Benchmark - St Lawrence - Southleigh, Devon
Posted by: SMacB
N 50° 44.081 W 003° 07.707
30U E 490935 N 5620329
Cut benchmark on the south west corner of St Lawrence's church bell tower, Southleigh,
Waymark Code: WM163FZ
Location: Southern England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 04/26/2022
Views: 1
Cut benchmark on the south west corner of St Lawrence's church bell tower, Southleigh,
Square |
Easting |
Northing |
Mark type |
Description |
Height |
Order |
Datum |
Verified year |
Metres above ground |
SY |
2046 |
9339 |
CUT MARK |
BUTT S ANG ST LAURENCES CH |
74.783 |
3 |
'N' |
1951 |
0.500 |
"Parish church. Norman origins, some C13 and C15 work but most was rebuilt in the C19; the south aisle was added in 1821, the chancel in 1854 and a general restoration of 1881. Local stone and flint rubble with Beerstone quoins and detail; slate roof. Plan: nave and chancel under continuous roof. The south aisle is not quite full length and it contains the south doorway and a porch. West tower, which is all that remains of the medieval church. Exterior: low west tower of 2 stages with low diagonal buttresses and embattled parapet. Internal stair in the north-west corner. The belfry windows are square- headed 2 lights with trefoil heads. West doorway is a 2-centred arch with broad moulded surround and directly above is a 3-light window with Perpendicular tracery. Both nave/chancel and south aisle have shaped kneelers and coping with ball apex finials. The south side of the aisle is 4 bays. The gabled south porch is left of centre containing a possibly reused Norman round-headed arch. The south doorway is a reused Norman arch with broad bead-moulded surround. The windows are 2 lights with Decorated tracery and a 3-light version in the east end. The east end of the chancel has an Early English style triple lancet window containing plate tracery and with a continuous hoodmould. In the gable above is an oculus. The vestry projects from the north side of the chancel and the north side of the nave contains 3 Decorated style windows like those in the aisle. Interior: nave, chancel and aisle have open arch-braced truss roofs. C15 tall tower arch with moulded surround. The chancel arch is C19 (maybe based on the C13 original); the arch has an ogee moulding springing from moulded imposts on double vaulting shafts. 4-bay Beerstone arcade with 1 arch overlapping the chancel; the responds are semi-octagonal, the piers are circular in section, moulded caps and double-Chamfered arch rings. The chancel window inner arches are moulded with shafts and caps. The walls are plastered. The floor is laid with C19 red and black tiles. All the furniture and fittings are C19. In general they are plain with some Gothic decoration. Oak altar rail on pairs of turned balusters. Oak prayer desk, stalls, lectern, drum pulpit and pine stalls. Gothic style oak tower screen. Norman-style Beerstone font on a Purbeck marble base. Monuments: the oldest is north of the sanctuary in memory of Robert Drake (d. 1600); a Beerstone rectangular niche is flanked by Ionic columns supporting a moulded entablature over a strapwork frieze. The sides of the Riche have carved armorial bearings and a strapwork cartouche includes the Latin inscription. Alongside, in the chancel a marble memorial with urn to members of the How family who died between 1813 - 17. The tower contains a marble plaque to John Rose (d. 1705) and an undated early C19 plaque in memory of Thomas and Cholmondely Vickers. Painted board with the ams of George II. The east window and one in the nave have stained glass."
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