History in Structure

Church of All Saints

A Grade II Listed Building in Gloucester, Gloucestershire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.8616 / 51°51'41"N

Longitude: -2.2382 / 2°14'17"W

OS Eastings: 383692

OS Northings: 218138

OS Grid: SO836181

Mapcode National: GBR 1L5.BXT

Mapcode Global: VH94C.5G3R

Plus Code: 9C3VVQ66+JP

Entry Name: Church of All Saints

Listing Date: 4 November 1981

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1271571

English Heritage Legacy ID: 472086

ID on this website: 101271571

Location: Barton, Gloucester, Gloucestershire, GL1

County: Gloucestershire

District: Gloucester

Electoral Ward/Division: Barton and Tredworth

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Gloucester

Traditional County: Gloucestershire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Gloucestershire

Church of England Parish: St James and All Saints, Gloucester

Church of England Diocese: Gloucester

Tagged with: Church building

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Description



GLOUCESTER

SO8318SE BARTON STREET
844-1/13/6 (North side)
04/11/81 Church of All Saints

II

Parish church. 1874-5, altered 1887. By Sir George Gilbert
Scott, for the Gloucester and Bristol Church Building
Association. Ashlar, tiled roofs with coped gables. Middle
Pointed style. Aisled nave with clerestory of five bays and
south porch; chancel with south aisle re-ordered later as
chapel, the original vestry on north side altered to house
organ, and another vestry added in 1887.
EXTERIOR: west gable-end wall has a large six-light window
with foiled geometrical tracery between flanking buttresses, a
three-light window with similar tracery in the end wall of
each aisle.
The gabled south porch, projecting from the west bay of the
south aisle, has a cusped arched doorway within a moulded
frame; otherwise in each bay of the south aisle a three-light
window with reticulated tracery flanked by offset buttresses;
lean-to roofs over the aisles behind coped parapets above a
continuous string course; in the clerestory square windows
with varied patterns of tracery.
The slightly lower chancel has a coped east gable-end wall
which contains a large seven-light window with foiled
geometrical tracery between flanking offset buttresses capped
by gablets, and at the east end on the south side a two-light
window with reticulated tracery.
The south chapel has a three-light window with foiled
intersecting tracery in the coped gable east wall and a pair
of two-light windows with segmental arched heads in the south
wall.
INTERIOR: nave arcades with octagonal piers and moulded bases
and caps, shallow pointed arches to the clerestory windows;
the inner order of the moulded chancel arch is supported on
corbels; on the west side of the chancel arch and supported on
corbels a decorated rood beam with the figures of Christ on
the Cross and the two Marys.
In the sanctuary a finely carved sedilia; between the chancel
and the south chapel, a painted screen with serpentine curves
designed by J Coates-Carter and sculpted by AP Frith c1920.
Good later C19 furnishings throughout including font, painted
organ case and pews.
STAINED GLASS: by Clayton and Bell c1875 in the east window,
in another window in the chancel, and in three windows in the

south aisle.
HISTORY: considered by Verey to be the "finest C19 church in
Gloucester", notable for the overall unity in the design of
the church and its fittings.
The building was constructed with funds from subscribers and a
benefaction from the family of Rev.Thomas Hedley.
(BOE: Verey D: Gloucestershire: The Vale and the Forest of
Dean: London: 1976-: 229; VCH: The City of Gloucester: Oxford:
1988-: 293-294).

Listing NGR: SO8369218137

External Links

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