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Church of All Hallows

A Grade I Listed Building in Bardsey, Leeds

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.883 / 53°52'58"N

Longitude: -1.4453 / 1°26'43"W

OS Eastings: 436561

OS Northings: 443124

OS Grid: SE365431

Mapcode National: GBR LRBJ.WS

Mapcode Global: WHDB5.RNYK

Plus Code: 9C5WVHM3+6V

Entry Name: Church of All Hallows

Listing Date: 30 March 1966

Grade: I

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1135652

English Heritage Legacy ID: 342127

Also known as: All Hallows Church, Bardsey, West Yorkshire

ID on this website: 101135652

Location: All Hallows' Church, Bardsey, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS17

County: Leeds

Civil Parish: Bardsey cum Rigton

Built-Up Area: Bardsey

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Bardsey All Hallows

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: Church building Medieval architecture

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Description


SE34SE
7/1

BARDSEY-CUM-RIGTON
CHURCH LANE, LS17 (east side)
Church of All Hallows

30.3.66

GV
I
Parish church. Anglo-Saxon tower between 850-950 raised later C10, parapet
early C20, north aisle Norman, c1100-1125; south aisle Transitional, c1175-1200;
aisles widened C14 with Perpendicular windows inserted C15; chancel early C14;
much restored north chapel c1520, now the vicar's vestry; south chapel built as
the Bayley family pew c1724 now choir vestry; roof raised C19; restored 1909
by Charles R. Chorley and Son (Leeds) (Linstrum, p374). Red sandstone coursed
rubble to tower and aisles; hammer-dressed gritstone to clerestorey, chancel and
south transept; ashlar porch and dressings to restored windows; stone slate roofs.
West tower, aisled nave with clerestorey, south porch, north and south chapels,
chancel. Slender tower embraced by aisles gives the west front an unusual
appearance as if the tower were rising out of a gable. Long and short work on
this face: 8 courses of large dressed quoins; masonry disturbed from insertion
of 2-light Perpendicular window matching flanking windows set in west end of
aisles with C12 lancets set between tower; earlier roof line of aisles clearly
discernible as is steeply-pitched gable on tower, thought to indicate the presence
of an original pre-Conquest porch (Pevsner, p90). West and north faces of tower
have a small light under lancet and inserted 2-light Perpendicular belfry windows
with clock-face to north; south face has two C12 two-light baluster belfry windows;
east face has traces of herringbone masonry; embattled parapet with corbel table
(restored). Nave: 3 bays. Gabled porch set in 1st bay protects repositioned
fine-carved Norman south doorway: 3 orders, outer with beakhead ornament, chevron,
plain inner, carried on 2 engaged columns with decorated capitals and moulded
impost. Aisles, with offset buttresses, and clerestorey have 2-light windows;
north doorway has pointed arch. North chapel: single bay, extension of aisle
with buttress between. South chapel, at right angles has coped gable flush with
aisle, offset buttress, set in apex is stone carved with 5 blind trefoils, gable
stack. Its right return has 2-light window (restored). Lower single-bay chancel:
has angle buttresses and 3-light east window with round-headed lights, Y-tracery
filled with mouchettes; on south, priest's door to left of original C14 two-light
window with cusped lights in deeply-chamfered surround.
Interior: base of tower has round-arched doorway with stilted-arched window
above in north and south faces. Original 4 angles of the pre-Conquest nave
still remain: projecting corners with large dressed quoins to west and ½ columns
on tall square bases with different capitals. Western tower-arch altered,
(enlarged) in line with chancel arch, has 3 discernible roof lines: a flat roof,
2 steeply-pitched roof lines before present slightly flatter-pitched roof.
North arcade has short cylindrical columns with scolloped capitals and round-arched
arcade. South arcade taller with bell-shaped capitals with curled-leaf corners
and pointed arches with hoodmoulds. Chancel: north Tudor-arch blocked by organ
inserted c1867 (replaced 1934) with small cusped light to left; south wall has
two C14 pointed-arched windows with a lower cusped light. Sanctuary: 3-niche
sedilia with ogee lintels of C19 character, C15 piscina has trefoil-cusped arch.
Memorials: chancel: carved stone tablet to Charles Lister c1684 decorated with
winged-head angel spandrels; memorial to Richard Capstick, flat obelisk marble
tablet by J. Parker c1685; good wall tablet to Elizabeth Thorpe wife of Baron
Thorpe c1666, strapwork cartouche with broken pediment with heraldic lozenge;
2 funeral tablets to the Lane-Fox family of Bramham (q.v.). Base of tower
has 2 upright medieval grave slabs, one decorated with a cross. Royal Coat of
Arms c1819 and Benefactions board in south chapel. C19 king-post roof of heavy
scantling.

The church is of considerable importance. The tower is probably the oldest
Saxon work in Yorkshire and the only example in the county of the former evidence
of a west porch, the tower being erected over it as at Monkwearmouth and Corbridge.
It is prominent within the village and has a remarkable visual appearance, the
tower curiously thin in proportion to the rest of the church. Illustrated in:
R. A. Carter, Yorkshire Churches, (1976) p6.
D. Linstrum, West Yorkshire Architects and Architecture, (1978) p158.
E. Pontefract and M. Hartley, The Charm of Yorkshire Churches, (no date) p15.
N. Pevsner, Yorkshire West Riding, (1974) pp89,90.


Listing NGR: SE3655843124

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