Interior looking West
View of the nave looking westwards, showing the curiously off centre west window in the space beyond the tower arch, the only original parts of the present structure.
St Giles church in Nether Whitacre possess a short red sandstone west tower of 16th century date, but was otherwise entirely rebuilt in the 1870s, with nave and chancel (plus north chapel/vestry) very much of their time.
It is however worth visiting for some small elements of 14th century glass and a wall monument of 1775 (in the vestry so normally difficult to see)..
It is also, happily, one of the very few churches in the north of Warwickshire that are kept regularly open and welcoming to visitors.
Interior looking West
View of the nave looking westwards, showing the curiously off centre west window in the space beyond the tower arch, the only original parts of the present structure.
St Giles church in Nether Whitacre possess a short red sandstone west tower of 16th century date, but was otherwise entirely rebuilt in the 1870s, with nave and chancel (plus north chapel/vestry) very much of their time.
It is however worth visiting for some small elements of 14th century glass and a wall monument of 1775 (in the vestry so normally difficult to see)..
It is also, happily, one of the very few churches in the north of Warwickshire that are kept regularly open and welcoming to visitors.