History in Structure

Church of St Saviour

A Grade I Listed Building in Burmantofts and Richmond Hill, Leeds

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.792 / 53°47'31"N

Longitude: -1.5265 / 1°31'35"W

OS Eastings: 431291

OS Northings: 432953

OS Grid: SE312329

Mapcode National: GBR BNN.MG

Mapcode Global: WHC9D.JYBD

Plus Code: 9C5WQFRF+QC

Entry Name: Church of St Saviour

Listing Date: 26 September 1963

Grade: I

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1375400

English Heritage Legacy ID: 466296

Also known as: St Saviour Church, Richmond Hill

ID on this website: 101375400

Location: St Saviour's Church, Cavalier Hill, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS9

County: Leeds

Electoral Ward/Division: Burmantofts and Richmond Hill

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Leeds

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Richmond Hill, Leeds

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: Church building Gothic Revival

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Description


SE3132NW
714-1/82/178
26/09/63

LEEDS
ELLERBY ROAD
(South West side)
Church of St Saviour

GV
I

Anglican church. 1842-45. By John Macduff Derick. Dressed
stone with ashlar dressings, Gothic Revival style.
PLAN: nave, chancel, north and south aisles, transepts and
north porch, on a sloping site with orientation nearer
north-south than east-west.
EXTERIOR: tall and narrow, with crossing tower with quatrefoil
pierced parapet and pinnacles, 5-light windows to both
transepts and the west and east ends, 3-light chancel windows,
2-light aisle windows, clerestory. Bellcote over west end has
small flying buttresses and crocketed pinnacles.
INTERIOR: reputed to contain tall octagonal piers to nave
arcades, aisleless chancel, Pusey chapel by GF Bodley, 1890.
Reredos by Temple Moore, 1921.
STAINED GLASS: the four 5-light windows described by Pevsner
as 'of great merit, in the style of the C13 and in glowing
colour, nothing yet of Victorian insipidity'; designed by
Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin and executed by O'Connor to
Pusey's directions worked out with Benjamin Webb of the
Cambridge Camden Society. The windows of the north end of
the north aisle and the north porch are by Morris and Co and
were made between 1875 and 1880; single figures of saints,
and Fra Angelico.
The church was built just after the completion of the rebuilt
parish church for Dean Hook and was the centre of a major
controversy over church ritual.
Dr Pusey, Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford University and
a leading member of the Oxford Movement was the leading patron
of the living, together with 3 other Tractarians; he financed
the building anonymously as the earliest Tractarian parochial
experiment outside London. The building is of a high standard
of craftsmanship but was not completed: the tall spire,
(modelled on St Mary's, Oxford), and pinnacles along the eaves
were not built; the corbel tables, crocketed pinnacles and
stops to the window hoodmoulds were left uncarved.
HISTORICAL NOTE: attacks on the Anglo-Catholic Oxford Movement
in Leeds reached extreme proportions between 1845 and 1851,
led by both Anglicans and Non Conformists, St Saviour's Church
being considered an 'obnoxious influence'; it was to become a
typical and successful ritualist church of the late C19 during
the incumbency of John Wylde, 1877-1929.
(Pevsner, N: The Buildings of England: Yorkshire West Riding:


1967-; Fraser, D (Ed): A History of Modern Leeds: 1980-: 263;
Thoresby Society Publication: Yates, N: Leeds and the Oxford
Movement: 1975-: 27-31).

Listing NGR: SE3129132953

External Links

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