Details
766/2/1 CHURCH STREET
30-MAR-51 (North side)
CHURCH OF ST CATHERINE II
The nave and west tower were built in 1836-7 by Robert Ebbels. The chancel was added in 1849 and galleries erected in the nave at the same time. In 1897 the south aisle and south porch were added, probably by Edgar J Harvey. In 1910 the chapel was added south of the chancel and chancel furnishings added. The spire was demolished in 1921. In 1963 the clergy vestry was added at the east end of the south aisle. Modern northern extension is not of interest. MATERIALS: Local coursed stone rubble. The roof material is concealed by parapets. The C20 clergy vestry is constructed of concrete. PLAN: Nave of five bays with west tower of three stages, south aisle with clerestorey, south porch, two bay chancel and chapel south of chancel. EXTERIOR: C13 Gothic style. The west tower is in three stages with angle buttresses diminishing to the castellated, corner-turreted parapet. The top or bell stage has pierced wooden screens to the lancet windows. The intermediate stage has an arched window with paired cinquefoils facing west and clock face to south. Below is an arched entrance. A projecting south porch has a gable flanked by angle buttresses with crockets. The north side of the nave has simple lancets with drip-moulding and corbel heads flanked by angle buttresses. The south clerestorey has arched windows of three lights with trefoil heads and below the south aisle has arched windows of three lights with drip-moulding, divided by angle buttresses with gabled heads. The chancel has simple lancet windows to north and south and the east window comprises a triple lancet window flanked by single lancets, all with drip-moulding and corbel heads. On the north side is a projecting gable with blocked arched window. The south chapel is gabled to the south with kneelers and arched window with intersecting arches. To the east is a projecting porch with arched entrance with corbel heads and stairs, L-shaped on plan, with solid stone balustrades. The 1963 clergy vestry is gabled ended with kneelers, has end quoins and arched windows to the ends and flat-arched windows to the north side. INTERIOR: The nave has a decorated queen post roof of five bays and the tie beams have trefoil decoration to the spandrels and are supported on angel corbels. The south arcade has pointed arches supported on clustered columns, which were blocked c.1971 to provide a parish hall in the south aisle. The 1849 west gallery has splayed ends and panels of carved quatrefoils with blank shields, supported on 4 octagonal wooden columns. Later C19 photographs show there was originally a similar gallery on the north side of the nave. The south aisle has a sloping roof with angled queen struts and bolted knees and is supported on stone corbels. The chancel roof has four simple arch-braced trusses supported on pendant corbels. PRINCIPAL FIXTURES: There is an octagonal carved stone font and an octagonal carved wooden pulpit. Two funeral hatchments on the west wall of the nave are probably those of the Hamborough family of Steephill Castle. Below is a marble wall tablet in the form of a sarcophagus with lions' paws and antefixae to the Rev. Philip William Tallents (d. 1843). The south wall of the chancel has a marble wall tablet of a sarcophagus on lion's paws with antefixae and shield to Benjamin Freeman Coleman (d. 1838) and also to John Noble Coleman (d.1872), the first incumbent of the church. A wall tablet to the Rev. John Hall Shaw (d. 1897) records that the south aisle was built as a memorial to him. There are further brass wall memorial tablets. The organ case, chancel choir stalls, lecterns and reredos are of c.1910. The only pictorial stained glass is in the east window, depicting The Good Shepherd flanked by St Luke and St Andrew over Jesus the Healer, the Crucifixion and the Resurrection. HISTORY: The site was presented by Major Charles Poplin Hill and the church was erected and endowed at the sole expense of Mr John Hamborough of Steephill Castle. The foundation stone was laid by Mrs Hamborough in June 1836 and the church consecrated on 20 July 1837. The church was presented by Mr Hamborough to the parish, which had formerly been part of the Parish of Newchurch. In 1849 three galleries were erected in the nave but the south gallery was probably dismantled in 1897 when the south aisle was added and the north aisle was dismantled in 1971. A watercolour in the church signed by Edgar J Harvey in June 1896 indicates he was the architect of the south porch and south aisle. The south aisle was carried out as a memorial to the vicar of the church, The Rev. John Hall Shaw, who died in that year. The spire was removed in 1921 because it was leaning. SOURCES
Lloyd, D and Pevsner, N., The Buildings of England: Isle of Wight (2006), 285.
Morris, G., St Catherine's Church Ventnor (church guide 2008). REASONS FOR DESIGNATION
The Church of St Catherine, Ventnor, of 1837 with 1897, 1910 and later additions, is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* Exterior Architectural Interest: an 1837 stone church with prominent west tower, originally crowned by a tall spire, with chancel added in 1849 in similar style and south aisle of 1897.
* Interior Architectural Interest: the nave has an unusually elaborate 1830s queen post roof and 1849 west gallery,
* Memorials of Note: there are a number of C19 memorial wall tablets and furnishings of circa 1910.
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
Legacy System number:
420698
Legacy System:
LBS
End of official list entry
Print the official list entry