Details
HUMBERSIDE
GLANFORD
5264 SE 91 NE SAXBY ALL SAINTS CHURCH LANE
(east side) 7/58 Church of All Saints 6.11.67 GV II
Church. Rebuilt 1845-9 by George Gilbert Scott, with some re-used medieval
details; tower rebuilt in 1873 by Neville. Vestry added in 1880. Limestone
ashlar with Westmoreland slate roof. Late C13 Gothic style. 5-bay nave
with north aisle, south porch and tower adjoining south side; 3-bay chancel
with vestry adjoining north side. Nave: buttresses, chamfered plinth; 2-
light trefoiled windows with pierced quatrefoils above, pair of west lancets
with pierced quatrefoil above. North aisle: 2 lancets and 2 similar 2-light
trefoiled windows with quatrefoils, re-set C13 trefoiled lancets to east and
west; corbel table with two carved head spouts, coped parapet. Gabled
timber porch on ashlar plinth. 4-stage tower with chamfered plinth, angle
buttresses, chamfered string courses; pointed chamfered door to first stage,
lancets to second stage, 2-light Y-traceried windows to third stage,
similar louvred belfry openings to top stage, with clockface of 1893 to
east. Cornice, angle gargoyles, embattled parapet with crocketed angle
pinnacles; short spire with wrought-iron finial. Chancel: plinth,
buttresses, cill band; lancets with hoodmoulds, single pointed 3-light
traceried east window. Interior. Arcade of cylindrical piers, octagonal
east respond, carved head corbel west respond; double-chamfered round
arches. West lancets have nook shafts, moulded arches and hoodmoulds with
carved head stops. Double-chamfered pointed arch to organ chamber/tower on
carved head corbels. Double-chamfered pointed chancel arch on octagonal
responds. Continuous hoodmould to chancel windows; east window with nook
shafts and hoodmould with headstops, south east window has a wooden seat
below flanked by trefoiled niches cut into the window reveals. Wooden
credence shelf on north wall supported on a fine medieval carved head
corbel. Monuments in chancel include: finely-inscribed marble wall tablet
to Rev John Consett of 1783; marble tablet of 1831 to John Barton and wife
Margaret with arms in relief by Skelton of York; large ashlar tablet to John
Watson Barton, probably of late 1840s, with richly-carved Gothic-style
ornament by R Brown of London. Original fittings include carved ashlar
pulpit, carved wooden altar rails and pew ends, and stained glass. North
aisle east window painted by C E Kempe, 1876. N Pevsner and J Harris, The
Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, 1978, 349.
Listing NGR: SE9921916694
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
Legacy System number:
165858
Legacy System:
LBS
Sources
Books and journals Pevsner, N, Harris, J, Antram, N, The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, (1989), 349
Legal
This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.
End of official list entry
Print the official list entry