Church of St Agnes Birmingham, England

Listed Building Data

Church of St Agnes 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1343411
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
8 July 1982
Name
CHURCH OF ST AGNES INCLUDING BOUNDARY WALLS AND LYCH GATE
Location
CHURCH OF ST AGNES INCLUDING BOUNDARY WALLS AND LYCH GATE, COLMORE CRESCENT B13
District
Birmingham
Grid Reference
SP 08584 82365
Easting
408584.3500
Northing
282364.6161

Listed Building Description

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

997/12/17 COLMORE CRESCENT B13 08-JUL-82 MOSELEY Church of St Agnes including boundary walls and lych gate

II Anglican St Agnes Church. 1883-93. William Davis. Decorated Gothic style. Tower completed in 1931-2 by C. E. Bateman.

MATERIALS: Rusticated Hampstead red sandstone with Bath stone dressings. Banded tile roof. The interior is exposed Bath stone.

PLAN: The church is orientated east to west and the plan consists of a nave, north and south aisle, chancel, north and south transept, south vestry, north organ chamber, north porch, west porch and west tower. EXTERIOR: The west end consists of a central tower of two stages: a rusticated sandstone base by Davis and a Bath stone upper stage by Bateman. The upper stage has a battlemented parapet and crocketed pinnacles to the four corners. To each face of the upper stage is a pair of rectangular louvered windows with blind tracery. The lower stage has three rows of alternating red and white tiles and blind tracery to the south and north side. To the west face of the tower is a tracery window with three cusped lancets with central sexfoil and quatrefoil to either side. The doorway is a recessed pointed brick arch of two orders supported on round piers with foliate capitals. The porch has a triangular gable end with cinquefoil to the centre and hood mould to the pointed arch doorway with head stops. To either side of the gable are stone tiles with a flower motif. Pilasters to either side of the doorway have triangular capitals with pointed trefoil motif. To either side of the tower are the single storey aisles. The north and south aisles are six bays with dividing shallow buttress between pairs of cusped window within pointed stone arch openings with hood mould and central foliate stop. To the nave are six clerestorey windows consisting of three cusped lights with sexfoil above and quatrefoil either side. To the eastern end are the transepts with a tracery window of five cusped lights with three sexfoils above. To the angle between the west tower and the south elevation is an octagonal rusticated stone turret with battlemented parapet. To the east end of the south elevation is the extended vestry, to the north elevation is the organ chamber. To the west end of the north elevation is the gabled porch with central trefoil and recessed pointed arch doorway. To the outer corners are angle buttresses surmounted by a turret with plain pinnacle. The chancel's east window is divided into three: to the centre are three tall lancet windows with cusped heads with sexfoil above to the centre and quatrefoil either side set with a moulded pointed arch with engaged shafts; the outer windows have a single lancet window with cusped head and quatrefoil above within a moulded pointed arch with engaged shafts. To the four corners of the chancel are stone turrets with blind arcading and plain pinnacles.

INTERIOR: The interior has exposed Bath stone. The six bay arcades are formed from round stone piers supporting pointed arches with moulded impost, and hood mould with head stops. Cluster piers support the pointed chancel arch. The arch-braced scissor and collar rafter roof is supported on round moulded stone corbels with marble shaft and moulded stone pendant. The floor is wood block with tiles to the side and nave aisles. Contemporary fittings and fixtures include the stone font, which has been relocated, with the baptistery, to the south aisle, and has the inscription "PARVULI, PARVULIS RENASCITURIS RENAT" (The children who have been born again in Baptism to the children who will be born again); and the East window of "Christ in Glory worshipped by prophets and saints" designed by Ballantyne and Gardiner of Edinburgh to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1897. Most of the oak joinery is mid-C20 and was designed by James Swan in a late Perpendicular Gothic style and carved by Robert Pancheri of The Bromsgrov