Church of St Mary-on-the-Hill, Chester

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Church of St Mary-on-the-Hill, Chester

Tower of St Mary-on-the-Hill, Chester

Church of St Mary-on-the-Hill, Chester (Cheshire)
Church of St Mary-on-the-Hill, Chester
Shown within Cheshire
Basic information
Location Chester, Cheshire, England
Geographic coordinates 53°11′10″N 2°53′29″W / 53.1861, -2.8913Coordinates: 53°11′10″N 2°53′29″W / 53.1861, -2.8913
Ecclesiastical status Educational centre
Architectural description
Architect(s) James Harrison
J. P. Seddon
Architectural type Church
Architectural style Gothic
Year completed 1892
Specifications
Materials Red sandstone

The Church of St Mary-on-the-Hill, Chester stands at the top of St Mary's Hill, Chester, Cheshire, England near Chester Castle (grid reference SJ404658). It is a Grade I listed building.[1] The church stands at the top of a narrow winding lane which leads down to the River Dee and it is adjacent to Chester Castle.[2] In the 1970s the church was converted into an educational centre.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

The original church on the site was Norman and it served the castle.[3] The present church dates from the 14th and 15th centuries.[1] The south chapel was built around 1443 and was owned by the Earl of Shrewsbury. It was damaged in 1645 during the Civil War and collapsed in 1661. It was rebuilt in 1693.[3] The church was restored in 1861–62 by James Harrison and in 1890–92 by J. P. Seddon.[1] The north porch was rebuilt in 1892 in memory of Randle Holme III.[2]

[edit] Structure

The church is built in red sandstone. Its plan consists of a three-stage west tower, a three-bay nave with clerestory, north and south aisles, a chancel with north and south chapels, a north porch and a two-storey south porch.[1] The tower is in three stages; the lower two stages date from the 16th century and the third stage was added in the 19th century. On its north wall is a Tudor doorway. The arcades of the nave are also Tudor. The northeast chapel is St Katherine's Chapel and the southeast is the Troutbeck Chapel.[2]

[edit] Internal features

The interior of the church is Perpendicular in style, other than the tower arch and the chancel arch which are both in the Decorated style.[4] On the east wall are traces of a wall painting and a pre-Reformation holy water stoup.[2] The medieval roof is camber beam in type, divided into panels and richly carved with many bosses. The east window dated 1857 and stained glass in the south chapel are by William Wailes. In the east window of the north chapel are the remains of a Crimean War memorial by George Hedgeland dating from around 1856.[4]

Effigy on the Gamul tomb showing their son Francis reading a book
Effigy on the Gamul tomb showing their son Francis reading a book

In the church are 72 monuments and cenotaphs dating from the 16th century to the early 20th century.[1] Examples of these include the tomb of Philip Oldfield, a barrister who died in 1616, in St Katherine's Chapel. His effigy shows him lying on his right side and on the sarcophagus below is a skeleton in a similar posture, and kneeling figures of four sons and two daughters. Another tomb shows effigies of Thomas Gamul, who also died in 1616, and his wife, at whose feet their son, Francis, sits reading a book. On the side of the tomb are images of Francis' three sisters and the family coat of arms. A wall monument in the north aisle carries inscriptions to four members of the Randle Holme family, memorial painters.[2] A large Gothic tablet to the memory of William Currie, who died in 1834, is by James Harrison.[4] The ring is of six bells of which three are dated 1657. The parish registers begin in 1628 with fragmentary transcripts going back to 1547. The churchwardens' accounts start in 1536.[2]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Images of England: St Mary's Centre. English Heritage. Retrieved on 2007-07-30.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Richards, Raymond (1947). Old Cheshire Churches. London: Batsford, 110–117. 
  3. ^ a b Salter, Mark (1995). The Old Parish Churches of Cheshire. Malvern: Folly Publications, 31. ISBN 1871731232. 
  4. ^ a b c Pevsner, Nikolaus; Edward Hubbard [1971] (2003). The Buildings of England: Cheshire. New Haven: Yale University Press, 151–152. ISBN 0 300 09588 0. 

[edit] External links