

Date:
18 Oct 1999
Location:
Church Of St Bartholomew, Bayton, Malvern Hills, Worcestershire, DY14 9LW
Reference:
IOE01/01881/02
Type:
Photograph (Digital)
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Description

This information is taken from the statutory List as it was in 2001 and may not be up to date.

BAYTON CP BAYTON SO 67 SE

2/7 Church of St Bartholomew

18.4.66

- II*

Parish church. C12, altered C15 and 1817; restored 1905. Part sandstone rubble with ashlar dressings, part, sandstone ashlar; plain tiled roofs, continuous over nave and chancel with parapet at east end. West tower, nave with south porch, chancel and north organ chamber. Perpendicular and Georgian styles. West tower: 1817; two stages separated by a band; chamfered plinths and diagonal buttresses with offsets at west end; lower stage has two pointed windows with Y-tracery, one above the other in the west elevation, and a pointed south door above which is a date stone with a circular moulding; the belfry stage has pointed single-light louvred bell-chamber openings; all openings on both stages have moulded keyblocks and imposts; above the belfry stage is a moulded cornice and embattled parapet. Nave: walls are C12 with windows replaced c1905; west end has rectangular lights flanking tower; easternmost windows of north and south elevations are of 3 lights, the north one has a cambered head and the south one a 4-centred head; both retain their C12 jambs; both elevations have a 2-light square-headed westernmost window which has a hood mould with returns. South porch: 1905; timber-framed and gabled on sandstone base; chamfered pointed archway flanked by ogee-arched open- ings with brattished tie-beam above; four square panels each side with upper cusped ogee-arched traceried detail and rendered infill. South doorway is C12 and has a round-arched shafted order with lozenge detail on the face and soffit, a similar rear arch and a plain tympanum [originally believed to have been figured (Pevsner)]. Chancel: walls are C12 at west end, remainder rebuilt 1905; angled buttresses with offsets at west end; 5-light east window with loophole above; 2-light square-headed windows each having a hood mould with returns at eastern end of side elevations; the plain jambs of a blocked window is visible in the south-west wall and beneath is a mid-C17 memorial with a Latin inscription; the gabled organ chamber projects from the north-west wall; it has a cusped lancet at its north gable end and on its east side steps lead down to a basement door which has a cambered head. Interior: nave roof is C15 and has cambered tie-beams, braced collars and two tiers of paired swept wind-braces.

Chancel has a wagon roof of 1905. Chancel screen also 1905 and has a wide central pointed archway with narrow traceried openings each side and also small traceried openings in the spandrels. The roof truss above has close-set struts above and below the collar. The chancel has a pointed archway into the organ chamber, sedilia and the choir stalls incorporate early C17 linenfold panelling with fishscale detail similar to that at Shakenhurst nearby (qv). The font is a fine mid-C12 example of circular plan, the bowl elaborately carved with beaded scroll and cable mouldings and the stem enriched with formal foliage in low relief. The pulpit contains some C17 panelling with frieze detail. A hatchment is displayed on the west wall. This medieval church retains much of its original wall- ing, its C15 nave roof and a fine Norman font. (VCH iv, p 240; BOE, p 75).

Listing NGR: SO6912373223

Content

This is part of the Series: IOE01/2205 IOE Records taken by R Derek Wilbraham; within the Collection: IOE01 Images Of England

Rights

© R Derek Wilbraham. Source: Historic England Archive

This photograph was taken for the Images of England project

People & Organisations

Photographer: Wilbraham, R Derek

Rights Holder: Wilbraham, R Derek

Keywords

Ashlar, Render, Rubble, Sandstone, Tile, Medieval Parish Church, Religious Ritual And Funerary, Church, Place Of Worship, Commemorative Monument, Commemorative