Church of St Mary
CHURCH OF ST MARY, MAIN STREET
Listed on the National Heritage List for England. Search over 400,000 listed places
Overview
- Heritage Category:
- Listed building
- List Entry Number:
- 1149659
- Date first listed:
- 10-Oct-1966
- Statutory Address:
- CHURCH OF ST MARY, MAIN STREET
Location
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Images of England Project
- Date:
- 2007-01-30
- Reference:
- IOE01/16265/12
- Rights:
- © Mr David H. Garbutt. Source: Historic England Archive
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Discover moreOfficial list entry
- Heritage Category:
- Listed building
- List Entry Number:
- 1149659
- Date first listed:
- 10-Oct-1966
- Statutory Address 1:
- CHURCH OF ST MARY, MAIN STREET
Location
- Statutory Address:
- CHURCH OF ST MARY, MAIN STREET
The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.
- District:
- North Yorkshire (Unitary Authority)
- Parish:
- Luttons
- National Grid Reference:
- SE 93064 69225
Details
LUTTONS MAIN STREET SE 96 NW (north side) West Lutton 13/33 Church of St Mary 10.10.66 GV II* Church. 1874-75. By G E Street for Sir Tatton Sykes. Sandstone ashlar on chamfered plinth. Tile-hung belfry with timbered bell-openings. Tile roofs. West belfry: 2 1/2-bay aisled nave and south porch; chancel and vestry. Pointed west window of 4 lights with geometric tracery beneath leaf-stopped coved hoodmould. Belfry with balustraded bell-openings on all sides, beneath broach spire with weathercock. Gabled porch on double-chamfered, roll-moulded plinth. Pointed-arched opening of 3 orders dying into the sides. Bracketed niche above, containing a sculpted Virgin and Child under a rib-vaulted, crocketed canopy. West return has traceried round window. Interior of porch is cross-vaulted in stone, ribs springing from slender columns with moulded capitals. Similar columns support pointed arch moulded with fleurons.over cusped south doorway. Cusped and pointed east doorway gives access to south aisle. East of porch are paired and tripled trefoil- headed windows on either side of central buttress: second buttress further west. Pointed 2-light cinquefoil window beneath leaf-stopped hoodmould in aisle east end. North aisle has 2 groups of trefoil-headed windows and central buttress. Chancel south wall contains wide, pointed window of 3 stepped lancets with traceried head, and rounded triangular window enclosing 3 trefoils to east. Both windows have leaf-stopped hoodmoulds. Central and east angle buttresses. On north side, gabled vestry projects, with 2-light cinquefoil window in gable end. Pointed doorway in west return contains square-headed door beneath recessed shaped lintel. In chancel wall, pointed 2-light window and stack, rising at rear of vestry. East angle buttress. Circular traceried east window recessed in moulded pointed arch between angle buttresses. Moulded sill band encircles church and forms hoodmould over porch arch. Buttresses are gableted and on chamfered, roll-moulded bases. Coped gables, and-gable crosses to porch, nave and chancel. Interior. North and south arcades of pointed arches on cylindrical columns with moulded capitals and continuous hoodmoulds. Nave windows are deeply- splayed in broach-stopped, chamfered openings with semicircular heads. Pointed chancel arch of 3 orders, the outer chamfered, the inner 2 roll- moulded, on slender round columns with moulded capitals. Vaulted chancel on 2 bays of pointed arches on slender rounded columns with moulded capitals. Arches are of 2 orders, the inner roll-moulded with fillets, the outer chamfered with nailhead moulding. On the south side, sedilia, aumbry and piscina are grouped beneath cusped, pointed arches on detached columns with continuous gabled hoodmould. Pairs of similar blind arches flank altar. Richly painted and carved timber altar with painted triptych reredos depicting The Crucifixion with a pendant Deposition, by Burlison and Grylls. Stone pulpit and octagonal font with carved, traceried sides. Metalwork includes iron and brass chancel screen; lamp brackets, some with brass oil lamps, in aisles and chancel; wrought-iron door furniture and hinges. Stained glass by Burlison and Grylls, especially notable being the west "Tree of Jesse" window. Roofs. 2 arched-braced king-strut trusses in nave, with moulded struts and tie-beams; third, corbelled queen-post truss at west end, with cusped and pierced spandrels. Aisle roofs are pent. Roof patterned with attached painted metal suns and stars. Vestry: one order of a Norman arch with lobed mouldings and central corbel head is reset over the outside doorway. Tunnel-vaulted roof, similarly decorated to nave.
Listing NGR: SE9306469225
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
- Legacy System number:
- 329373
- Legacy System:
- LBS
Legal
Map
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