History in Structure

Church of St George

A Grade II* Listed Building in Chorley, Lancashire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.6521 / 53°39'7"N

Longitude: -2.6292 / 2°37'45"W

OS Eastings: 358509

OS Northings: 417474

OS Grid: SD585174

Mapcode National: GBR BV26.LK

Mapcode Global: WH97C.LG6K

Plus Code: 9C5VM92C+R8

Entry Name: Church of St George

Listing Date: 21 December 1966

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1072441

English Heritage Legacy ID: 357583

ID on this website: 101072441

Location: St George's Church, Chorley, Lancashire, PR7

County: Lancashire

District: Chorley

Electoral Ward/Division: Chorley South East

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Chorley

Traditional County: Lancashire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lancashire

Church of England Parish: Chorley St George

Church of England Diocese: Blackburn

Tagged with: Church building Gothic Revival

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Description


SD 51 NE CHORLEY ST. GEORGE'S STREET


5/67
21.12.1966 Church of St. George

GV II*


Church, 1822-25, by Thomas Rickman. Ashlar, with slate roof. West tower,
nave and chancel in one, north and south aisles; in Early English Style.
Four stage battlemented tower with small angle buttresses; like all the
buttresses on the building these are persistently chamfered, and end in
octagonal pinnacles. Arched west doorway under a crocketed gable; tall
lancet with hoodmould; clockfaces on 3 sides of short 3rd stage; belfry
with arcades of 3 tall lancets (the outer ones blind). Seven-bay nave and
aisles; aisles have vertically-emphasised bays of coupled lancets with
stopped hoodmoulds, separated by buttresses ending in pinnacles above a
plain coping; nave has horizontal emphasis with clerestorey of evenly-
spaced lancets (2 to each bay), the hoodmoulds linked by a band carried
across vestigial buttresses which terminate below the cornice of a
battlemented parapet. East window of 5 stepped lights. Interior:
moulded 2-centred arches on piers with attached shafts which have
moulded caps; deeply splayed tower arch with tracery and stained glass;
all ceilings are flat, but supported by flying ribs, simply in the aisles,
but of hammerbeam construction in the nave with sexfoil spandrels, every
other frame standing on wall shafts; gallery of arcaded panels at west
end and inside each aisle, supported by very slim iron shafts and cusped
multifoil segmental arches. Baptistery at west end of north aisle has
white marble angel carrying a scalloped bowl (said to be copied from
Thorwaldsen); elaborately sculpted octagonal pulpit by Thomas Rawcliffe
of Chorley; parts of original box pews now form wainscot to aisle walls. A
Commissioners' church which cost £12,387(Pevsner). An impressive and
characteristic Rickman design.


Listing NGR: SD5850917474

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