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Monument details

HER Number:TQ 76 NW 466
Type of record:Listed Building
Name:PARISH CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS

Summary

Grade II* listed building. Main construction periods 1066 to 1884 Church, Norman, C14 alterations and nineteenth century restorations.


Grid Reference:TQ 74412 69800
Map Sheet:TQ76NW
Parish:ROCHESTER & CHATHAM, MEDWAY, KENT

Monument Types

  • MINSTER? (CHURCH, Early Medieval or Anglo-Saxon - 701 AD to 950 AD)
  • CHURCH (Medieval to Modern - 1066 AD to 2050 AD)
Protected Status:Listed Building (II*) 1107886: PARISH CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS

Full description

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Description from record TQ 76 NW 29 :
[TQ 74416980] All Saints' Church (T.U.] (1) The Church of All Saints, Frindsbury, is Norman and later. (2) In normal use. (3) Church of All Saints, Findsbury. Chancel of Norman period. (For full description see list). (4) Additional bibliography. (5) STROOD CHURCH GREEN FRINDSBURY Parish Church of All Saints Parish Church. Norman chancel, chancel arch and much of the fabric of the nave, together (probably) with substantial part of the west tower. [Full architectural description] LISTED GRADE II*. Additional architectural reference. (a) (6)

The following text is from the original listed building designation:
STROOD CHURCH GREEN, TQ 7469 NW FRINDSBURY Parish Church of All 4/267 Saints 24.10.50 II* Parish church. Norman chancel, chancel arch, and much of the fabric of the nave, together (probably) with substantial part of the W tower; C14 S aisle and alterations to the tower (including S stair turret); restorations in 1824 and 1884 (the latter by Pearson who added - or rebuilt - the N aisle, renewed the window tracery (removed in 1824) and built the NE vestry). The oldest work contains much flint with ragstone dressings; the rest ragstone rubble with limestone dressings; shingle spire, Kent tile chancel roof and renewed tile roof to nave. The plan (W tower, nave and aisles, chancel without aisles, NE vestry) is unusual only in that the S aisle which contains the entrance, stops one bay short of the W end. Exterior. W tower, quoined without buttresses, battlemented (with exceptionally wide merlons), 3 stages (single cusped pointed openings to each stage, N, S and W); moulded arch to W doorway; polygonal stair turret to S. Renewed single broach spire. S aisle, and the single unaisled bay of nave S wall, all under plain parapet, with renewed 3-light windows (one with transom); S doorway within aisle. 4-light E window to aisle. Quoining of SE corner of nave visible. Chancel, S wall with blocked 2-light low-set window (for reading desk) immediately W of blocked priest's doorway. Single lancet and 2-light square-headed window. Chancel E: 3 low-set round-headed lancets under large wheel window (by Pearson). NE vestry (set transeptally) and N aisle (all Pearson) with plain parapet and 4-light windows. Interior: nave with 3- bay medieval S arcade (octagonal piers, 2 hollow chamfers to arches); N arcade by Pearson. Norman chancel arch, the abaci partly original; the flanking cusped openings renewed by Pearson. Chancel roof: early form (ashlar pieces, high-set tie with diagonal bracing) much renewed but with some medieval timbers; C19 nave roof with arched braced tiles, side and collar purlins with wind braces. Font: early C15, stone, octagonal bowl on panelled and buttressed stem with contemporary wooden cover. C19 furnishings, stone reredos, Last Supper in half relief behind open canopied arcade set within buttresses frame on plinth. Monument: remarkable wall monument to Thomas Butler (1621), a cumbersome shafted chest with wooden pedimented over-mantel with inscription. Minor early C19 mural monument in N aisle, one (George Gunning, 1821) signed by John Bacon, jr. another (Lady Staines, 1832), signed Samuel Manning, jr. Mid. C17 monuments in S aisle. Glass: E ensemble, Clayton & Bell (on stylistic grounds), Passion sequence in lancets, angels in wheel window above; S aisle (E) by Dixon, 1880s. A c.1860s tricento- style reredos now in tower. Reference: J Newman, West Kent and Weald. Buildings of England (2nd ed, reprint 1980, p 289). Listing NGR: TQ7441269801 (10)

HE archive material: BF112034 VCH Kent: Lower Medway Valley Photography by EH photographer Derek Kendall for the book 'The Medway Valley: a Kent landscape transformed' by Andrew Hann (published 2009).


<1> OS 6" 1962 (OS Card Reference). SKE48371.

<2> MHLG (1557/11/A July 1947) 6 (OS Card Reference). SKE46921.

<3> F1 CFW 19-DEC-64 (OS Card Reference). SKE42649.

<4> DOE (HHR) City of Rochester 1969 2 (OS Card Reference). SKE40160.

<5> Bldgs of Eng West Kent and the Weald 1980 289 (J Newman) (OS Card Reference). SKE38055.

<7> DOE(HHR)Dist of Rochester upon Medway Kent, 2nd Dec 1991 153 (OS Card Reference). SKE41335.

<8> Newman J(1980)The Buildings of England:West Kent and the Weald. 289 (OS Card Reference). SKE47552.

<9> Field report for monument TQ 76 NW 29 - December, 1964 (Bibliographic reference). SKE4097.

<10> English Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Map). SKE16160.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
<1>OS Card Reference: OS 6" 1962.
<2>OS Card Reference: MHLG (1557/11/A July 1947) 6.
<3>OS Card Reference: F1 CFW 19-DEC-64.
<4>OS Card Reference: DOE (HHR) City of Rochester 1969 2.
<5>OS Card Reference: Bldgs of Eng West Kent and the Weald 1980 289 (J Newman).
<7>OS Card Reference: DOE(HHR)Dist of Rochester upon Medway Kent, 2nd Dec 1991 153.
<8>OS Card Reference: Newman J(1980)The Buildings of England:West Kent and the Weald. 289.
<9>Bibliographic reference: Field report for monument TQ 76 NW 29 - December, 1964.
<10>XYMap: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. [Mapped feature: #29508 chruch, ]