History in Structure

Church of St John the Baptist

A Grade II* Listed Building in Quinton, West Northamptonshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.1818 / 52°10'54"N

Longitude: -0.8653 / 0°51'55"W

OS Eastings: 477676

OS Northings: 254330

OS Grid: SP776543

Mapcode National: GBR BX2.424

Mapcode Global: VHDSC.YFD9

Plus Code: 9C4X54JM+PV

Entry Name: Church of St John the Baptist

Listing Date: 3 May 1968

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1371303

English Heritage Legacy ID: 235562

ID on this website: 101371303

Location: St John the Baptist Church, Quinton, West Northamptonshire, NN7

County: West Northamptonshire

Civil Parish: Quinton

Built-Up Area: Quinton

Traditional County: Northamptonshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Northamptonshire

Church of England Parish: Quinton and Preston Deanery St John the Baptist

Church of England Diocese: Peterborough

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


QUINTON
SP7754
19/162 Church of St. John the Baptist
03/05/68

GV II*

Church. C13 and C15 with late Norman origins. Porch and chancel of 1801.
Chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and west tower. Coursed squared
limestone and ironstone, with ironstone dressings, limestone ashlar to chancel
and porch; lead, slate and plain-tile roofs. 2-bay chancel. First bay is
windowless and wider than east end, which has rounded corners and similar
flattened curve to heads of windows. These have key blocks and leaded crown
glass panes to south and north chancel windows. East window has keyblock
inscribed DEO. Ironstone plinth, hollow-chamfered cornice, plain stone-coped
parapet and hipped slate roof. Roof-line of original chancel roof with steep
pitch on east gable wall of nave. Nave has Perpendicular clerestory of 3 windows
to south and 2 windows to north, all of 2-lights, with 4-centred heads,
trefoil-headed lights and hood moulds; plain stone-coped parapets. Roof-line and
blocked arch to north-east of former transeptal chapel. Arch blocked by wide
offset buttress. Blocked, moulded trefoil-headed piscina to east side of arch
and blocked entry above to gallery of former rood screen. Chamfered north
doorway with studded plank door. South aisle has 3-light Perpendicular windows,
all with 4-centred heads and hood moulds and plain stone-coped parapet.
Hollow-chamfered south doorway with studded plank door. Porch has wider, shallow
inner bay and entrance bay with rounded corners and stepped and hollow-chamfered
doorway. Stone above doorway inscribed POPULO. Stone-coped parapet and pyramidal
slate Roof with small ball finial. 3-stage tower has 2-light C13 bell-chamber
windows with blank quatrefoils to heads and hood moulds and 2-light
Perpendicular bell-chamber openings above with 4-centred heads and hood moulds.
Low off-set angle buttresses, battlemented parapet and pyramidal slate roof with
weather-vane to apex. Interior: double-chamfered chancel arch with polygonal
responds. Nave has 3-bay arcade with circular piers, keeled responds, moulded
bases and capitals and double-chamfered arches. Aisle has cinquefoil-headed
piscina. Double-chamfered tower arch dying into walls. Small lancet window
above, now internal, with deep splay. Plaster ceilings to nave and chancel.
Chamfered cambered tie-beams to aisle roof. C18 baluster font. Polygonal pulpit
of c.1800 with inlay panels, Chancel and porch were rebuilt during the
incumbency of Edward Bayley, who rebuilt the Rectory (q.v. Old Rectory) at the
same time.
(Buildings of England: Northamptonshire: 1973, pp380-381; VCH: Northamptonshire:
1937, Vol IV, p283).


Listing NGR: SP7767654330

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