History in Structure

Church of St Andrew

A Grade II Listed Building in Blubberhouses, North Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.9932 / 53°59'35"N

Longitude: -1.7453 / 1°44'43"W

OS Eastings: 416796

OS Northings: 455268

OS Grid: SE167552

Mapcode National: GBR JQ78.Y9

Mapcode Global: WHC8B.5W5M

Plus Code: 9C5WX7V3+7V

Entry Name: Church of St Andrew

Listing Date: 14 July 1987

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1150451

English Heritage Legacy ID: 331412

ID on this website: 101150451

Location: Blubberhouses, North Yorkshire, LS21

County: North Yorkshire

District: Harrogate

Civil Parish: Blubberhouses

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Fewston St Michael and St Lawrence

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


BLUBBERHOUSES SHEPHERD HILL ROAD
SE 15 NE
(east side)
2/20 Church of St Andrew
- II

Church. 1851. By E B Lamb for Lady Frankland. Coursed gritstone rubble
and ashlar, graduated stone slate roof. 3-bay nave, north aisle with tower
and porch grouped at the west end, 3-bay chancel. Built on a steep slope,
in an Early English style. Flight of 7 stone steps to studded board door of
porch with scrolled hinges in chamfered pointed arch below deep pitched roof
with gable copings. Tower of 2 storeys with tall lancet belfry windows,
stepped angle buttresses, deep corbelled eaves to pyramidal spire with small
lucarnes and finial. North aisle: 3 paired trefoil-headed windows; east
window of 3 trefoil-headed lancets, south side as north aisle, west end: 2
trefoil-headed lancets divided by a stepped buttress. Wide gable copings
and cross finials to apex of gables. Interior: north aisle roof supported
on deeply chamfered ashlar pillar with corbels carrying the timberwork of
nave and aisle roof. Nave roof of a hammer-beam type with king posts, the
chancel roof has an arch braced truss. Porch inner door has studs and
scroll hinges as the door to left into the tower. The altar rail and pulpit
are C17 oak, the rail balusters finely carved with alternate fluted columns.
The church is typical of the work of E B Lamb (1806-69), having a low
contour and heaviness of effect with complicated timber roof structure also
seen at St Mary's Church, Gospel Oak, London (1862-65) and St Mary's
Addiscombe, Surrey (1868). R Dixon and S Muthesius, Victorian Architecture,
1978, pp 195-196.


Listing NGR: SE1679655268

External Links

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