History in Structure

Church House Church of St Edmund

A Grade II Listed Building in Thurlaston, Warwickshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.3344 / 52°20'3"N

Longitude: -1.3133 / 1°18'47"W

OS Eastings: 446888

OS Northings: 270922

OS Grid: SP468709

Mapcode National: GBR 7PK.QSC

Mapcode Global: VHCTX.6L29

Plus Code: 9C4W8MMP+QM

Entry Name: Church House Church of St Edmund

Listing Date: 6 October 1960

Last Amended: 3 July 1987

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1319932

English Heritage Legacy ID: 308751

ID on this website: 101319932

Location: St Edmond's Church, Thurlaston, Rugby, Warwickshire, CV23

County: Warwickshire

District: Rugby

Civil Parish: Thurlaston

Traditional County: Warwickshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Warwickshire

Church of England Parish: Dunchurch St Peter

Church of England Diocese: Coventry

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description


THURLASTON CHURCH LANE
SP47SE (South side)
2/106 Church of St. Edmund and
06/10/60 Church House
(Formerly listed as Church)
- II
Church and attached house. Built as a chapel-school, to be used as a school
during the week and a church on Sunday, with schoolmaster's house attached.
1849. Designed by William Butterfield. Flemish bond brick. Tile roofs have ridge
cresting; house has brick internal stack to rear. Chancel, nave, north vestry
and west tower forming house. Simple Gothic Revival style. One-bay chancel,
3-bay nave. House is one-unit plan. 3 storeys; one-window range. Chancel has
simple plinth and tile-coped diagonal buttresses of 2 offsets. 3-light east
window has Gothic tracery. Limestone tracery throughout. South side has small
wooden window. Small lean-to vestry has chamfered straight-headed east window.
Nave roof sweeps down lower. Buttresses have one offset. South-west porch has
chamfered segmental-pointed arch. Sides have open 5-light wooden openings.
Segmental pointed double-leaf plank doors inside. Two 4-light windows of
trefoiled lancets. North side has one window. Outshut to western part. Tower has
wood cross windows with brick segmental arches. Pyramid roof has arched wood
bellcote with steep pyramid roof. 2-storey range set back on left has
segmental-pointed plank door. Hipped roof. Interior of church is plastered, but
with red brick gables. Chancel has segmental arched vestry door. Chamfered brick
segmental-pointed chancel arch. Chancel and nave have arched brace roofs; nave
also has king posts. Windows have run-out chamfered wood lintel. Fittings: stone
font has shaft of quatrefoil section with chevron moulding. Quartered bowl with
lozenge moulding. Simple chamfered benches, probably original. Mid/late C20
panelling and pulpit. The church is actually orientated north-south. It is an
interesting example of a distinctively Victorian building type, which was then
'new in idea and practice'.
(Buildings of England: Warwickshire, pp.433 and 531; Paul Thompson: William
Butterfield, pp.93, 110, 114, 178, 179, 181, 217, 429).


Listing NGR: SP4688870922

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