All Saints Church, Normanton

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Contents

[edit] History

The current Church is believed to have existed since at least 1256, and thought to have been commissioned by Roger Le Peytivin of Altofts Hall. However, a prior church is mentioned in the Doomsday Book of 1086. It is likely that the current church stands on the lines of the original.

The building is in the perpendicular style, being built mainly of coursed dressed sandstone blocks under a stone slate roof and consists of a three-bay Chancel with a south chapel adjacent, a four-bay Nave with north and south aisles and a clerestory. A tower was added to the western end in the fifteenth century. In the nineteenth century, clergy and choir vestries were added as well as an organ chamber. The building was granted Grade II* listing in 1965. The church was internally re-ordered in 1991.

[edit] Notable Monuments and Contents

The Church houses the Freeston Tomb, the burial place of sir John Freeston of Altofts (d 1594), who by his will provided for an almshouse at Kirkthorpe and a grammar school for Normanton and Warmfield. His benefice still provides funding for the current secondary school in Normanton, the Freeston Business and Enterprise College.

In 1906, a medieval alter slab bearing five incised crosses was found under the sanctuary floor, where it had probably lain since the reformation. It now stands in the Lady Chapel and is used for weekly Eucharist.

There is low octagonal stone Font, now standing within the modern dais toward the north-eastern end of the Nave.

The window at the east end of the Lady Chapel depicting the fall of the Walls of Jericho, is a war memorial to the fallen of the Great War.

The window to the left of the porch was an addition in the late 1970s as a memorial to the explorer, John Frobisher of nearby Altofts.

All Saints possess two ancient silver cups, now housed in a collection at York Minster. The oldest was made in London in 1655 and is inscribed "Normanton cupp 1674". The second is two-handled porringer inscribed "The Gift of Mrs Henry Favell of Pontefract to the Church of Normanton for ever 1699"

In "Normanton, Past and Present," author Walter Hampson (1928) made note of the monuments within the church: "The chapel is the burial place of the Bunnys of Newland, Torres of Snydale, Favells of Normanton, Smiths (now Bosworths) late of Newland, and the Mallets and Levetts of Normanton. The Favells were an important Normanton family and were resident here in the early part of the seventeenth century. On the south chancel floor are memorial slabs of the Favells bearing the dates 1698, 1714, 1777 and others in the eighteenth century. Here also is a large altar tomb of the Malletts and Levetts. The Mallets it would seem were a very ancient family, as we are told their ancestors flourished here in the middle of the thirteenth century. The tomb on the top bears the arms of the Levetts together with the arms of the Mallets. On the wall above the tomb is an undated tablet recording that 'Mrs. Elizabeth Levett made benefaction for the poor of Normanton and Snydale, and for teaching poor children.' There also are tombs of the Torres mentioned under Snydale." Mallets had lived in Normanton for centuries. (The first High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1069 was William Malet).[1]

There are several monuments in All Saints Church to the well-regarded Yorkshire antiquarian James Torre, who having graduated from the Inner Temple in London gave up the law, sold his properties and retired to do historical research at York, later purchasing the manor of Snydale. Torre died in 1699.[2][3][4]

[edit] Incumbents

There is list of incumbents engraved on an oak board above the door to the old clery vestry on the north wall of the Chancel dating back to Henry of Kyrkeby, clk in 1252. The current incumbent is the Rev'd Don Gilkes who was inducted in 2002.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal
  2. ^ The Diary of Ralph Thoresby, 1830
  3. ^ in Yorkshire, Wakefield and Its Neighbourhood, William Stott Banks, 1871
  4. ^ The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, 1879

[edit] External links