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St John's Church, Lytham

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OS grid reference
  
SD 371 272

Denomination
  
Anglican

Opened
  
1857

Status
  
Parish church

Architect
  
Edwin Hugh Shellard

Country
  
England

Consecrated
  
11 September 1850

Parish
  
Lytham St Annes

Diocese
  
Diocese of Blackburn

St John's Church, Lytham wwwgenukiorguksitesdefaultfilesnode73532s

Location
  
East Beach, Lytham St Annes, Lancashire

Website
  
St John the Divine, Lytham

Architectural style
  
Gothic Revival architecture

Similar
  
St Mark's Church - Blackburn, St Ambrose's Church, Church of St John the Divine - H, St Peter's Church - Preston, St John's Church - Silverdale

St John's Church is in East Beach, Lytham St Annes, Lancashire, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Kirkham, the archdeaconry of Lancaster, and the diocese of Blackburn. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building.

Contents

History

The church was designed by E. H. Shellard, and was built in 1848–49. The site for the church was given by the Clifton family of Lytham Hall, and the church was paid for by public subscription. The church was consecrated on 11 September 1850. It was originally a mission church to St Cuthbert, Lytham, and became a parish in its own right in 1870. Extensions to the transepts and the chancel, also by Shellard, were made in 1856–57. In 1897 a lych gate was erected in memory of Revd T. G. Smart, vicar of the church, who had died in the previous year. In about 1920 a southeast chapel was remodelled as a war memorial chapel by Frank Mee.

Exterior

St John's is built in sandstone ashlar with Cumberland slate roofs, and is in Early English style. Its plan consists of a narrow nave with a clerestory, wide north and south aisles, north and south transepts, and a chancel with a south chapel and a north vestry. Attached to the south aisle is a four-stage tower with corner pilasters. There is a doorway in the bottom stage, narrow lancet windows in the second and third stages, and louvred lancet bell openings in the top stage. Surmounting the tower is a broach spire with two tiers of lucarnes. Along the sides of the aisles are buttresses and paired lancet windows, and the clerestory has pilasters and small triple lancets. In the west wall of the nave are buttresses and two tall lancets. The transepts each have three very narrow lancets with a circular window above them. The east window consists of three stepped lancets.

Interior

Inside the church are six-bay arcades carried on short cylindrical piers. The pews are box pews with the doors removed. The war memorial chapel has a screen by Ernest Flower. The memorial in the chapel is in the form of a stone arcade, designed by Cartmell and carved by J. Stother. The stained glass in the south aisle dates from 1911, and consists of a scheme of Northern saints by Geoffrey Webb. The glass in the war memorial window is by B. D. Walmsley. The builder of the two-manual pipe organ is unknown. Work has since been carried out on it by Conacher of Huddersfield in 1874 and 1888, and in 1950 by Hele of Plymouth. There is a ring of six bells, all cast in 1875 by Mears and Stainbank of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.

Appraisal

The church was designated as a Grade II* listed building on 13 January 1971. Grade II* is the middle of the three grades granted by English Heritage, and is applied to buildings that are "particularly important buildings of more than special interest". The citation in the National Heritage List for England expresses the opinion that the church is among Shellard's best works. In the Buildings of England series, Hartwell and Pevsner state that "the interior shows Shellard at his best".

References

St John's Church, Lytham Wikipedia


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