History in Structure

Church of St Elisabeth

A Grade II Listed Building in Old Town, East Sussex

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.7831 / 50°46'59"N

Longitude: 0.255 / 0°15'18"E

OS Eastings: 559064

OS Northings: 100597

OS Grid: TQ590005

Mapcode National: GBR MV0.Z5D

Mapcode Global: FRA C7F0.M68

Plus Code: 9F22Q7M4+72

Entry Name: Church of St Elisabeth

Listing Date: 8 February 1994

Last Amended: 17 August 1994

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1252676

English Heritage Legacy ID: 293633

Also known as: St Elisabeth's Eastbourne

ID on this website: 101252676

Location: St Elisabeth's Church, Downside, Eastbourne, East Sussex, BN20

County: East Sussex

District: Eastbourne

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Eastbourne

Traditional County: Sussex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): East Sussex

Church of England Parish: Eastbourne St Elizabeth

Church of England Diocese: Chichester

Tagged with: Church building

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Description



TQ5800
11/10009

EASTBOURNE
VICTORIA DRIVE (east side)
Church of St Elisabeth

(Formerly listed as Church of St Elizabeth)

II

Parish church. Foundation stone laid in 1935, architects D Stonham and Son and A.R.G Fenning. Built of red brick in English bond with Clipsham stone dressings and tiled roof. Floor and roof trusses are in pre-cast suspended reinforced concrete and the pitched roofs have light steel trusses and timber joists. Wide nave with narrow aisles and choir and chancel of equal height. East end has Lady Chapel to east of north transept which has an organ loft over and south transept has library over and attached bellcote. In addition to the west door are NW and SW porches to the narthex, which contains the baptistery and north and south porches at east end of the nave. Tall west front with gabled parapet and almost full-height tapering brick buttresses. West window is a traceried lancet with trefoil heads. Arched west door flanked by side lancets and gabled parapet. Aisles have 3 tall lancets with traceried windows divided by buttresses and narrow aisle with 2 triple casements and gabled porches. North transept has gable to north and mullioned windows. South transept similar but with bellcote. Chancel has 2 traceried windows. East end is blank except for triple mullioned window to former basement classroom. Two storey flat-roofed porches to NE and SE. Interior has arcade with Clipsham stone arches, octagonal Clipsham stone font and 2 Clipsham stone pulpits. Ribbed ceiling and unusual polygonal-shaped lights suspended from brackets. Transepts have arched openings at first floor level. Metal screen to Lady Chapel. Light oak pews to nave and choir. Travertine marble floor to chancel. Wrought iron altar rail. Around the sanctuary is a sequence of fixed painted panels depicting scenes such as the Annunciation and the Baptism of Christ, in a pure Italian quatrocento style. They are signed E.W. Tristram, 1938. (Tristram was the leading authority on English Medieval wall paintings and their conservation.) In a basement room there survives an important painted mural sequence, depicting the Pilgrim's Progress in a free expression style by Hans Feibusch, 1944. These murals are of special historic interest.

[See "Architects' Journal" April 4, 1940.]

Listing NGR: TQ5906400597

External Links

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