Listed Building: CHURCH OF ST ANN (1161591)

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Grade II*
Authority Department for Culture Media and Sport
Volume/Map/Item 704, 4, 150
Date assigned 24 October 1974
Date last amended

Description

5150 SJ 68 NW 704-0/4/150 WINWICK ROAD Church of St Ann 24.10.74 II* Former church. 1868-9, by John Douglas of Chester. Red brick in Flemish bond with some blue brick dressings, slate roof. High Victorian style with C13 Rhenish accent. Aisleless nave with north end and south porches, south-east tower, north vestry and apsidal chancel. The 6-bay nave, with stout buttresses, a plinth, a string-course of blue brick and a brick cornice with a nail-head band, has a gabled porch to the second bay of each side, both with broad battered clasping buttresses, a 2-centred arch chamfered in 3 orders containing a segmental-headed doorway, and a pair of small lancets in each side wall; and in most of the other bays a pair of lancet windows with roll-moulded surrounds. The south-east tower, which is the most striking feature of the design, is broad and square, clasped in the angle of the nave and chancel, and of 3 stages, with straight angle-buttresses to the south-east corner terminating with blue brick offsets at the belfry stage, and a south-west stair-turret treated as a broad clasping buttress terminating at the same level but finished with a tall conical-roofed turret rising above the parapet; a corbel table to the parapet, and a tall steeply-pitched saddle-back roof with a tiered break at its base. It has a small lancet to the 1st stage, an arcade of 3 similar windows to the 2nd stage, and coupled 2-centred arched belfry windows with chamfered surrounds and large wooden louvres. The tall semicircular apse, with buttresses to almost full height, has high 2-centred arched windows with 2 lancet lights and a circle in the head. Gabled vestry on north side, opposed to tower. INTERIOR: wide lofty nave with unusual internal buttresses between the windows spanned by 2-centred arches and carrying wall-posts to an arch-braced wagon roof with arcaded ashlaring and wind-braced purlins; blind arcading between these buttresses; chancel with slender shafts to elegantly rib-vaulted roof. Said to be heated by steam from adjoining brewery (now demolished). "An impressively forceful High Victorian piece, blunt and uncompromising" [Pevsner, BoE], effectively concentrating its principal features at the south-east corner from which it is first seen. Listing NGR: SJ6054889042 Selected Sources Article Reference - Author: Nikolaus Pevsner and Edward Hubbard - Title: Cheshire - Date: 1971 - Journal Title: The Buildings of England National Grid Reference: SJ 60548 89042

External Links (1)

Sources (2)

  • Digital Archive: English Heritage. 2005. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. 58872. [Mapped features: #374 58872; #5844 58872]
  • Written Communication: English Heritage/DCMS. Various. Notification of inclusion, amendment or removal from the List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred SJ 6054 8904 (38m by 27m) (2 map features)
Map sheet SJ68NW
Civil Parish WARRINGTON, WARRINGTON

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Record last edited

Mar 5 2013 9:26AM