Listed Building: CHURCH OF ST MARTIN (1359965)

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Grade I
Authority Department of the Environment
Date assigned 09 September 1967
Date last amended

Description

TA 20 SE WAITHE CHURCH LANE 1/62 Church of St. Martin 9.9.67 G.V. I Parish church. C10, C11, C13, restored 1861 by James Fowler of Louth, in Early English Style. Coursed limestone rubble with tiled and slate roofs having decorative ridge tiles. Nave, aisles, central tower, small south transept and apsidal chancel. West wall has 4 lancets and a vesica shaped window. The north aisle wall has 2 lancets, and a similar window in the east end. The 3 stage tower is unusually built of coursed large pebbles to a point about 5'0" below the plain offset to belfry stage. As the paired belfry lights are of C11 character this shows that the tower base must be Saxon. The north wall of the tower has a C19 lancet to ground stage, the cill of which is C13. Above is a C19 cinquefoil light, and to belfry stage paired lights with mid wall shafts having cushion capitals, above is a plain parapet. The apsidal chancel in square limestone is buttressed with moulded plinth, string course and decorative eaves. There are 5 lancets in the chancel. The scar of the earlier chancel roof is visible on the east side of the tower. The south transept has a lancet to the east wall and gabled buttresses to south east angle. The south door has a richly moulded head and angle shafts with floriate capitals, moulded hood with leaf tops. Above is an enriched lancet with moulded head and hood. The south aisle has 2 lancets to the south wall. Interior. The 2 bay nave arcades are basically of the early C13, having on the north side slightly keeled quatrefoil clustered piers with annular abaci, double chamfered arches and C19 moulded hood and stops, and in the south side are clustered circular piers with quatrefoil hobnail abaci, double chamfered arches and octagonal responds. The aisle and nave walls are of banded red facing brick and ashlar with chamfered polychromatic rear arches to the windows. At the top of the wall are continuously tiled texts. The round headed tower arches are plastered and entirely plain. In the south wall of the tower is a white marble plaque recording the restoration of the church in 1861 by George Henry Haigh, Esq. This is a recessed panel with marble side shafts supporting a tympanum bearing the Haigh arms. The chancel has blank arcading round the walls in a C13 style, it springs from a chamfered string course with marble shafts and limestone arches having annular decorated capitals. Below the string course the walls are lined with impressed glazed tiles and above are fine red facing bricks with tiled borders and flush white marble lozenges, some of which are inscribed to members of the Haigh family. The chancel and sanctuary have richly tiled floors and the reredos is elaborately tiled. All fittings are from 1861 including the drum font lightly carved in semblance of C12 work. The rounded ashlar pulpit has paired black marble collar shafts and foliate decoration. Underneath the chancel is the Haigh family mausoleum. Listing NGR: TA2837100706

External Links (1)

Sources (1)

  •  Index: Department of the Environment. 1986. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. 1/62.

Map

Location

Grid reference TA 28371 00706 (point)
Map sheet TA20SE
Civil Parish WAITHE, EAST LINDSEY, LINCOLNSHIRE

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Record last edited

Nov 10 2009 10:51AM

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