St George's Church, Woodsetts

St George's Church, Woodsetts
St George's Church
St George's Church, Woodsetts
LocationWoodsetts, South Yorkshire
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
History
DedicationSt. George
Architecture
StyleGothic Revival
Completed1842
Administration
DioceseSheffield
DeaneryLaughton
Clergy
VicarKirsty Massey

St George's Church, Woodsetts is a Church of England parish church in Woodsetts, South Yorkshire, England. The church is located on Lindrick Road, and overlooks the village crossroads. The earliest part of the building was completed in 1842, and was extended in 1923.[1] It sits within the Diocese of Sheffield, and the Province of York.

History

By the late 19th century, the population of Woodsetts was deemed large and stable enough to warrant a church of its own. Before this time, villagers would travel to St James Church at Anston[2]. A subscription was started in the village, and raised a total of £1,100. Land for the church was purchased from the Duke of Leeds,[3] and building started in 1840, to a design by Hurst and Moffatt. The building was consecrated in September 1841.[4] The work cost £1,100, and on completion the church had seating for 188 worshippers. On Sunday 30 March 1851, it held two services, with attendances of 64 and 72.[5]

The building was originally of a single cell, the footprint of which is the present nave, and first dedicated to St Mary. In 1923 the church was extended by A. E. Turnell to include a choir, an apse, and a vestry. A porch was added as a World War I memorial.[4] The bellcote has a single bell, originally cast in 1841 at Whitechapel, and recast in 1976 at Loughborough.[1] In 1970, new light fittings were installed, designed by George Pace.[6]

Architecture

The building is of three cells. Withstanding the porch, the entire church is of local limestone and slate roof. The nave is of an austere early English style, with Y-tracery windows and basic hood-moulds. Sharing the nave's cell is an elevated choir and organ. At the east end of the church is an apse with three lancet windows. To the south east of the church is a vestry, with mullion and lancet windows. The exterior of the vestry gable has a clock. Ascending from the west wall of the nave is a bell-cote. The porch is of a mock-tutor style, with timber frame. The east windows have stained glass, designed by Kempe & Co in 1924.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b Underwood, Alan; Underwood, Victoria (2006). Aspects of the History of Woodsetts (2nd ed.). Woodsetts Local History Society. pp. 34–35.
  2. ^ Stratford, Pem (1976). Anston, North & South 1086 - 1976.
  3. ^ Fisher, John (1936). History, Antiquities, and Description of the Parish of Anston in the County of Yorkshire.
  4. ^ a b c Harman, Ruth; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2017), Yorkshire West Riding: Sheffield and the South, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-22468-9
  5. ^ Yorkshire Returns of the 1851 Census of Religious Worship: West Riding (South). York: Borthwick Institute. 2000. ISBN 9781904497110.
  6. ^ Pace, Peter Gaze (1990). The Architecture of George Pace, 1915-75. Batsford. ISBN 9780713462739.