Latitude: 52.5869 / 52°35'12"N
Longitude: -2.128 / 2°7'40"W
OS Eastings: 391426
OS Northings: 298793
OS Grid: SO914987
Mapcode National: GBR 1DK.B2
Mapcode Global: WHBFZ.87XN
Plus Code: 9C4VHVPC+QR
Entry Name: Church of St Peter
Listing Date: 16 July 1949
Grade: I
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1282467
English Heritage Legacy ID: 378445
Also known as: St Peter's Church, Wolverhampton
St Peter's, Wolverhampton
St Peter's Collegiate Church, Wolverhampton
ID on this website: 101282467
Location: Wolverhampton, West Midlands, WV1
County: City of Wolverhampton
Electoral Ward/Division: St Peter's
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Wolverhampton
Traditional County: Staffordshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Midlands
Church of England Parish: Central Wolverhampton
Church of England Diocese: Lichfield
Tagged with: Church building
WOLVERHAMPTON
SO9198NW LICH GATES
895-1/11/248 (East side)
16/07/49 Church of St Peter
GV I
Church. Late C13 crossing and south transept; late C15 nave,
tower and north transept; chancel and restoration, 1852-65, by
E.Christian. Ashlar with lead roofs. Cruciform plan: 4-bay
apsed chancel, crossing tower and 6-bay aisled nave, 2-storey
south porch and 2-storey vestry to north. 4-bay chancel and
7-bay apse, in Decorated style, articulated by offset
buttresses with crocketed gables and gargoyles to cornice
below openwork parapet, has 2-light windows to apse and
3-light windows with flowing tracery to chancel. 3-stage tower
has north-east stair turret, panels with quinquefoil heads and
quatrefoil friezes and embattled parapet with crocketed
pinnacles; 2-light windows to 2nd stage, paired 2-light bell
openings to top stage. North transept has offset buttresses,
embattled parapet and C17 round-headed windows to north and
east with large central mullion. South transept has angle
buttresses and embattled parapet, 5-light east window, and
3-light south window with 3 two-light square-headed transomed
clerestory windows above and 2 to west, all with Perpendicular
tracery. North aisle has 3-light windows with segmental-
pointed heads and Perpendicular tracery between buttresses,
embattled parapet. South aisle similar, with 4-light windows.
Vestry has embattled parapet and varied square-headed windows
of one, 2 or 3 lights. 2-storey porch has angle buttresses and
panelled embattled parapet with pinnacles, entrance with
moulded arch, sundial above, 2-light square-headed window to
1st floor. West facade has entrance of 2 orders under
crocketed ogee hood, enriched cornice and 4-light Decorated
window also under crocketed ogee hood; panelled buttresses and
gabled aisles, 3-light window to north and 4-light window to
south. Clerestory has paired Perpendicular 2-light
square-headed transomed windows and panelled embattled
parapet.
INTERIOR: vaulted ceiling to apse with angel and square
foliate capitals to shafts and angels to cornice; hammer-beam
roof to chancel has angel corbels with angels to brattished
cornice; crossing has C17 beams to late C19 painted ceiling;
transepts have late C15 moulded tie-beam roofs; 5-bay
Perpendicular nave arcades on octagonal piers, and C15 nave
roof with carved spandrels to moulded tie beams, panelled
ceiling with bosses. Fittings: chancel stalls have traceried
fronts and angel finials; crossing has C19 timber screen to
north, similar to C15 screen to south with open tracery and
C15 shafts supporting brattished cornice; north transept has
C19 Decorated style screen; screen to south transept has C15
shafts and blind tracery panels below open-work upper panels,
C19 brattished cornice; nave has C15 panelled stone pulpit on
shaft with stair winding round pier and parapet with crouching
lion to foot; late C17 west gallery, much altered; late C19
two-stage internal timber porch in Decorated style with
openwork tracery and figures under crocketed canopies. Some
C15 stalls from Lilleshall Abbey. Memorials: north transept:
chest tomb to Thomas Lane d.1582, carved balusters and figures
and armorial bearings to sides, 2 finely carved recumbent
effigies; wall monument to John Lane d.1667, a distinguished
soldier instrumental in the rescue of Charles II, is in marble
and alabaster and has inscribed panel in Ionic aedicule with
garlanded scrolls and heraldic cartouche in swan-necked
pediment flanked by cannon, and projecting base has finely
carved trophy of arms with crown in oak tree to left; south
transept has bronze figure and cherubs from monument to
Admiral Leveson, c1635, by Le Seur, and chest tomb to John
Leveson d.1575 and wife, with spiral corner balusters, figures
and armorial shields to sides, finely carved recumbent
effigies; north aisle has wall tablet to Henry Bracegirdle
d.1702, inscribed panel in Doric aedicule, painted board to
William Walker d.1634 and other C19/early C20 wall tablets
including George Thorneycroft d.1851 and South African war
memorial. Stained glass by C.E.Kempe to south aisle and good
east window to south transept.
(The Buildings of England: N.Pevsner: Staffordshire: London:
1974-: 314-5).
Listing NGR: SO9141698792
This List entry has been amended to add the source for War Memorials Register. This source was not used in the compilation of this List entry but is added here as a guide for further reading, 18 January 2017.
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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