St Jame's Church, Village Rd, Christow, Exeter EX6 7LZ
Official list entry
Heritage Category: Listed Building
Grade: I
List Entry Number: 1163790
Date first listed: 30-Jun-1961
Statutory Address: CHURCH OF SAINT JAMES THE APOSTLE
Location
Statutory Address: St Jame's Church, Village Rd, Christow, Exeter EX6 7LZ
County: Devon
District: Teignbridge (District Authority)
Parish: Christow
National Park: DARTMOOR
National Grid Reference: SX 83613 85039
Details
CHRISTOW CHRISTOW SX 88 NW 2/88 Church of Saint James the Apostle 30.6.61 GV I Parish church. C12 font, medieval fabric C15, restoration of 1862 by Edward Ashworth included rebuilding the chancel, the porch, adding the vestry, reseating and repairing and repainting the screen. Granite ashlar tower, the remainder of the church rubble and snecked stone ; slate roofs. Largely Perpendicular. Plan: of nave, chancel, 4-bay north and south aisles, south porch, west tower north- east vestry. C19 chancel with granite ashlar quoins set back buttresses, 3-light C19 Perpendicular east window with carved label stops, 1 buttress on the south side which has a C19 moulded priest's door and a 1-light cusped window with carved label stops; similar north window to chancel ; north-east vestry with 2-light cusped square headed window on the east side and a moulded doorway on the north side. North aisle with set back buttresses and buttresses with set-offs between the 4 C19 Perpendicular 3-light windows retaining medieval mullions and jambs ; similar east window ; 2-light square-headed cusped west window. South aisle with set back buttresses 2 windows east of porch, one to west, Perpendicular, 3-light with C19 tracery ; smaller west window ; tall 3-light C19 Perpendicular east window. Tall slim battlemented granite ashlar west tower of 3 stages with battlementing and obelisk pinnacles, set back buttresses and string courses. Shallow-moulded granite west doorway dated 1680 (presumably a restoration date) on the arch ; 3-light Perpendicular granite traceried west window ; 2-light chamfered belfry openings on all 4 faces ; rectangular openings at bellringers' stage on east and west faces. Porch with set back buttresses and a shallow moulded granite outer doorway with NB carved on one jamb, C19 hoodmould and carved label stops, good ledger stone used as paving slab outside porch, commemorating Nicholas and Walter Busell, died 1631 and 1632 ; C19 arched brace roof to porch with crude chamfered rounded inner doorway and probably C17 door. Interior: Plastered walls ; C19 timber chancel arch on brattished corbels ; 4-bay granite arcades of conventional Perpendicular design; double chamfered tower arch, the inner order on stone corbels. Ceiled wagon roofs with carved bosses to nave, similar C19 roof to chancel, ceiled wagons without bosses to north and south aisles. 5-bay rood screen, (Pevsner 'A'type), the coving missing, re-painted in the C19. 3- bay of the screen, formerly across the south aisle, have been re-sited as the tower screen. 1860s stone reredos of 5 gabled bays with texts and paintings on tin in the centre 3 bays, co-eval floor tiling and C19 poppyhead choirstalls with traceried fronts. The nave has a late C19 timber drum pulpit with carved panels incorporating C16 blind tracery ; C12 font with a square scalloped bowl on a replaced cylindrical stem and plinth. C16 square-headed bench ends with 2 tiers of blank tracery, one carved with a pomegranate, fixed to later seating in the aisles with low door added in the C19. Plain C19 benches in the nave except for 2 rows facing north and south with carved frontals. 1682 Royal Arms in plaster in high relief with the names of Tho Moore and Chr Moore, churchwardens, below. Memorials: Numerous C19 wall white marble wall monuments to the Exmouth family in the chancel, 2 of 1833 signed E. Gaffin, Regent Street, London : one to the Right Honourable Pownoll Bastard Pellew with a mourning woman ; the second commemorating the Right Honourable Edward Pellew with a sarcophagus, urn and laurels framed by half columns, naval trophies above and long verse below recording Pellew's rescue of 500 people from the wreck of the 'Dutton' ...." so, when this mighty orb, in dread alarm,/ shall crash in ruins, at its God's decree;/May thy redeemer, with triumphant arm,/ from the vast wreck of all things - rescue thee"/. The nave has a number of C19 wall monuments and 2 fine slate-cut ledger stones fixed to the west and north walls commemorating Edmund Davis, died 1652 and John Davys died 1682. Stained Glass: Fragments of C15 canopy work and a figure in the easternmost window of the south aisle ; some C18 bottle glass in the head tracery of the north aisle ; Outstanding Clayton and Bell glass, memorial date 1862, in the east. window of the south aisle ; chancel east window probably by Drake of Exeter, memorial date of 1899 glass by Ward and Hughes in the window in the south aisle, first bay from the east, memorial date of 1913. Window in north aisle, opposite the door, with memorial date of 1867, probably by William Wailes. Devon Nineteenth Century Churches Project.
© Historic England 2022
St Jame's Church, Village Rd, Christow, Exeter EX6 7LZ
Official list entry
Heritage Category: Listed Building
Grade: I
List Entry Number: 1163790
Date first listed: 30-Jun-1961
Statutory Address: CHURCH OF SAINT JAMES THE APOSTLE
Location
Statutory Address: St Jame's Church, Village Rd, Christow, Exeter EX6 7LZ
County: Devon
District: Teignbridge (District Authority)
Parish: Christow
National Park: DARTMOOR
National Grid Reference: SX 83613 85039
Details
CHRISTOW CHRISTOW SX 88 NW 2/88 Church of Saint James the Apostle 30.6.61 GV I Parish church. C12 font, medieval fabric C15, restoration of 1862 by Edward Ashworth included rebuilding the chancel, the porch, adding the vestry, reseating and repairing and repainting the screen. Granite ashlar tower, the remainder of the church rubble and snecked stone ; slate roofs. Largely Perpendicular. Plan: of nave, chancel, 4-bay north and south aisles, south porch, west tower north- east vestry. C19 chancel with granite ashlar quoins set back buttresses, 3-light C19 Perpendicular east window with carved label stops, 1 buttress on the south side which has a C19 moulded priest's door and a 1-light cusped window with carved label stops; similar north window to chancel ; north-east vestry with 2-light cusped square headed window on the east side and a moulded doorway on the north side. North aisle with set back buttresses and buttresses with set-offs between the 4 C19 Perpendicular 3-light windows retaining medieval mullions and jambs ; similar east window ; 2-light square-headed cusped west window. South aisle with set back buttresses 2 windows east of porch, one to west, Perpendicular, 3-light with C19 tracery ; smaller west window ; tall 3-light C19 Perpendicular east window. Tall slim battlemented granite ashlar west tower of 3 stages with battlementing and obelisk pinnacles, set back buttresses and string courses. Shallow-moulded granite west doorway dated 1680 (presumably a restoration date) on the arch ; 3-light Perpendicular granite traceried west window ; 2-light chamfered belfry openings on all 4 faces ; rectangular openings at bellringers' stage on east and west faces. Porch with set back buttresses and a shallow moulded granite outer doorway with NB carved on one jamb, C19 hoodmould and carved label stops, good ledger stone used as paving slab outside porch, commemorating Nicholas and Walter Busell, died 1631 and 1632 ; C19 arched brace roof to porch with crude chamfered rounded inner doorway and probably C17 door. Interior: Plastered walls ; C19 timber chancel arch on brattished corbels ; 4-bay granite arcades of conventional Perpendicular design; double chamfered tower arch, the inner order on stone corbels. Ceiled wagon roofs with carved bosses to nave, similar C19 roof to chancel, ceiled wagons without bosses to north and south aisles. 5-bay rood screen, (Pevsner 'A'type), the coving missing, re-painted in the C19. 3- bay of the screen, formerly across the south aisle, have been re-sited as the tower screen. 1860s stone reredos of 5 gabled bays with texts and paintings on tin in the centre 3 bays, co-eval floor tiling and C19 poppyhead choirstalls with traceried fronts. The nave has a late C19 timber drum pulpit with carved panels incorporating C16 blind tracery ; C12 font with a square scalloped bowl on a replaced cylindrical stem and plinth. C16 square-headed bench ends with 2 tiers of blank tracery, one carved with a pomegranate, fixed to later seating in the aisles with low door added in the C19. Plain C19 benches in the nave except for 2 rows facing north and south with carved frontals. 1682 Royal Arms in plaster in high relief with the names of Tho Moore and Chr Moore, churchwardens, below. Memorials: Numerous C19 wall white marble wall monuments to the Exmouth family in the chancel, 2 of 1833 signed E. Gaffin, Regent Street, London : one to the Right Honourable Pownoll Bastard Pellew with a mourning woman ; the second commemorating the Right Honourable Edward Pellew with a sarcophagus, urn and laurels framed by half columns, naval trophies above and long verse below recording Pellew's rescue of 500 people from the wreck of the 'Dutton' ...." so, when this mighty orb, in dread alarm,/ shall crash in ruins, at its God's decree;/May thy redeemer, with triumphant arm,/ from the vast wreck of all things - rescue thee"/. The nave has a number of C19 wall monuments and 2 fine slate-cut ledger stones fixed to the west and north walls commemorating Edmund Davis, died 1652 and John Davys died 1682. Stained Glass: Fragments of C15 canopy work and a figure in the easternmost window of the south aisle ; some C18 bottle glass in the head tracery of the north aisle ; Outstanding Clayton and Bell glass, memorial date 1862, in the east. window of the south aisle ; chancel east window probably by Drake of Exeter, memorial date of 1899 glass by Ward and Hughes in the window in the south aisle, first bay from the east, memorial date of 1913. Window in north aisle, opposite the door, with memorial date of 1867, probably by William Wailes. Devon Nineteenth Century Churches Project.
© Historic England 2022