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Church of All Saints

A Grade II* Listed Building in Whitstable, Kent

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.3558 / 51°21'20"N

Longitude: 1.0397 / 1°2'22"E

OS Eastings: 611739

OS Northings: 166248

OS Grid: TR117662

Mapcode National: GBR TX1.ZLZ

Mapcode Global: VHKJR.Z50Y

Plus Code: 9F33924Q+8V

Entry Name: Church of All Saints

Listing Date: 30 March 1951

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1084932

English Heritage Legacy ID: 170814

Also known as: All Saints Church, Whitstable

ID on this website: 101084932

Location: All Saints' Church, Church Street, Canterbury, Kent, CT5

County: Kent

District: Canterbury

Electoral Ward/Division: Chestfield

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Whitstable

Traditional County: Kent

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Kent

Tagged with: Church building

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Description


This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 8 March 2021 to correct a name and to reformat the text to current standards

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CHURCH STREET (southwest side)
Church of All Saints

30-MAR-51

II*
Perpendicular C15 south west tower and north aisle arcade. Church otherwise rebuilt in 1875-76 by Charles Barry Jr. South aisle and west porch added in 1962, in a sympathetic style. Re-ordered internally 1981-86.

Materials: rubble Kentish Ragstone walls through all periods, with some evidence of water scoured beach pebbles in tower. Ashlar quoins and dressings. Red tiled roofs. Continuous stone plinth around Victorian work.

Plan: following the 1962 south aisle addition, the church is roughly rectangular in plan. Aligned east-west, the entrance is now through the northeast porch, although there are further porches to the west and the west of the north wall.

Exterior: church is fairly low and dominated by the fairly plain south west tower, with string course below parapet, pair of cusped lancets to each face of the top stage, below clock, and single lancet at ground floor level; heavy angled buttresses; evidence of band half way up tower. The south aisle (1962) continues for five bays with paired trefoil-headed lancets under hoods. East end: lower 1962 aisle to left with central window with trefoil headed lancets and cusped light under moulded hood to match that in Victorian north aisle; central 1875 chancel end with Perpendicular four-centred window under moulded hood and above continuous moulded cill, and corner buttresses; north aisle to right is recessed with central nearly rounded pointed arch window with pair of trefoil-headed lancets under cusped light, all under moulded hood with square headstops. North east corner has flat-roofed vestry to east and north porch with cinquefoil cusped circular windows over door. West end is pleasingly proportioned with graduated heights down from the dominant corner tower; west end of nave features quatrefoil with Kentish cusps; advanced central flat-roofed porch of 1962 with depressed arch and quoins.

Interior: arched brace timber roof with reinforcing rods and wooden brackets set on stone corbels; simple crown post roofs in aisles. Octagonal piers and arches moulded with double wave to nave arcade: C15 to north side and 1962 to south. Higher chancel arch of 1875. Interior was reordered in 1984 when pews removed and altar moved to a movable podium in the centre of the nave. Victorian floor tiles of the original plan survive, and the chancel has a handsome decorative tiled floor; Victorian choir stalls; piscina basin to south wall may be re-used from earlier building. 1890s lectern, a gift of a former vicar, features marble colonettes, and oak lectern apparently made out of timber from the medieval roof. A number of late-C19 and early-C20 stained glass windows: of note are the Browning Memorial window of 1925 in the north wall which shows a red-sailed traditional Thames barge, as well as a shell and a starfish, over St. Anne teaching the Virgin to read; east window of 1884 depicts lamb of God; St. Augustine of 1908 and Wynn Ellis (of mausoleum in churchyard, q.v.) window of 1875, with seven roundels, both reset in south aisle. South wall has a brass memorial tablet to Thomas Brede, d.1444. World War I and World War II memorial tablets with names in the north aisle, and a memorial window dedicated to parishioners who died in WWI. Tower features a substantial ladder stair of rough hewn oak of some antiquity. Medieval stone font with hexagonal shaft and basin on moulded base in south west corner has early C17 font cover with ogee profile and crocketed ribs, recently shown to have a painted underside, and featuring coats of arms. The bells date from 1730 when recast by Samuel Knight of Holborn, one bearing the inscription ' S K made me in 1730'.

Subsidiary Features: timber lych-gate to Church Street is dated 1924, constructed by Percy Pout and dedicated to the memory of W Harrington and N Scryngour.

History: there has been a church on this site since the C13. The medieval fabric that survives today is the plain but imposing Perpendicular tower and four bay north arcade (as well as possibly the piscina which may have been reset in the new chancel). The church was otherwise largely rebuilt in 1875-76, by Charles Barry Jr.; a printed notice of 1875 confirmed that only the tower and a colonnade of arches from the existing church were to be kept. The west end was underpinned in 1908 and in 1914, and a Lady chapel was created in the former organ chamber / vestry. The altar panels were painted around this time by a Miss Ethel K. Martyn. In 1921, an Emily Holden donated funds to buy the land for a vicarage and to extend the churchyard (one of the largest in Kent). By 1962, there was still need for further room in the church, and a south aisle and west porch were added with the arcade in a sympathetic style with the Victorian windows reset into the new south aisle wall. This work was dedicated by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Michael Ramsey in December 1962. The interior was reordered in 1984. The tower has long served as a beacon for seafarers in this coastal town, and also served as an air raid lookout post in WWII.

Sources
Newman, J., Buildings of England, North East and East Kent (1977), 495
All Saints Church Whitstable, 'A Short Guide'

Reasons for Designation
All Saints church, Whitstable, is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:
* Perpendicular tower and nave arcade, and possibly piscina and font, constitute C15 fabric of more than special interest;
* The rest of the church, mostly by Charles Barry Junior 1875-6 is of special interest for its sympathetic Gothic design with late-Victorian fittings and windows of note;
* The square tower has served as a beacon for sailors and fishermen in this historic coastal community for five centuries; a window of 1925 shows a traditional Thames sailing barge that is so characteristic of the Whitstable seafaring economy;
* Group value with the Grade II monuments in the churchyard: the Wynn Ellis Mausoleum (LBS 468924) of 1875, also by Charles Barry Junior, the Walter Goodsall Burial Enclosure (LBS 468925) of 1913, and the C18 headstones with skull, hourglass and bone motifs; as well as a number of listed buildings on Church Street.

External Links

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