Parish Church of St Thomas Apostle Lymington and Pennington, England

Listed Building Data

Parish Church of St Thomas Apostle has been designated a Grade II* listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1217370
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II*
Date Listed
22 December 1953
Name
PARISH CHURCH OF ST THOMAS THE APOSTLE
Location
PARISH CHURCH OF ST THOMAS THE APOSTLE, HIGH STREET
Parish
Lymington and Pennington
District
New Forest
County
Hampshire
Grid Reference
SZ 32181 95442
Easting
432180.7735
Northing
95442.1080

Description

Parish church, a key element in Lymington High Street, the S wall to the High Street. C13 origins (archaeological evidence in E and W ends of church); c1325 chapel with c1500 roof; tower 1670; the rest of the church was thoroughly rebuilt in the C18 and C19 and refurbished and re-roofed in 1910-1911. 1931 sacristy; 1980-1981 church hall to the designs of Roger Pinckney, attached to N side of the nave.

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

LYMINGTON

693/1/25 HIGH STREET 22-DEC-1953 (North side) PARISH CHURCH OF ST THOMAS THE APOSTLE

GV II* Parish church, a key element in Lymington High Street, the S wall to the High Street. C13 origins (archaeological evidence in E and W ends of church); c1325 chapel with c1500 roof; tower 1670; the rest of the church was thoroughly rebuilt in the C18 and C19 and refurbished and re-roofed in 1910-1911. 1931 sacristy; 1980-1981 church hall to the designs of Roger Pinckney, attached to N side of the nave. MATERIALS: Stone rubble. N, S and W walls are cement-rendered, limestone ashlar tower with lead-roofed cupola; tiled roofs. PLAN: Nave with N and S aisles with galleries; W end organ gallery and narthex, N transept. Chancel, SE tower at E end of S aisle; NE chapel; sacristy built on N face of N transept.

EXTERIOR: The chancel has diagonal buttresses with set-offs. 5-light C19 E window with Perpendicular style tracery with a transom in the head. The S side has a 3-light C19 Geometric Decorated window and a small 3-light segmental-headed window with Perpendicular style tracery. The N wall of the chancel has a very tall slit window. 2-stage tower with diagonal buttresses to the lower stage only. Moulded S doorway with C17 style round-headed panelled door. Above this the S face has a very tall square-headed 3-light window with uncusped lights. Square-headed mullioned belfry windows. The cornice below the embattled parapet is broken for 1907 clock faces. Timber arcaded cupola with lead dome and weathervane on octagonal base, in place by 1740 and possibly 1680s in origin. The S side of the church has tall 2-light windows of 1871 with Geometric Decorated tracery. Triple gable to W end, the narthex with a hammer-dressed stone plinth. 2-light windows to the N and S; 5-light W window. The N aisle render is blocked out. 3 2-light traceried windows of 1868. The N transept has a 3-light Decorated style window and 1931 sacristy with hipped roof built against it. The N chapel has angle buttresses and two tall C14 Decorated N windows, and an E window with intersecting tracery.

INTERIOR: The nave is predominantly classical in appearance. Unplastered walls at the E end reveal complex archaeology. The 1811 narthex has staircases to the N and S galleries. The original W wall (now internal)includes a C13 lancet window and a c1200 W respond with a base with spurs. The E end walls are stripped of plaster to reveal the evidence of tall, shafted blind arcading on the N and S chancel walls. C13 trefoil-headed piscina with short squat shafts in S wall of chancel. The NE chapel, built as a mortuary chapel by Hugh Courtenay, has a ceiled wagon roof of c1500, divided into panels by moulded ribs with rustic bosses at the intersections. Mid C13 N doorway in N transept, now leading to the 1931 sacristy. Remains of a medieval pier at the SE internal corner of the tower. The remainder of the visible fabric and features are C18 and later.

The dominant interior features are the galleries. The N and S galleries (1792 and 1811) are supported on two tiers of Tuscan columns which also function as arcades. The W gallery is supported on cast-iron columns. The gallery frontals are panelled and have dentil cornices. The S gallery has a plain barrel roof. The N gallery, which extends into the chancel, truncating the transept walls, has a canted plastered ceiling above two boxed-in tie beams. This gallery was reduced in length in 1927 to make the Courtenay chapel more legible. 1910-1911 plastered barrel vault to the nave, with transverse ribs and a cornice decorated with ornamental plasterwork. Similar roof to the chancel, but here the barrel is pointed. Flat ceilure over the sanctuary with a frame of decorated plaster and gilded cherub's heads. Font of 1873 with an octagonal stone bowl carved with trefoil-headed motifs, circular stem. An C18 baluster font has been preserved. Polygonal timber pulpit of 1911, designed b