History in Structure

Church of the Holy Saviour

A Grade II Listed Building in Westbury, Wiltshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.2504 / 51°15'1"N

Longitude: -2.1972 / 2°11'49"W

OS Eastings: 386334

OS Northings: 150160

OS Grid: ST863501

Mapcode National: GBR 1TL.HBQ

Mapcode Global: VH978.VTTS

Plus Code: 9C3V7R23+54

Entry Name: Church of the Holy Saviour

Listing Date: 29 December 1950

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1036321

English Heritage Legacy ID: 313183

ID on this website: 101036321

Location: Church of the Holy Saviour, Westbury Leigh, Wiltshire, BA13

County: Wiltshire

Civil Parish: Westbury

Built-Up Area: Westbury

Traditional County: Wiltshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Wiltshire

Church of England Parish: Westbury

Church of England Diocese: Salisbury

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


WESTBURY

929/5/64B WESTBURY LEIGH
29-DEC-50 (Northwest side)
CHURCH OF THE HOLY SAVIOUR

GV II
Dates of main phases, name of architect: Nave and chancel 1876-7; south aisle, 1888-9; tower 1890; all to designs by William White. Interior conversion by Peter Swann, 1999-2000.

Materials: Honey coloured limestone (rubble stone without, ashlar-faced within), tiled roofs.

Plan: Nave, two-bay chancel with narrow vestry and organ chamber (north), two-bay south aisle with tower at its west end. The south aisle is now partitioned off with kitchen etc., below and meeting room above.

Exterior: A small country church with short nave and south aisle, chancel slightly lower, and south porch. The tower is short with low buttresses south and west, and the upper parts unbutressed. It has louvred two-light bell openings, and a small pyramidal cap roof behind a solid parapet. The window tracery throughout the church is in mixed styles, some Perp but not following medieval precedent.

Interior: The open timber roof of the nave is a complex and a carefully considered variation on a tie-beam and scissor-brace design. The nave, which now serves as a community hall, is straightforward, with bare stone walls, and a two-arched arcade to the south aisle. Here, the arches die into the walls at the outside, and at the centre into a square pier resting in turn on a sturdy circular column with foliate capital. The mouldings and transitions are highly individual, and carefully managed. The moulded chancel arch springs from corbels. A new timber floor was laid in 1999-2000.

Principal Fixtures: Reredos (probably early 20th century) depicting the Crucifixion, in a gilded rectangular frame with arched centre. The chancel seating consists of Victorian open benches, shortened from the original nave pews. 19th century stained glass in the east window and nave, maker unknown. The reordering removed the wooden pulpit, stone font, nave and aisle seating. Two simple war memorial tablets on the nave north wall, one of marble, c. 1919, one of cut stone, c. 1945. Stained and painted partitions and folding doors divide the south aisle and chancel from the nave.

History: Until the 1850s Westbury Leigh was served by two Baptist chapels, while Anglicans travelled either to Westbury parish church or to Dilton Marsh. From 1855 church services were held in a schoolroom. By 1875 plans were drawn up by William H. White (though Pevsner and Cherry say that White made plans as early as 1851, citing P. Joyce) and fundraising began in 1876. The church cost £2,584 and was opened on Advent Sunday 1877 as a chapel of ease to Westbury parish church. The chancel and nave were completed first. The south aisle was added in 1888-9; White¿s plans submitted to the Incorporated Church Building Society at that time are dated April 1875, proving that the aisle was intended from the first, and showing the outline of a north aisle that was never built. The tower was added in 1890 by Mrs Phipps as a memorial to her husband, Leckonby Hathersall Phipps. By the 1990s the church was cold, damp and underused. A community-led millennium project converted the nave, aisle and tower to a community centre, with the chancel retained as a place of worship. The plans were by Peter Swann, a retired local architect.

William White (1825-1900) was a leading architect of the Victorian
Gothic Revival. Born in Northamptonshire, he was a great-nephew of the
naturalist Gilbert White of Selborne. He trained in Leamington Spa
under D.G. Squirhill and in 1845-7 was an assistant to George Gilbert Scott. He then set up independently in Truro and became highly successful as a church architect in the south-west. He returned to London in 1852 on the strength of the commission for All Saints, Notting Hill. White was a friend of the pioneering Gothic revivalists, G.E. Street and G.F. Bodley, and an exponent of High Victorian Gothic which he helped develop in the1850s and 1860s, making much use of brick and polychrome. He was also interested in technical innovation and experimented with concrete in the early 1870s. He was closely involved with the Ecclesiological Society, developing his own theories of design proportion and a general concern for the proper arrangement of churches. He also built schools, parsonages and country houses.

Sources:
Pevsner, N and Cherry, B., The Buildings of England: Wiltshire (1975)
Victoria County History: A History of the County of Wiltshire: Volume 8: Warminster, Westbury and Whorwellsdown Hundreds (1965), 176-181.
URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=16102 Date accessed: 07 July 2009.

Reasons for Designation: The church of Holy Saviour, Westbury Leigh, is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:

* A Victorian country church by William White, a significant architect of the Gothic Revival.

* Simple and harmonious treatment of Gothic motifs, with considered touches of individuality that set it well above the run of the mill.

* In spite of recent sub-division, the interior retains its spatial quality and interest.


This List entry has been amended to add sources for War Memorials Online and the War Memorials Register. These sources were not used in the compilation of this List entry but are added here as a guide for further reading, 16 August 2017.

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