History in Structure

Church of St Mary

A Grade I Listed Building in South Creake, Norfolk

More Photos »
Approximate Location Map
Large Map »

Coordinates

Latitude: 52.8915 / 52°53'29"N

Longitude: 0.7564 / 0°45'22"E

OS Eastings: 585526

OS Northings: 336232

OS Grid: TF855362

Mapcode National: GBR R6G.L1V

Mapcode Global: WHKPR.LLD4

Plus Code: 9F42VQR4+JG

Entry Name: Church of St Mary

Listing Date: 5 June 1953

Grade: I

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1077798

English Heritage Legacy ID: 221632

ID on this website: 101077798

Location: St Mary's Church, South Creake, King's Lynn and West Norfolk, Norfolk, NR21

County: Norfolk

District: King's Lynn and West Norfolk

Civil Parish: South Creake

Traditional County: Norfolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Norfolk

Church of England Parish: Creake South St Mary

Church of England Diocese: Norwich

Tagged with: Church building

Find accommodation in
South Creake

Description


TF 83 NE SOUTH CREAKE CHURCH ROAD (north)

2/48 Church of St. Mary.
5.6.53.

I

Parish church. C13, C14, largely C15. West tower, nave and aisles, south porch,
chancel and north chapel. Rubble and knapped flint. Slated nave and chancel,
leaded aisle roofs. C14 rectangular on plan west tower has stone plinth and
quoined angle buttresses with set offs. 4-light Reticulated tracery west window
with drip mould strip at base and springing of arch. Lancets to upper chamber,
4 2-light Decorated tracery belfry windows. Moulded eaves, no parapet. South
porch has re-positioned C14 richly moulded arch with half columns. Simple
C14 north door with arch dying into splayed richly moulded arch. Angle
buttresses. Triangular gable with ogee niche, "MR" monograms in flushwork
repeated on returns. Decayed angle finials and base of central finial or cross.
2 north and south 2-light windows. 5 bay Perpendicular aisles, on south with
4 right angle and one set off angle cutstone buttresses, on north with 4 right
angles and 2 set off angle buttresses. Aisle east and west windows C14 3-light
Reticulated tracery, 4 north and south 3-light Perpendicular windows. 5 north
and south 3-light Perpendicular tracery clerestorey windows. 5 bay Perpen-
dicular clerestorey. Tower east face has line of earlier taller roof pitch.
Nave east gable has 2 set off buttresses, 3-light Perpendicular gable east
window. C13 and later chancel has 2 c.1300 'Y' tracery with trefoil head south
windows. One 3-light Perpendicular window to west with drip mould with label
stop heads. Evidence of blocked window or former extension to south. Buttressed
east gable with c.1300 5-light switch tracery window. Knapped flint north
chancel chapel has 3-light Reticulated tracery east window of opposed inter-
laced ogees, moulded frame and drip mould head. Early Perpendicular 2-light
north window with battlemented transom. 2 angle buttresses. Chancel north
has 2 simple 'Y' tracery windows. Interior: 5 bay north and south Perpendicular
arcades, double hollow chamfered arches, outer arch on uninterrupted splay,
inner arch with moulded capital. Octagonal seat bases, moulded semi-octagonal
inner order, knobbed bases to outer. Nave and aisles have C15 roofs of 5 bays.
Nave single hammerbeams with angels supporting arched braces. 5 semi-octagonal
wall posts with moulded bases and capitals supporting arched braced wall plate
with traceried spandrels cove, brattishing. Moulded through purlins and
central ridge with bosses. Aisle roofs, 5 bays, have moulded arched braces
with traceried spandrels and brattishing, carried by semi-octagonal wall posts
with moulded bases and capitals set on C15 stone brackets, angels with scrolls.
Moulded ridge and central rafter to each bay. Coving against outer and inner
walls with brattishing. North aisle has extra arched traceried half bay over
east end. C14 tower arch has trefoil section over, half pier and 2 angle
quarter piers, moulded bases and capitals, double hollow chamfered arch. Tower
arch of c.1300, order of complex section, with central half columns and
flanking colonnettes with rectangular fillets in between. C19 recut base,
original capitals. Richly moulded arch, 2 label stop heads, label above cut
away. To east, upper section of pier at south supported on C13 moulded corbel,
perhaps to house rood screen below towards chancel. Fine tripartite polychrome
C14 screen with traceried dado and gates, north and south lights with traceried
heads, central ogee tracery arch with infilling trefoil. Much delicate upper
tracery. South 4 centred rood stairs arch with in situ boarded door, first
floor roof loft arch. At north 2-light Perpendicular squint with painted
reverse side, under 4 centred arch with moulded intrados, spandrels and drip
mould. Chancel has moulded 2 column sedilia, C15 replacement carved lintel
in between with winged angels and rosettes. At north, angle piscina attached
with C13 angle colonnette with stiff-leaf capital. East window has moulded
internal arch with colonnettes with stiff leaf capitals. Moulded C14 north
door with label stop heads. Furnishings: C14 and C15 hexagonal painted goblet
pulpit, tracery panels. Mutilated illegible C15 octagonal seven sacrament
font set on 2 levels of octagonal steps. Much in situ tracery C14 and C15
glass in lights of south aisle east window, north aisle east and west windows
and 2 north aisle north windows. Tower arch screen c.1900. Chancel arch rood
beam c.1920, designed for other churches.


Listing NGR: TF8552636232

External Links

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.

Recommended Books

Other nearby listed buildings

BritishListedBuildings.co.uk is an independent online resource and is not associated with any government department. All government data published here is used under licence. Please do not contact BritishListedBuildings.co.uk for any queries related to any individual listed building, planning permission related to listed buildings or the listing process itself.

British Listed Buildings is a Good Stuff website.