Church of Saint Anne Catterick, England

Listed Building Data

Church of Saint Anne has been designated a Grade I 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1131488
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
4 February 1969
Name
CHURCH OF SAINT ANNE
Location
CHURCH OF SAINT ANNE, HIGH GREEN
Parish
Catterick
District
Richmondshire
County
North Yorkshire
Grid Reference
SE 24012 97977
Easting
424012.1500
Northing
497976.7709

Listed Building Description

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

CATTERICK HIGH GREEN SE 29 NW (south side, off) 8/26 Church of Saint Anne 4.2.69 GV I

Church. 1412, with later C15 and C19 alterations. By Richard de Crakehall, master mason, for Katherine de Burgh and William, her son. Coursed sandstone, Westmorland slate roof. Perpendicular style. West tower, 4-bay nave with aisles and south porch, 3-bay chancel with side chapels and north vestry with heating chamber below. Windows have straight-sided pointed arches and hollow-chamfered surrounds. Tower: 3 stages. Stair turret with light vents in south-east corner. 3-light west window. Light vents to west and south sides of ringing chamber with clock. 2-light belfry openings. Crenellated parapet with corner finials. Nave: south porch: continuously- moulded pointed-arched doorway. Coats of arms of Aske, de Burgh and Lascelles families. Sundial in gable. Stone benches inside and small stoup. Inner doorway: continuously-moulded pointed arch, label with weathered heads. South aisle: bays divided by shallow stepped buttresses. 2-light windows with cinque-cusping, and labels. Blind parapet. Clerestory, added C19, has paired quatrefoils. North aisle: small north doorway with ovolo on chamfer and label, one C19 window and 1 original window. Cinque-cusped square-headed single-light window to west end of each aisle. Chancel: south aisle: continuously-moulded pointed-arched priests' doorway with label, 2-light windows, 3-light east window. Chancel east window of 5 lights under label with head stops. Above, C19 oculus with 3 lights. North chapel: of later C15; two 3-light square-headed north windows. Interior: arcades with octagonal columns on square chamfered broached bases with Perpendicular capitals, and 2 orders of arches, the outer one hollow chamfered, the inner one chamfered. Matching chancel arch. Arch from chancel to south chapel of 2 orders, one chamfered. Arch from chancel to north chapel of 3 chamfered orders. Straight-sided tower arch, without responds, of 3 chamfered orders, the innermost one hollow. Vaulted ringing chamber. Piscina in south aisle; 2 ogee niches in north aisle. Chancel: 3-seat sedilia with ogee canopies, crockets and finials. Vestry doorway: pointed arch with ovolo on arris and label. Wall monuments in chancel to Rev Michael Syddal, Vicar of Catterick d1658, who founded the village school and almshouse; Charles Anthony, 1600-85; Richard Braithwaite, court poet to James I, d1673. Floor slab in sanctuary to Roger Croft, d1684. Wall brasses in north chapel, built as a chantry of Saint James, to the founder, William de Burgh d1492 and wife Elizabeth; floor brasses to William de Burgh d1442, the builder of the church, and his son William d1462. C15 7-light wooden screen. South chapel: floor slab to Alice d1659 wife of Christopher Wandesford, Lord Deputy of Ireland. Nave: south aisle: reset effigy of Sir Walter Urswick, Constable of Richmond Castle in 1371, in segmental-arched moulded canopy; C15 wooden screen of 6 trefoiled lights. North aisle: wall monuments to de Burgh and their successor family of Lawson; also Lawson family hatchments. Black marble octagonal font, with monogram of founder, William de Burgh, arms of de Burgh, D'Arcy, Fitzhugh, Scrope and Neville families, and inscription on stem "CLAR FON" (clear fountain). Parish chest at west end. Royal coat of arms dated 1769 over tower arch.

Listing NGR: SE2401297976