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Latitude: 50.8473 / 50°50'50"N
Longitude: -1.291 / 1°17'27"W
OS Eastings: 450008
OS Northings: 105551
OS Grid: SU500055
Mapcode National: GBR 88L.Y3Z
Mapcode Global: FRA 865V.QVX
Plus Code: 9C2WRPW5+WH
Entry Name: Church of St Mary
Listing Date: 19 April 1989
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1233890
English Heritage Legacy ID: 409495
ID on this website: 101233890
Location: St Mary's Church, Newtown, Fareham, Hampshire, SO31
County: Hampshire
District: Fareham
Electoral Ward/Division: Warsash
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Locks Heath/Warsash/Whiteley
Traditional County: Hampshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Hampshire
Church of England Parish: Hook with Warsash St Mary
Church of England Diocese: Portsmouth
Tagged with: Church building
This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 24/04/2020
SU 40 NE and SU 5005
SU 5103 27/502 and 14/502
HOOK WITH WARSASH
CHURCH ROAD (east side)
Church of St Mary
GV
II
Church.1871, by R Brandon for A Hornby of the Hook Estate. Rockfaced rubble stone with ashlar dressings; plain tile roof with ridge tiles. Four-bay aisled nave with clerestorey, north and south porches, and bellcote to west gable. Lower two-bay chancel with apse, north vestry, and south organ chamber.
In Gothic style, the windows of the nave and paired one-light clerestorey windows in Decorated style, the aisles in Perpendicular style and the apse in Early English style. Chamfered plinth; offset buttresses; continuous roll-moulded sill band; hoodmoulds to windows at east end; board doors with decorative iron hinges. The bellcote has a full-height ashlar buttress; is of ashlar stone, octagonal on plan, with lancet openings, crocketted cornice, and tapering stone roof with scrolled finial and weathervane. A circular eaves stack to either side of west gable.
Interior: pointed-arched nave arcades on circular columns; corbelled colonnettes support arch-braced roof trusses with decorative bosses and angels to intermediate trusses; simpler aisle roofs with sexfoils in spandrels. Roll moulded chancel arch supported by colonnettes on leafy corbels; slender early English-style columns support ribs of decorative wooden roof. In chancel encaustic tile floor and sedilia. In nave contemporary font and pulpit, the latter wooden on stone base with brass apostolic panels.
The church is the most important item in the group of church, school (qv) and schoolhouse (qv, no 130) which Hornby built to serve the two villages of Hook and Warsash.
Listing NGR: SU4973705859
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
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