Listed Building: UNITED REFORMED CHURCH (1280138)
Grade | II |
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Authority | Historic England |
Volume/Map/Item | 858-1, 4, 25 |
Date assigned | 09 June 1995 |
Date last amended | 16 October 1995 |
Date revoked |
LYNTON AND LYNMOUTH SS7149 LEE ROAD, Lynton 858-1/4/25 (South side) United Reformed Church - GV II
United Reformed Church, formerly Congregational. 1904. For Sir George Newnes, patron, at cost of £1,500. Snecked rubble, limestone ashlar dressings, tile roof. A single 4-bay nave, with vestry to SW, and squat tower above porch to the NE; the church is set gable to Lee Road. An Arts and Crafts building with Art Nouveau overtones. The main gable has decorative timber-framing with cusping, and a brattished bottom 'tie', with plastered panels, above a 5-light window with transom and flat segmental head with decorative spandrels; the lights are cusped. The gable eaves has a cusped barge-board and a small finial. To the left, brought forward, is a gabled porch with similar barge-board, over a pair of plank doors in a segmental moulded arch. Set back behind this is the tower, square, with corner turrets and sunk lancet panels, with an undulating crenellated parapet above blind 'Perpendicular' panelling, and a 2-light casement with transom. The pyramidal roof has a lead finial. The E side of the tower has a 3-light casement. The right (W) return is in 4 bays, with 3-light casements with transom, cusped lights under a flat segmental arch, and small-pane leading, divided by square buttresses with 2 offsets, but diagonal at the gable end. To the right is the gabled vestry, set forward towards the street, with decorative barge-board and timber-framing containing a 5-light timber casement. The S gable is plain, with a small ridge stack, and with an attached low apse with conical roof, and a diagonal buttress to the right corner. The E side has four 3-lights and buttresses, as the W. The deep eaves carries the original cast-iron ogee gutter. INTERIOR: 4 arched-braced collar trusses with decorative square baluster kingposts. Plastered walls, panelled dado, plain glass. A central octagonal pulpit with Art Nouveau carved decoration, flanked by rails and a platform on 2 steps. There was formerly an organ in the apsidal recess. An austere interior to a simple but dignified exterior. The building is another example of the generosity of Sir George Newnes as patron in the town, and is similar in style to the Town Hall (qv); an inscribed stone reads: 'Erected by Sir George Newnes. Dedicated August 23rd 1904'. (Allen NV: Churches and Chapels of Exmoor: Dulverton: 1974-: 63).
Listing NGR: SS7177349399
This Exmoor HER designation record includes a list entry description which is Crown Copyright and was provided by Historic England on 15/08/2005 licensed under the Open Government Licence. See link below for up to date list entry data on the National Heritage List for England.
External Links (1)
- https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1280138 (National Heritage List for England entry)
Sources (0)
Location
Grid reference | Centred SS 71774 49400 (17m by 25m) |
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Map sheet | SS74NW |
Civil Parish | LYNTON AND LYNMOUTH, NORTH DEVON, DEVON |