- St Mary's Church, Knowsley
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St Mary's Church, Knowsley
St Mary's Church, Knowsley, from the southwestLocation in Merseyside Coordinates: 53°27′22″N 2°51′10″W / 53.4562°N 2.8528°W OS grid reference SJ 435 958 Location Knowsley, Merseyside Country England Denomination Anglican Website St Mary, Knowsley History Consecrated 6 June 1844 Significant associated people Earls of Derby Architecture Status Parish church Functional status Active Heritage designation Grade II Designated 28 January 1971 Architect(s) Edmund Sharpe,
Edward Paley
Paley and Austin
Paley, Austin and PaleyArchitectural type Church Style Gothic revival Groundbreaking 1843 Completed 1893 Administration Parish St Mary, Knowsley Deanery Huyton Archdeaconry Liverpool Diocese Liverpool Province York Clergy Assistant priest Revd Canon Alison Woodhouse Laity Reader John Wickham Churchwarden(s) Helen Clarey,
Stan EdwardsSt Mary's Church, Knowsley is in Knowsley Lane, Knowsley Village, Merseyside, England. The church has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade II listed building.[1] It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Liverpool, the archdeaconry of Liverpool and the deanery of Huyton.[2] Pollard and Pevsner describe the church as being "largish" with "an intimate interior".[3]
Contents
History
The church was built in 1843–44 to a design by Edmund Sharpe for the 13th Earl of Derby at a cost of about £20,000 (£1,610,000 as of 2011).[4][5] It was consecrated on 6 June 1844 by Rt Revd John Bird Sumner, Bishop of Chester.[5] Transepts designed by Edward Paley were added in 1860.[1] In 1871–72 the Derby chapel by Paley and Austin was added, and in 1892–93 a new vestry and a new east window by Paley, Austin and Paley were built.[3] An organ was installed in the Derby chapel in 1913.[5] In 1981–82 the church was reordered, a nave altar was introduced, and meeting and service facilities were installed in the base of the tower.[3]
Architecture
Exterior
The church is constructed in sandstone with freestone dressings and has a stone tile roof. Its architectural style is mainly Early English. The plan of the church consists of a west steeple, a five-bay nave with north and south aisles and a clerestory, a north porch, north and south transepts, a five-bay chancel with a north chapel (formerly the Derby chapel), and a south vestry. The tower is in three stages, with angle buttresses. In the bottom stage is a west doorway with lancet windows above. The middle stage also contains windows with pointed arches. In the top stage are two-light bell openings containing quatrefoil tracery, flanked by blind arches. The tower is surmounted by a broach spire with two tiers of lucarnes. Each bay on the south side of both the aisles and the clerestory contains a pair of windows. The transepts have buttresses, a corbel table, two-light north and south windows in Decorated style, and small west windows. The chancel also has a corbel table. Its east window has five lights with Perpendicular tracery, and the two two-light south windows are in Decorated style. The north chapel is also in Decorated style, and has a four-light north window. Along the north side of the church are three-light windows, and a frieze of quatrefoils. The vestry has a square-headed window and an east doorway re-set from an earlier doorway.[1]
Interior
The nave arcades are carried on quatrefoil piers with foliage capitals. The chancel arch includes carvings of Queen Victoria and the Archbishop of Canterbury. The nave is floored with 19th-century relief tiles, and there are encaustic tiles in the chapel.[1] Inside the church is an intricately carved bench from Knowsley Hall which is dated 1646, and royal arms dated 1567. The reredos, dating from 1866, was designed by Edwin Stirling. In the Derby chapel is a recumbent alabaster effigy by Matthew Noble of the 14th Earl of Derby.[3] Along the chancel walls are memorial mosaics dating from the 1910s and 1920s. The octagonal font was created in 1890 by Stubbs and Sons of Liverpool. The pulpit is polygonal and dates from about 1946.[1] Stained glass in the church includes the east window of 1893 by Shrigley and Hunt, a window in each transept by Lavers and Barraud, and a window in the south wall of the chancel of 1923 by Powell and Sons.[3] The three-manual organ was made in 1913 by Rushworth and Dreaper of Liverpool.[6]
See also
- List of architectural works by Edmund Sharpe
- List of ecclesiastical works by Paley and Austin
References
- ^ a b c d e "Church of St Mary, Knowsley", The National Heritage List for England (English Heritage), 2011, http://list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1253329, retrieved 17 May 2011
- ^ Deanery of Huyton, The Diocese of Liverpool, http://www.liverpool.anglican.org/index.php?p=385, retrieved 9 September 2008
- ^ a b c d e Pollard, Richard; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2006), Lancashire: Liverpool and the South-West, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, p. 223, ISBN 0-300-10910-5
- ^ UK CPI inflation numbers based on data available from Lawrence H. Officer (2010) "What Were the UK Earnings and Prices Then?" MeasuringWorth.
- ^ a b c Hughes, John M. (2010), Edmund Sharpe: Man of Lancaster, John M. Hughes
- ^ Lancashire (Merseyside), Knowsley, St. Mary (D07779), British Institute of Organ Studies, http://www.npor.org.uk/cgi-bin/Rsearch.cgi?Fn=Rsearch&rec_index=D07779, retrieved 6 August 2011
External links
Categories:- Church of England churches in Merseyside
- Grade II listed churches
- Grade II listed buildings in Merseyside
- Gothic Revival architecture in England
- 1840s architecture
- 19th-century church buildings
- Edmund Sharpe buildings
- E. G. Paley buildings
- Paley and Austin buildings
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