All Saints Church, Becconsall

All Saints Church

All Saints Church, Becconsall, from the southwest
All Saints Church

Location in West Lancashire

Coordinates: 53°42′10″N 2°50′24″W / 53.7027°N 2.8400°W
Location Station Road, Hesketh Bank, Lancashire
Country England
Denomination Anglican
Website All Saints, Becconsall
Architecture
Status Parish church
Functional status Active
Architect(s) Austin and Paley
Architectural type Church
Style Gothic Revival
Groundbreaking 1923
Completed 1936
Administration
Parish Hesketh with Becconsall
Deanery Leyland
Archdeaconry Blackburn
Diocese Blackburn
Province York
Clergy
Priest(s) Revd Nicholas Davis
Assistant priest Interregnum
Laity
Reader(s) Lesley
Churchwarden(s) Iain Ashcroft
Mary Scambler

All Saints Church, Becconsall, is in Station Road, Hesketh Bank, Lancashire, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Leyland, the archdeaconry of Blackburn, and the diocese of Blackburn.[1]

History

The church was designed by the Lancaster architect Henry Paley of Austin and Paley, and built between 1925 and 1926. Plans had been made in 1923 for a church with a spire, which would have cost about £6,500 (£320,000 in 2015),[2] but these were scaled back, and the planned spire was replaced by a tower with a saddleback roof.[3] The new church replaced a smaller church built in 1765, and the site was given by Major T. Fermor-Hesketh.[4] The tower was completed by the same architect in 1935 at a cost of £721.[5]

Architecture

The authors of the Buildings of England series state that this a small church, but that its broad west tower is "impressive".[6] The tower is supported by stepped angle buttresses, and it has a pyramidal roof recessed on two sides. The windows contain tracery based on the Decorated and Perpendicular styles.[6]

See also

References

Citations

  1. All Saints, Hesketh w Becconsall, Church of England, retrieved 17 April 2012
  2. UK CPI inflation numbers based on data available from Gregory Clark (2014), "What Were the British Earnings and Prices Then? (New Series)" MeasuringWorth.
  3. Brandwood et al. 2012, p. 181.
  4. Brandwood et al. 2012, p. 251.
  5. Brandwood et al. 2012, p. 254.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Hartwell & Pevsner 2009, p. 105.

Sources

  • Brandwood, Geoff; Austin, Tim; Hughes, John; Price, James (2012), The Architecture of Sharpe, Paley and Austin, Swindon: English Heritage, ISBN 978-1-84802-049-8
  • Hartwell, Clare; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2009) [1969], Lancashire: North, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-12667-9