History in Structure

Church of All Saints

A Grade I Listed Building in Easton, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.1799 / 52°10'47"N

Longitude: 1.338 / 1°20'16"E

OS Eastings: 628308

OS Northings: 258768

OS Grid: TM283587

Mapcode National: GBR WP7.93X

Mapcode Global: VHLBB.4GQR

Plus Code: 9F4358HQ+X6

Entry Name: Church of All Saints

Listing Date: 7 December 1966

Grade: I

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1030590

English Heritage Legacy ID: 285857

ID on this website: 101030590

Location: All Saints' Church, Easton, East Suffolk, IP13

County: Suffolk

District: East Suffolk

Civil Parish: Easton

Built-Up Area: Easton

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Easton All Saints

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


TM 25 NE EASTON THE STREET
(north side)

10/85 Church of All
7.12.66 Saints

GV I


Parish church. Medieval, restored late 1880's. Nave and
chancel, west tower, north and south porches, south vestry.
Random flint rubble, stone dressings; nave and chancel formerly
plastered, upper part of tower rendered; plaintiled roofs. Late
C13 tower, the lower part square, the upper part octagonal; C15
crenellated parapet with flushwork panels; 2-light Y tracery bell
chamber openings to alternate faces of the octagon, clock face to
south. Nave and chancel with various C14 and C15 windows; mostly
restored, with a range of 6 to the south; one blocked window to
north chancel; C19 3-light east window in Decorated style.
Simple C15 south porch of knapped flint with original door into
nave; north porch and vestry are C19. No chancel arch; C19
scissor-braced king post roof. Moulded octagonal font; good set
of 30 early C19 box pews; late C17 turned alter rails; late C13
double piscina and double sedilia. To either side of the altar
are fine identical canopied pews of the Wingfield family: late
C17; each canopy is supported by Ionic colonnettes and has a
frieze with wreaths, paired wings and cherubs. Hanoverian Arms
over north doorway, carved in wood; 9 hatchments. Effigy brasses
in chancel floor: John de Brok (1426); John Wingfield (1584);
Dame Ratcliffe Wingfield (1601); good wall monuments to Lady Mary
Wingfield (1675), a marble tablet with flanking columns, scrolled
pediment and garlands at the foot; George Richard Savage Nassau
(1823); Fifth Earl of Rochford (1830). Some C14 and C15 stained
glass. Graded I for surviving medieval fabric and the interior
fittings.


Listing NGR: TM2830858768

External Links

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