Skip to main content

Listed Building: CHURCH OF ST PETER (1109332)

Please read our .

Grade II*
Authority Historic England
Volume/Map/Item 183, 10, 72
Date assigned 14 June 1984
Date last amended

Description

Church. 1873-4 by Stevens & Robinson, incorporating C12 parts. Coursed squared rock-faced limestone with rock-faced and ashlar sandstone dressings, used to give a polychromatic effect. Slate roofs with stone coped gables with crosses. West steeple, nave with aisles and north porch, chancel with south aisle and north vestry. Norman style. Chamfered plinth. West tower of four unequal stages, divided by sandstone bands. Sandstone clasping buttresses linked at the top by arched corbel tables. Ground stage of the west elevation with re-used C12 north doorway. Nook shafts with beakhead type decoration. Single order of Chevron. Incised tympanum with various animals, a lamb carrying a cross, a stag, each standing on a serpent and with a bird and a pig above, and a lion eating its tail. C19 hoodmould. Plank door with large metal C-hinges. Above the doorway, a wheel window. North and South elevations have single lancet to the ground stage. Narrow rectangular window above to each face. Two-light bell openings to each face, with plate tracery. Nook shafts at the angles of the bell stage. Broach spire with two tiers of lucarnes, big ones low down and tiny ones high up. The south aisle runs the full length of the building with the lower chancel roof carried over the aisle as a catslide. Six round-arched windows with a step and a chamfer. Robust nave clerestory with four triplets divided by rock-faced lesenes. Each bay with a triplet of chamfered round-arches with two colonettes and a cinquefoil window in smooth stone surround, giving the effect of plate tracery. Row of dentil corbels above. East and west windows of the south aisle are of two round-arched lights with a central colonette. The chancel projects slightly east of the south aisle and has gableted set-back buttresses. The east window a triplet of steeply pointed arches, the centre one taller. The vestry on the north side is gabled and is taller than the aisle, with a chimney on each gable. To the east a cinquefoil window in a circle and to the north, a pair of round-arched windows and a round-arched door. The north side of the nave is similar to the south side, except for a north porch in a similar style, added in 1911, The interior has a four-bay nave arcade with circular piers and semi- circular responds, square abaci, croquet type capitals. Double chamfered arches. Tile triplets of the clerestory are treated as arcades on. two detached shafts. Tower arch, mostly re-used C12 parts. Inner order of chevron, a roll, a hollow and a roll and an outer order of dogtooth. Chamfered imposts. Pointed chancel arch with two roll mouldings, nook shafts with moulded capitals but with the main arch carried through without capitals. Double chamfered arches to the north and south of the chancel. East window with nook shafts. Dec style chancel screen. Nave pews c1874, openwork, with cusped arches to the ends. Brass eagle lectern. Tiled floor in the nave. Within the tower, three coffin lids set into the south wall. C18 charity board above. Font with the date 1662 scratched on polygonal bowl on a circular base. Stained glass - south aisle west 1901; east window 1865 by Holland Son & Holt of Warwick Listing NGR: SK1883454351

External Links (1)

Sources (0)

Map

Location

Grid reference SK 18834 54351 (point)
Map sheet SK15SE
Civil Parish PARWICH, DERBYSHIRE DALES, DERBYSHIRE

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Record last edited

Jul 27 2009 2:40PM

Comments and Feedback

Do you have any more information about this record? Please feel free to comment with information and photographs, or ask any questions, using the "Disqus" tool below. Comments are moderated, and we aim to respond/publish as soon as possible.