History in Structure

Church of St Nicholas

A Grade II Listed Building in Hollym, East Riding of Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.7063 / 53°42'22"N

Longitude: 0.0357 / 0°2'8"E

OS Eastings: 534466

OS Northings: 425243

OS Grid: TA344252

Mapcode National: GBR XTPL.J4

Mapcode Global: WHHH8.J36H

Plus Code: 9F52P24P+G7

Entry Name: Church of St Nicholas

Listing Date: 27 February 1987

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1083479

English Heritage Legacy ID: 166553

ID on this website: 101083479

Location: St Nicholas's Church, Hollym, East Riding of Yorkshire, HU19

County: East Riding of Yorkshire

Civil Parish: Hollym

Built-Up Area: Hollym

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): East Riding of Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Hollym St Nicholas

Church of England Diocese: York

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


HOLLYM NORTHSIDE
TA 32 NW
(south side)
4/12 Church of St Nicholas
GV II

Parish church. Tower of 1814 by William Hutchinson, remainder of 1884 by
James Demaine. Grey brick to tower, yellow brick to nave with ashlar and
red brick dressings. Westmorland slate roof. West tower with west door,
4-bay nave, 3-bay chancel with vestry adjoining south side. Chamfered
ashlar-capped plinth. 3-stage tower: 2 steps to round-arched entrance with
double board door and radial fanlight in round-arched recessed panel with
ashlar keystone inscribed "BUILT", ashlar string course; blank second stage,
1814
2-course brick band; round-arched belfry openings with wooden louvres and
applied Y-tracery; stepped and dentilled brick cornice, coped parapet, plain
ashlar angle pinnacles. Nave and chancel: buttresses with tumbled-in brick
to offsets, triple round-headed windows to nave, single similar windows to
chancel, stepped triple east window; twin north window to vestry. Ashlar
sills, flush red brick sill and impost bands, hoods above windows, and
stepped and cogged eaves cornice. Stone-coped gables with shaped kneelers.
Crested ridge tiles. Ornate chimney to vestry. Interior. Nave open to
chancel, with round chancel arch carried on pairs of short corbelled wall
shafts. Waggon roof to chancel; ceiled hammer-beam roof to nave, of
rounded-trefoil section. Polychrome tiles to chancel floor. Monuments in
chancel: pair of shaped wall tablets, each with carved border, foliate drop,
and urn, one to Rev Peter Atkinson of 1779, the other an inferior copy of
1816 to Rev Robert Barker; tablet to Rev Charles Hague of 1864 with cornice
and pediment with acroteria. N Pevsner, The Buildings of England:
Yorkshire, East Riding, 1972, p 254; Victoria County History: York East
Riding, vol 5, 1984, p 46.


Listing NGR: TA3446625243

External Links

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