History in Structure

Church of St Ebba

A Grade II* Listed Building in Ebchester, County Durham

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Coordinates

Latitude: 54.8937 / 54°53'37"N

Longitude: -1.8399 / 1°50'23"W

OS Eastings: 410365

OS Northings: 555450

OS Grid: NZ103554

Mapcode National: GBR HCLV.GJ

Mapcode Global: WHC40.Q818

Plus Code: 9C6WV5V6+F2

Entry Name: Church of St Ebba

Listing Date: 6 June 1951

Last Amended: 21 January 1987

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1240418

English Heritage Legacy ID: 438845

ID on this website: 101240418

Location: St Ebba's Church, Ebchester, County Durham, DH8

County: County Durham

Electoral Ward/Division: Leadgate and Medomsley

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Ebchester

Traditional County: Durham

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): County Durham

Church of England Parish: Ebchester

Church of England Diocese: Durham

Tagged with: Church building

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Ebchester

Description


NZ 1055 CONSETT FRONT STREET

(East side, off)
Ebchester
17/48 Church of St. Ebba
6/6/51 (Formerly listed as
St Ebba's Church)
GV II*
Parish church. C12, extensively rebuilt in 1892 by C.H. Fowler; tower added
and nave extended and other work done in 1910 by G.T. Wilson. Sandstone rubble,
except for lower course of massive blocks; some blocks and quoins of coarse
sandstone; tower snecked sandstone; ashlar dressings; stone-flagged roof.
Restorations in Romanesque style with round-headed windows, except for
Perpendicular-style west window. Nave with north tower and boiler-room;
chancel with south vestry, choir-vestry and organ chamber. 3-stage tower with
single buttress has double doors in triple-chamfered round-headed surround.
Small window above; clock in raised surrounding mould in next stage and belfry
opening above, all under dripmoulds. Top cornice and parapet, stepped up at
corners, with roll moulding. 4-bay nave and lower 3-bay chancel have mostly
small windows in north and south walls, slightly chamfered except in west.
Original windows survive in east bay of chancel, and some others in north wall;
large east window; and large Perpendicular west window. Part of Roman altar
built into west wall. Gabled bellcote has paired 2-centred-arched openings.
Stone cross finials.
Interior: sandstone rubble except for large blocks in first course and patches
of coursed masonry, with ashlar dressings; collar-truss roof; low-pitched
panelled chancel roof with painted decoration on ribs and frieze. East window
has moulded round arch on shafts with scallop capitals; other windows have
deeply-splayed reveals and stepped sills with inserted lintels in chancel;
restored windows copy originals. Plain semicircular chancel arch on impost
bands. Wide rectangular aumbry in wall to left of altar has top hinge-pins
and rebated surround. Rerearch to west window. Round-headed tower-arch has
chamfered head. Glass in east window to Robert S. Surtees, died 1864, and
Anthony Surtees died 1871; Gothic style. Later C19 glass in west window. Font
in style of Norman pillar has moulded narrow bowl on stout irregular pedestal
which tapers towards base. Monuments include 2 in chancel; in memory of
Anthony Surtees of Hamsterley Hall died 1838, and his wife Alice died 1837;
white marble, with drapery and Prince of Wales feathers, on black mount; and a
white marble slab in black marble frame, signed Davies and Jopling, with
guttae, and draped urn, commemorating Robert and Ann Surtees of Milk Well Burn,
died 1811. Painted Creed, Commandments and Our Father panels on east wall.
Re-used Roman altar built into porch wall. The church is built within the
Roman fort Vindomora.


Listing NGR: NZ1036555450

External Links

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