History in Structure

Church of St Mary

A Grade I Listed Building in Conwy, Conwy

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.2807 / 53°16'50"N

Longitude: -3.8288 / 3°49'43"W

OS Eastings: 278163

OS Northings: 377526

OS Grid: SH781775

Mapcode National: GBR 1ZPH.VP

Mapcode Global: WH654.5S0V

Plus Code: 9C5R75JC+7F

Entry Name: Church of St Mary

Listing Date: 8 October 1981

Last Amended: 5 May 2006

Grade: I

Source: Cadw

Source ID: 3353

Building Class: Religious, Ritual and Funerary

Also known as: Church of St Mary, Conwy
Church of St Mary and All Saints, Conwy
Church of St Mary & All Saints, Conwy
Church of St Mary and All Saints
Eglwys y Santes Fair a'r Holl Saint, Conwy
St Mary's Church
St Mary's Church, Conwy
Aberconwy Abbey

ID on this website: 300003353

Location: In a large churchyard enclosed by buildings to Castle Street, High Street, Church Street and Rose Hill Street.

County: Conwy

Town: Conwy

Community: Conwy

Community: Conwy

Locality: Walled town

Built-Up Area: Conwy

Traditional County: Caernarfonshire

Tagged with: Church building

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History

Established as a Cistercian monastery in 1197. The church was damaged during the conquest of 1282, and then changed to parish status when the new borough of Conwy was created in 1284. C13 fabric is confined to part of the W front. The remainder of the church is mainly early C14 fabric, with alteration in C15 and C16, and restoration in the C19. It comprised an aisled nave, W tower, chancel and N vestry. In the mid C14 the S transept was added. In the C15 or early C16 the tower was heightened and the N porch was added. The S porch appears C17 in character. Extensive restoration was carried out in 1872 by Sir Gilbert Scott, architect of London. Scott added the clerestorey in the nave, new roofs and many new and restored windows. The vestry was extended in 1925.

Exterior

A large parish church mainly in Early English and Decorated style, comprising an aisled nave with porches, S transept, lower chancel, N vestry and W tower. Of rubble stone with mostly C19 freestone dressings, and slate roof behind coped gables on moulded kneelers.
The broad 3-stage W tower has angle buttresses in the lower stage to the W, partly obscured by the SW turret and parish room attached to the N side. The pointed W doorway, said to have been re-used from the abbey chapter house, is C13 and has polygonal responds with weathered foliage capitals, a similarly weathered arch of 4 orders, with hood mould and head stops. An offset above the W doorway has relief foliage in the centre, above which the W window is comprised of 3 stepped C13 lights. On the S side openings are offset to the R because of the turret. In the lower stage is a renewed window. Below it stone steps lead to the faceted E side of the turret, where there is a studded door. The turret has small superimposed lights. The 2nd stage of the tower has a cusped light in each face. A string course is between 2nd and 3rd stages, but it does not continue across the turret. Two-light belfry openings have 4-centred heads and hood moulds, with louvres. Below the parapet each face has a round clock face painted blue, by Fairer of London, in a freestone surround with hood mould continuous with a string course at the base of the embattled parapet.
The nave has lean-to aisles with porches at the W ends. On the S side is a post-Reformation gabled porch with an elliptical arch and iron gates. To its R are 2 single and a pair of lancets in the S aisle. The aisle W wall has similar paired lancets. In the clerestorey is a clear vertical joint between nave and tower, indicating that the clerestorey is a later addition to the nave. It has 5 quatrefoil lights in roundels to the S side and 6 to the N side. On the N side the porch is of half-cruck construction, although concealed on the outside by stone wall on the W and C19 timber-framing on the E side. Its gable end has cusped barge boards and its entrance has a pointed timber arch (like a miniature aisle truss) and iron gates. The aisle has paired lancets in C19 pale freestone surrounds, and a Perpendicular style E window with red-sandstone dressings, under a narrower relieving arch. At the W end, to the R of the porch, the aisle is continuous with a parish room against the tower. It has a pointed boarded door, buttress, and then pointed and small narrow windows in surrounds of re-used masonry. Its W wall has a pair of pointed lights.
The aisles are shorter than the nave. On the N side, at the E end of the nave is a 3-light window with simple bar tracery, flanked by buttresses, which on the R side is obscured by the aisle. On the corresponding S side is the transept. This has angle buttresses. In the W wall is a 2-light window with Y-tracery. A 5-light geometrical S window has a hood mould and foliage stops. On the buttressed E side are two 3-light windows, one with intersecting tracery and hood mould, the other with reticulated tracery under hood mould with foliage stops.
The 2-bay chancel is also buttressed. At the L end is a cusped light in the angle with the transept, superimposed by a narrower cusped light to the rood stair that was added in the late C15 or early C16. Further R is a 2-light window with lozenge tracery light, below which is a blocked pointed doorway with a sunk roll mould similar to the C14 internal transept arches. In the R-hand bay is a 2-light geometrical window and hood mould. In the E wall is a string course below sill level. The 5-light Perpendicular window is C19 in red-sandstone surround, below an earlier relieving arch. On the N side, the R-hand bay has a 3-light window with simple bar tracery. In the L-hand bay is an early C14 lean-to vestry with gabled projection added in 1925, which has freestone quoins. The original lean-to has a blocked pointed doorway to the L of the projection, and C19 windows in the end walls, of which the E is a 2-light window under a curved triangular head, and the W window has 2 cusped lights under a relieving arch. The 1925 projection has a Tudor-headed doorway with studded door on the E side, and triple round-headed lights to the N.

Interior

The S porch (disused) has stone benches and a single collar-beam truss on brackets. In the W wall is a wall tablet. The pointed S door has a C14 studded door. In the N porch are stone benches and a re-set medieval cross slab in the E wall. The pointed N doorway has C20 boarded doors.
The interior is plastered and windows, including clerestorey, have freestone rere arches. The nave has 3-bay early C14 arcades of octagonal piers on square bases, with simple capitals, pointed arches with 2 orders of hollow chamfer, and hood moulds with large head stops. On the S side the broad respond between nave arcade and later transept arch has a cusped niche. The nave has a 7-bay corbelled arched-brace roof with windbraces, and subsidiary trusses behind the purlins. Aisles have trusses on corbelled brackets and windbraces. In both aisles a corbelled shelf is beside the entrance, which on the S side has a shallow round-headed niche. The S aisle also has 2 arched tomb recesses and a cusped piscina, all C14. The tower arch has 2 orders of continuous chamfer, and boarded doors with false strap hinges. In the lower stage of the tower is a heavy framed ceiling on corbels. The S transept has pointed arches from nave and aisle, with 2 orders of sunk roll mould, a plainer outer order and hood mould. In the S transept is a cusped piscina in the S wall, and inserted cupboard below it. The upper section of a winding rood stair survives above the arches at the junction of transept and chancel.
There is no structural division between nave and chancel, except a lower cusped arched brace with struts above. The chancel has a lower eaves line, an arched-brace roof of 2 wide bays, similar to the nave but without windbraces. On the N side is an arch to the organ recess and vestry. It has 2 orders of sunk roll moulding, and hood mould with head stops. In the chancel is a floor of re-set grave slabs and C19 decorative geometrical-pattern tiles. The sanctuary has richer tile work. The wooden reredos has 5 blind panels behind the altar, of which the central 3 are higher, with delicate 2-light blind tracery, and similar but lower panels R and L, all under a vine cornice with brattishing. In the S wall, salvaged medieval floor tiles have been assembled to form a large wall panel.
The major interior fixture is the imposing 5-bay rood screen, erected in the period 1488-1504 and well restored in the C19. It features the badge of Sir Richard Pole (eagle's claw grabbing a fish), who was constable of Conwy Castle 1488-1504. Each outer bay has a panelled dado under quatrefoil friezes, and 4 lights with delicate tracery. The central bay has double wooden gates, with an upper tier of linenfold panelling. Main uprights have thin shafts with capitals, below deep ribbed coving and pendants. On the chancel side the coving is given additional support by 2 later posts. The cornice has 2 orders of foliage trails, incorporating various motifs including the badge of Sir Richard Pole. The choir stalls are contemporary with the screen. They are L-plan on both N and S sides, backing on the rood screen, with blind-traceried ends and poppy heads. Original fronts also have blind tracery, but another bench has been added on each side, also with traceried ends, and with later turned balusters to the front.
The C20 communion rail is in wood. In the N aisle is a C20 war memorial chapel with screen a simplified Tudor-Gothic style and a panelled wainscot inside incorporating a roll call. At the W end of the nave is a Tudor-Gothic hymn-book stall of the C20, with panel dado and blind arches, then open ogee arches with delicate tracery, foliage cornice and brattishing.
The Perpendicular font is on a stepped plinth. The plinth was probably re-used from elsewhere, although it is illustrated in its present position in 1835. The font is badly weathered but its intricate carving can still be appreciated. It has a lead-lined octagonal bowl with quatrefoils and rosettes. An octagonal pedestal is surrounded by an detached arcade of cusped arches, and buttresses. The pews are C19, with shaped ends. The C20 late-medieval polygonal wooden pulpit has open cusped tracery.
Memorials: There are numerous monuments, both freestanding tombs and wall tablets. The most important is in the SE corner of the chancel, a tomb chest with arched hood to Robert Wynn (d 1598) and Robert Wynn (d 1664). Aligned E-W, its W face has relief heraldry and inscriptions on both hood and chest. Other chancel monuments are wall tablets and plaques. Above the Wynn tomb in the E wall is a tablet with relief inscriptions and arms to John Wynn (d 1637), surmounted by pinnacles and achievement. Next to it is a plain brass to Rev Morgan Morgan (d 1870). On the N side of the altar is a marble tablet to Margaret Coytmor (d 1684), an inscription panel with pilasters, on a winged cherub, surmounted by a flaming urn. Next to it are simpler relief tablets to Anne Apthorp (d 1786) and Katherine Robeson (d 1621). In the N wall a memorial to Mary Owen (d 1837) is a marble tablet with urn against a black background, by E. Gaffin of London. A plain painted tablet in a wooden border is to Jane Fletcher (d 1708). The S chancel wall has grave slabs re-set against the wall with dates 1601, 1586 and 1666, although not all are visible. A classical tablet to Cadwaleder Wynn (d 1719), erected by Watkin Wynn in 1752, has a panel on an apron with cherub, pilasters and entablature. To its L is a simple tablet to Richard Williams (d 1765, aged 11).
In the nave N wall, opposite the S transept, a tablet to George Coytmor and wife (d 1738, 1758) is by B. Bromfield. It is of marble with inlay star patterns, Vitruvian-scroll moulding to the entablature, and pediment incorporating a relief roundel with achievement. A tablet, with pilasters and corbels, partly draped, commemorates Hephzibah Williams (d 1832). A marble tablet to Henry Pringle has flanking inverted torches and an achievement, on a black background.
In the transept E wall is a tablet to Robert Howard and wife (d 1776, 1780), by B. Bromfield and similar to the Coytmor tablet in the nave. Of marble, with inlay star patterns, it has a corbelled apron to a sarcophagus with inscription, and tall pediment with a fluted urn. Next to it is a weathered freestone Renaissance tablet with Latin inscription to Johannes Hooke (d 1600) below kneeling figures in high relief, guilloche-moulded border, and surmounted by pinnacles and achievement. In the S wall is a simple slate tablet to William Holland (d 1703). In the W wall are simple slate tablets to Edward Holland (d 1734) and Jane Williams (d 1694), and freestone tablet to Margaret Roberts. Against the S wall are 2 chest tombs. Below the piscina is a tomb with slate slab to Robert Williams (d 1760). On the W side is a tomb with cracked freestone slab, coats of arms and 2 inscriptions, to Sir Edward Holland (d 1584), and William Williams and wife (d 1641, 1677).
In the S aisle are 2 tomb recesses. The easternmost has a female effigy in low-relief slate. The westernmost has a re-set medieval grave slab. A memorial to the sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866) is by W. Theed of London. It comprises a marble bust in a cusped recess, with hood and foliage stops, below which is a marble inscription panel. There are also wall tablets to Cornelius Foulkes (d 1754) and Thomas Williams (d 1784).
Against the N aisle N wall is a table tomb with slate slab to John Williams (d 1706), on later shaped legs (in 1835 this slab was in the NE corner of the chancel). The E wall has 2 marble tablets with black pedimented backgrounds, to Silence Holland (d 1812) by T. Franceys of Liverpool, and Diana and Owen Holland (d 1795). In the N wall is another similar Franceys memorial, to Rev Hugh Williams and wife (d 1809, 1843). A slate tablet erected by the Burma Star Association commemorates lives lost in the Far East. Marble tablets are to Sir David Erskine (d 1841) and Jane Erskine (d 1826, aged 3). A brass plaque commemorates Elizabeth Roberts. Old grave slabs are set into the N aisle floor.
Stained glass: The E window, probably dating from Scott's 1872 restoration, depicts the Ascension and Evangelists. The N window, depicting the Last Supper, is by Mayer & Co of London and Munich, post 1882. In the S transept, one E window shows the angel of the Resurrection, post 1870, the other patterned coloured glass dated 1879. The S window has similar patterned glass. The W window shows the Welsh Bible translators William Morgan and William Salebury, post 1936. In the S aisle, the pair of lancets toward the E end show Saints Mary and Margaret, post 1915. In the W window the pair of lancets depict the single scene of Christ healing the sick, by A.L. Moore of London, post 1912. The E window of the N aisle shows re-set glass showing Christ blessing a child, carrying the cross and with Mary Magdalene, by H Worwick, dated 1854. The N window in the nave shows Christ preaching, post 1888.

Reasons for Listing

Listed grade I as a substantial medieval church with later alteration and restoration, retaining much C14 fabric and interior detail of exceptionally high quality from the C15 to the C20.

External Links

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