History in Structure

Church of St John the Evangelist

A Grade II Listed Building in East Witton, North Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 54.2696 / 54°16'10"N

Longitude: -1.7759 / 1°46'33"W

OS Eastings: 414690

OS Northings: 486018

OS Grid: SE146860

Mapcode National: GBR JM12.97

Mapcode Global: WHC6Y.PYJ7

Plus Code: 9C6W769F+RJ

Entry Name: Church of St John the Evangelist

Listing Date: 15 February 1967

Last Amended: 25 June 1985

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1130931

English Heritage Legacy ID: 321651

ID on this website: 101130931

Location: St John's Church, East Witton, North Yorkshire, DL8

County: North Yorkshire

District: Richmondshire

Civil Parish: East Witton

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


SE 18 NW EAST WITTON TOWN EAST WITTON
(north side)

10/29 Church of St John the
Evangelist
15.2.67
(Formerly listed under Masham
II Road)

Church. Dated 1809. By H H Seward for the Earl of Ailesbury. Ashlar
sandstone, stone slate roof. Nave and chancel in one, with aisles, south
porch, north baptistry and west tower. Tower: off-set angle buttresses,
4-stages with 1-, 2-, 1-, 3-light openings, embattled parapet. On west
face, pointed doorway in Elizabethan-style flat-headed surround with hood-
mould, and plaque recording that church was built to commemorate the
fiftieth year of the reign of George III, clock. Gabled south porch with
diagonal buttresses, doorway as before, quatrefoil in gable. 6-bay nave and
chancel aisle, divided by off-set buttresses. 3 windows of 4-lights with
uncusped Y-tracery, hood-moulds with label stops. In fifth bay, vestry
doorway as before; in sixth bay late-C19 single-light window with 5 cusps.
In sixth bay on north side, 3-light lancet window to organ chamber. East
end: off-set diagonal buttresses, 5-light uncusped Perpendicular east
window, embattled parapet. 2-light Geometric north window of baptistry.
Interior: 4-bay arcades with 4-centred Perpendicular-style arches on tall
octagonal piers. Perpendicular-style chancel arch with Tudor flowers on
soffit. Walls of sanctuary lined with very fine late C19 encaustic tiles
depicting Lord's Prayer, Creed and Ten Commandments, also tiled reredos and
tiled floor. Over doorway into tower, plaster coat of arms of Queen
Victoria in quatrefoil. Arms of George III over vestry door. The new
church replaced the old church of St Martin at Low Thorpe.


Listing NGR: SE1469086018

External Links

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