Kirkwhelpington Church of St Bartholomew
Has been described as a Questionable Fortified Ecclesiastical site
There are masonry ruins/remnants remains
Name | Kirkwhelpington Church of St Bartholomew |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Northumberland |
Modern Authority | Northumberland |
1974 Authority | Northumberland |
Civil Parish | Kirkwhelpington |
Parish church. C12 fragments. Chancel and nave largely C13 with C15 alterations. Restored 1897. Dressed stone and Lakeland slate roof. West tower, nave, chancel and south porch.
West tower of several builds. Lower masonry C12 or C13. Low, late Perpendicular west door with Tudor lintel. Buttresses of various dates C13-C16. Battlements and crocketed pinnacles Perpendicular features. Victorian 3-light bell openings with Perpendicular tracery.
Similar windows in 3-bay C13 nave. South porch, possibly C16, has plain chamfered round arch and sundial above dated 1764. South door is C13 and has 2 orders of columns, with nailhead in the capitals, and multi-moulded arch. Nave north wall has one original and one Victorian lancet.
Chancel has blocked priest's door and one lancet on south side; also large C18 12-pane sash window. East end lengthened 1897 and given 3 stepped lancets.
Gabled roof with kneelers and flat coping.
Interior has blocked tower arch with 1 order of columns, scalloped capitals and pronounced chevron mouldings in the pointed arch. This may have been chancel arch of earlier church and has C12 and C13 fragments built into wall which blocks it. C13 chancel arch with octagonal responds. Trefoiled sedilia with slender C13 shafts. C17 octagonal font using upturned C14 capital as base. Mahogany pulpit with tester, 1797. Tablet of 1743 with aedicule and coat of arms to Gawen and Mary Aynsley on chancel north wall. Several good tablets set in chancel floor. Medieval grave cover with foliated cross used as lintel of north lancet. (Listed Building Report)
The filling in of the fine pointed tower arch with its zigzag mouldings, the apex of which is still visible, and the huge character of the tower buttressing, all go to show the tower was in a dangerous, if not ruinous, condition. (Hicks 1894)
Not scheduled
This is a Grade 2* listed building protected by law
Historic England Scheduled Monument Number
Historic England Listed Building number(s)
Images Of England
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | NY996844 |
Latitude | 55.1541213989258 |
Longitude | -2.00711989402771 |
Eastings | 399650 |
Northings | 584420 |