Puneet Varma (Editor)

St Andrew's Church, East Heslerton

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OS grid reference
  
SE 926,766

Denomination
  
Anglican

Opened
  
1877

Architectural type
  
Church

Architect
  
George Edmund Street

Country
  
England

Founder(s)
  
Sir Tatton Sykes

Dedication
  
Andrew the Apostle

Designated as world heritage site
  
10 October 1966

St Andrew's Church, East Heslerton

Location
  
East Heslerton, North Yorkshire

Website
  
Churches Conservation Trust

Architectural style
  
Gothic Revival architecture

Similar
  
Coronation Chair, St Peter's Church - Bournemouth, St Mary the Virgin's Church, St John the Divine - Kennington, St James the Less - Pimlico

St Andrew's Church is a redundant Anglican church at the south end of the village of East Heslerton, North Yorkshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building and is under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.

Contents

History

The present church is the third to be constructed on the site. It was built in 1877 by Sir Tatton Sykes of Sledmere House, and designed by the architect G. E. Street. It has not been changed since, and is "notable for being a complete survival of a Street design, without alteration and with fittings intact". The church was vested in the Trust on 8 October 2002.

Exterior

St Andrew's is constructed in sandstone ashlar. The spire is roofed in stone slates, and the rest of the church in red tiles. Its plan consists of a five-bay nave with a porch, a south baptistry projecting at the western end, a chancel at a higher level with a vestry to its north, and a north tower. The porch is open, forming a narthex, and is supported on grey stone columns with foliated capitals. The tower is in two stages with angle buttresses and has a stair turret on its northwest. The lower stage is square with a west door and three stepped lancet windows on the north side. The upper stage is octagonal and contains four louvred lancet bell openings, between which are statues under trefoil-headed canopies. The statues are representations of Saint Ambrose, Saint Augustine, Saint Gregory, and Saint Jerome, the four Latin Fathers, by James Redfern. They were originally intended for the north porch of Bristol Cathedral but the dean said they were papist and they were rescued by Street. The spire is also octagonal, and contains lucarnes and quatrefoil windows in roundels, with a wrought iron cross on its summit. It is 105 feet (32 m) high. The chancel has an apse and contains lancet windows; it also has a wrought iron cross on the summit of its roof. The vestry has an east window of five stepped lancets.

Interior

All the original fittings and furniture have survived intact. In the chancel are a double sedilia and two piscinae, all with trefoil heads. The font has an octagonal bowl standing on a pedestal of clustered columns. Its cover is decorated with wrought ironwork. The pulpit is in Caen stone and marble. The altarpiece is a painted polyptych depicting the Te Deum. Between the nave and chancel is a wrought iron screen with gates in the centre. The chancel is floored with encaustic tiles. All the stained glass is by Clayton and Bell. The window behind the organ depicts the Creation, and the west window the Nativity. The pews are in oak, and the floor of the nave is boarded in oak. There is a ring of three bells, which were cast in 1876–77 by John Taylor & Co of Loughborough.

References

St Andrew's Church, East Heslerton Wikipedia