History in Structure

Church of St Peter

A Grade II* Listed Building in Peterstow, County of Herefordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.9209 / 51°55'15"N

Longitude: -2.6355 / 2°38'7"W

OS Eastings: 356390

OS Northings: 224902

OS Grid: SO563249

Mapcode National: GBR FP.P2W6

Mapcode Global: VH869.8ZK9

Plus Code: 9C3VW9C7+9Q

Entry Name: Church of St Peter

Listing Date: 26 March 1987

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1214804

English Heritage Legacy ID: 399706

ID on this website: 101214804

Location: St Peter's Church, Peterstow, County of Herefordshire, HR9

County: County of Herefordshire

Civil Parish: Peterstow

Traditional County: Herefordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Herefordshire

Church of England Parish: Peterstow

Church of England Diocese: Hereford

Tagged with: Church building

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Peterstow

Description


PETERSTOW CP

SO 52 SE
6/114 Church of St Peter

GV II*

Parish church. C12, C13, C14 and C15, possibly with Anglo-Saxon remains;
C19 and mid-C20 restorations and alterations. Sandstone rubble and ashlar
with tiled roofs. Small west tower overlapping west end of four-bay nave,
two-bay chancel with north vestry and south porch. West tower: probably
C15, protruding from nave, has deep moulded and chamfered plinth with a
string course above; two major external stages, that to bell-chamber
diminished on west side by off-set at level corresponding with apex of
nave roof; above bell-chamber is another string course, embattled parapet
and octagonal spire. Bell-chamber has one 2-light trefoiled opening under
square head to south and west sides and one square-headed opening to north.
Nave has north wall reported by RCHM as being partly pre-Conquest because of
enormous stones at west end; the same wall has three trefoil-headed single
light windows and towards the west end a small round-headed C12 window. Between
easternmost and next light to west is a buttress. C19 vestry has angle buttresses
west doorway is moulded with a 2-centred head and label, the last partly obscured
by a buttress. On the east side is 2-light window with 2-centred head, quatre-
foil tracery and label, each of the lights running up to blind ogees in typanum
above the glazing; stack to north gable. Chancel has high-set 2-light ogeed
and trefoiled east window with deeply cusped quatrefoil tracery in a 2-centred
head; south wall has two single-light windows with ogeed and trefoiled heads and
chamfered surrounds, between which is a blocked priest's door. South side of
nave is divided from chancel by a buttress. To the west of this is a pair of
C19 chamfered lancets and to the east of the porch one lancet similar, but
largerly C13 and unrestored; to its west a restored lancet. South porch is
probably c1900 and timber-framed on sandstone plinth; three principal trusses
are cusped to form trefoils. Front has cambered collar beam on arch-braces
carried on inner posts tied back to wall-plate supported by outer posts; tie-
beam supports cusped king-strut and two angle struts with trefoiled pattern on
bargeboards. Six open upper side panels within cinquefoiled heads to each
return above a pair of side benches. South doorway, probably C14, is chamfered
with 2-centred head and pyramidal stops to base of jambs. Interior has scissor-
braces, some bolted, perhaps C14 and restored, to nave roof; chancel has C19
wagon roof. C13 chancel arch is altered and has 2-centred arch with double
chamfers and moulded label above half-round responds with later foliated
capitals. Chancel has C14 piscina to south side with recessed trefoiled head
and circular drain. To north of altar is former circular font bowl with
cusped underside removed from, and then restored to, the church; brass cross
on altar for William and Maria Davis, died 1870 and 1861; to north side a chair
probably C19, with turned bobbin balusters and rails in C13 style. East window
has stained glass depicting Crucifixion and Benediction as memorial to George
Isreal Pellew, Rector, died 1897, with inscription: "In that he died unto sin
once. In that he liveth he liveth unto God". North window has stained glass
showing Christ washing the feet of a disciple with the inscription "I have
given you an example"; east window of south wall is for John Jebb, Rector,
died 1886, window further west is for Frederick Leonard Woodall, 1903. Organ
to north side is probably early C20, restored 1970; to the west of it a wall
plaque in brass for Thomas Ross, Rector, died 1712 and his wife, Susanna,
died 1692. C19 doorway to vestry has 2-centred head and roll moulding. Vestry
contains diagonal passageway to nave and pulpit, drainage plan of church and
churchyard dated 1972 and photographs of rectors back to 1886, a portrait
sketch of John Jebb, Rector until 1886, by W Smith, London, 1854, signed,
"faithfully yours/ John Jebb", and a photograph ntake in 1919 of a portrait
of an earlier rector, the Revd Charles Maitland Babington 1810-41. Nave has
late C19 brass lectern; early C17 pulpit, part hexgonal with Ionic capitals,
arcaded and dentilled upper panels, reached from vestry by C19 moulded arch
with 2-centred head. To south of chancel arch is a fragment of a coffin lid
with foliated cross circular design; north window at east end of nave has
stained glass depicting Christ with inscription "THIS IS MY BELOVED SON HEAR
HIM", to its west a triangular headed marble wall monument for James Matthews
died 1840; reset bearded head-stop from label, perhaps C13, between west wall
and westernmost window of north wall. Font is C15 with octagonal echamferd
base, plain octagonal stem and octagonal bowl chamfered on underside; west
wall has exposed zone of coursed sandstone, with squint from tower, reported
by RCHM as being blocked square-headed opening to tower. (BoE, p 271; RCHM
Vol I, p 217-18).


Listing NGR: SO5639024902

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