Print Page
No Image Available
IoE Number:
350488
Location:
CHURCH OF ST ANDREW, CHURCH VIEW (south off)
SADBERGE, DARLINGTON, DURHAM
Photographer:
N/A
Date Photographed:
N/A
Date listed:
20 March 1967
Date of last amendment:
20 March 1967
Grade
II
NOTE - The Images of England website consists of images of listed buildings based on the statutory list as it was in 2001 and does not incoporate subsequent amendments to the list. For an updated version of the statutory list you should visit our LBOnline database http://lbonline.english-heritage.org.uk/Login.aspx
SADBERGE CHURCH VIEW
NZ 3416 (South side, off)
15/112 Church of
20/3/67 St. Andrew
GV II
Parish church. 1831 by William Ramshaw, refenestrated 1874; south porch and
vestry added 1904. Squared sandstone with dressings; incorporating some
probably medieval masonry in lower courses. Graduated green slate roofs.
Aisleless nave with former porch, now storage, on west end and 1904 porch on
south; chancel; north vestry across junction of nave and chancel. 1831
Romanesque-style windows mainly replaced by lancets in 1874.
3-bay nave has chamfered plinth and flat-buttress bay divisions. 3-centred
south doorway, in porch, flanked by re-set carved medieval fragments
representing The Fall and God triumphing over Satan; small stoup re-set
near east jamb of doorway. Mainly paired lancets under hoodmoulds. Round-
arched 1831 window in east bay on south side. Roof has overhanging eaves
on large stone corbels. Large gabled bellcote at west end above blocked
round-arched window. Lower and narrower 2-bay chancel has similar window
and roof details; pointed 3-light east window. Gabled west end porch has
blocked round-arched doorway. Gabled south porch has pointed doorway of 2
chamfered orders and lancets on returns. Gabled vestry has pointed doorway
on east and paired lancets on north.
Interior: plain and plastered; chamfered semicircular chancel arch; similar
smaller arch at west end of nave; C19 stone font with octagonal bowl; c.1890
to 1900 memorial stained glass by Hemmings of London; nave roof has 7 braced
king-post trusses with a flat ceiling above the collars.
(Rev. W.L. Taylor, The History of Sadberge, 1919).