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Monument details

HER Number:TQ 54 NE 171
Type of record:Listed Building
Name:PARISH CHURCH OF ST JOHN

Summary

Grade II listed building. Main construction periods 1843 to 1896

Summary from record TQ 54 NE 17 :

Church 1843-4 and later additions.


Grid Reference:TQ 56481 48850
Map Sheet:TQ54NE
Parish:HILDENBOROUGH, TONBRIDGE AND MALLING, KENT

Monument Types

  • CHURCH (CHURCH, Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
  • SITE (Post Medieval - 1843 AD to 1896 AD)
Protected Status:Listed Building (II) 1248015: PARISH CHURCH OF ST JOHN

Full description

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The following text is from the original listed building designation:
HILDENBOROUGH LONDON ROAD (north east side) TQ 54 NE 5/123 Parish Church of St John
GV II*
Parish church. 1843-4, dating from the creation of the parish and the first church design of Ewan Christian, restoration and reseating of 1846 by F.W. Hunt (Homan) at a cost of £2,044 (Kelly's Kent (1934)). Roughly-coursed squared ragstone with ashlar dressings; C20 peg-tile roof with tile patterns. Lancet style.
Plan: Nave, north and south transepts, apsidal chancel, south east tower, north east vestry, south west porch.
Exterior: The chancel has a hipped roof with an east end gable. The east face has pilaster buttresses with set-offs and a triple lancet; single lancets to the other faces in recessed panels with corbel tables. Buttressed nave of 5 bays, the buttresses rising to the wall plate; bulbous string course at sill level, lancet windows. On the south side each bay has a corbel table between the buttresses, shallow gabled south west porch with a moulded doorframe with a hoodmould, Early English style shafts and bell capitals and a C18 door with ornamental hinges. The west end of the nave has angle buttresses, a triple lancet in the centre bay flanked by single lancets and a roundel in the gable. The transepts are similarly buttressed with triple lancet windows, the south window with a hoodmould. The vestry abuts the chancel rather awkwardly with gables to the east and north and extends along the north end of the north transpet. The south east tower, in the angle between apse and transept, is fine, slender, 3-stage with a broach spine with 2 tiers of lucarnes. The angle buttresses give a panelled effect to the bellringers' stage, with a corbel table between the buttresses. The south doorway is richly-moulded in Early English style, the string course rising as a hoodmould to the doorway which has the text "Enter into his gates with thanksgiving and into his courts with praise". Lancet windows to the bellringers' stage, the belfry windows are large paired lancets with a hoodmould. The west face has a parted lancet to the ground floor stage.
Interior: Dominated by the spectacular arched-braced roofs, springing from moulded corbels at window cill level. The nave roof is 5 bays plus a smaller bay at the crossing. The western bay is 1896. Each bay has diagonal braces and diagonal boarding. The crossing is formed by 4 curved braces with a moulded pendant at the apex. The chancel has 2 bays matching the nave with shorter braces to the apse, the east window framed by longer braces supported on clustered marble shafts. The painted decoration on the main trusses may be original. The transepts are each 2-bays with A frame trusses. Christian's roof is described by Newman as a re-thinking of "the problem of the preaching box". West Kent and the Weald (1980)). The walls are plastered. The chancel was embellished in 1896, the apse walls lined with alabaster and mosaic friezes with a mosaic of the Agnus Deii in the gable over the altar. Chancel fittings include dado panelling of 1925, C19 choir stalls and a low chancel screen with a frieze of pierced trefoils and Jacobean style finials. The late C19 pulpit is accessible only from the chancel, a timber drum with traceried panels on a stem. Pair of fine brass sanctuary lamps in a free Art Nouveau style. The nave has a set of plain 1896 benches with shaped ends and a plain octagonal font on an octagonal stem.
Stained Glass and Monuments: Important collection of late C19 and early C20 stained glass. The west windows, including the roundel, are probably by Clayton and Bell. The nave windows are a matching set by Powell. The west window in the north transept is by the Morris Company, that in the south transept designed by Burne-Jones. The south window of the south transept is high quality by Clayton and Bell. East Window by Powell. There are a number of good late C19 and early C20 wall tablets.
In the vestry there is a plan and elevation of the "proposed new church", dated January 1843 and signed Ewan Christian, 44, Bloomsbury Square.
One of Christian's finest churches.
Homan, R., The Victorian Churches of Kent (1984). Newman, J., West Kent and the Weald, the Buildings of England series (1980 edn.).
Listing NGR: TQ5580049400

Description from record TQ 54 NE 17 :
[TQ 56484885] St. John's Church (C of E) [NAT] (1) HILDENBOROUGH LONDON ROAD (north east side) Parish Church of St. John. Parish church. 1843-4, dating from the creation of the parish and the first church design of Ewan Christian. [Full architectural description] LISTED GRADE II*. Additional architectural and documentary references. (a)(b) (2)


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

<1> OS 1:2500 1970 (OS Card Reference). SKE48212.

<2> DOE(HHR)Dist of Tonbridge and Malling Kent, 19th Feb 1990 116-117 (OS Card Reference). SKE41365.

<3> Howan R(1984)The Victorian Churches of Kent (OS Card Reference). SKE44183.

<4> Newman J(1980)The Buildings of England:West Kent and the Weald 329-30 (OS Card Reference). SKE47540.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
---Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.
<1>OS Card Reference: OS 1:2500 1970.
<2>OS Card Reference: DOE(HHR)Dist of Tonbridge and Malling Kent, 19th Feb 1990 116-117.
<3>OS Card Reference: Howan R(1984)The Victorian Churches of Kent.
<4>OS Card Reference: Newman J(1980)The Buildings of England:West Kent and the Weald 329-30.