History in Structure

St Nicholas's Church

A Grade I Listed Building in Bradfield Combust with Stanningfield, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.1734 / 52°10'24"N

Longitude: 0.744 / 0°44'38"E

OS Eastings: 587731

OS Northings: 256346

OS Grid: TL877563

Mapcode National: GBR RH4.NX4

Mapcode Global: VHKDJ.VM5Q

Plus Code: 9F425PFV+9H

Entry Name: St Nicholas's Church

Listing Date: 14 July 1955

Last Amended: 27 January 1984

Grade: I

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1229767

English Heritage Legacy ID: 404617

ID on this website: 101229767

Location: St Nicholas's Church, Stanningfield, West Suffolk, IP29

County: Suffolk

District: West Suffolk

Civil Parish: Bradfield Combust with Stanningfield

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Stanningfield St Nicholas

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


TL 85 NE; 5/85

STANNINGFIELD,
CHURCH ROAD

St. Nicholas's Church

(Formerly listed as Church of St. Nicholas)

14.07.55

I

Church; mediaeval, restored 1881. Nave, chancel, west tower and south porch.
Flint rubble with limestone dressings. Plaintiled roofs with parapet gables;
the tower roof slated. The nave has C12 core: coursed flint walling with slit-
windows on north and south side; the north doorway (now blocked) with engaged
shafts and weathered crude crocket capitals, semi-circular head with chevron
moulding enriched with flowers on the soffit. The chancel rebuilt c.1300; 2-
light windows in north and south walls and 3-light east window with smoke vent
above, all having very original geometric tracery; blocked south doorway; a low
squint in the south wall, of quatrefoil form within a square; simple arched
piscina. The south nave doorway rebuilt early C14; Two chamfered orders with
flower ornament, hoodmould with ball-flowers and one surviving head-corbel; in
the wall inside the doorway a cusped holy water stoup. Two mid C14 Y-traceried
windows in the nave, one combined with a simple piscina. The chancel arch
rebuilt late C14, with pilasters having moulded capital and base; contemporary
wooden screen having central ogee-arched opening and four lights on each side,
with trefoiled heads on one side and quatrefoiled on the other. C15 tower with
stone-roofed stair-turrent on the south side; large transomed 3-light west
window with angel-corbels having shields; the bell-chamber stage demolished
c.1880 and slated pyramid roof constructed. C15 font, octagonal, limestone
with tracery on the stem; on the bowl the arms of Rokewood, alternating with
panels of tracery. A fine but decayed C15 Doom, painted in black line with
some red background, filling the wall above the chancel arch. During the
restoration of 1881, nave and chancel 7-canted roofs clad with matchboarding
and probably rebuilt. The south porch also rebuilt c.1880, in timber with
cusped bargeboards; the arched door drums are reused from the previous early
C14 porch. In the chancel, the limestone dresser-tomb of Thomas Rookwood,
d.1522; a frieze of fleurons with panels containing quatrefoils and the arms of
Rookwood; elliptical arched canopy and flanking pilasters with angel finials.
Two black marble floor-slabs: to Thomas Rookwood, d.1726; to John and Elizabeth
Gage, d. 1728 and 1759.


Listing NGR: TL8773156346

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