Old St Matthew's Church, Lightcliffe

Old St Matthew's Church, Lightcliffe, is a former church in the village of Lightcliffe, West Yorkshire, England, of which only the tower remains. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building,[1] and is under the care of the Friends of Friendless Churches.[2][3]

Old St Matthew's Church, Lightcliffe
Tower of Old St Matthew's Church, Lightcliffe
LocationLightcliffe, West Yorkshire, England
Coordinates53.7245°N 1.7896°W / 53.7245; -1.7896
OS grid referenceSE 140 254
Built1775
ArchitectWilliam Mallinson
Architectural style(s)Neoclassical
Governing bodyFriends of Friendless Churches
Listed Building – Grade II
Designated3 January 1967
Location in West Yorkshire

History

The original building on the site was a chapel of ease called Eastfield Chapel, which was built in 1529. This was damaged during the Reformation, and repaired in 1536.[4] The chapel was rebuilt[4] as a church in Neoclassical style in 1775,[2] and designed by William Mallinson of Halifax.[1] It was replaced in the late 19th century by a new church a short distance away. The old church was then used as a mortuary chapel. It was severely damaged by a storm in the 1960s and its fabric deteriorated and the church suffered from vandalism. The Bishop of Wakefield wanted to have the whole church demolished. After negotiation, it was agreed that the diocese would pay for the demolition of the body of the church, while the Friends of Friendless Churches would be responsible for financing the repair and restoration of the tower. The Friends were granted a 99-year lease on the tower on 1 January 1974. The repair work was carried out by Marshalls of Elland and it was supervised by the Gothic expert Dr John Harvey. Further repairs were carried out in 1990 at a cost of £5,800.[2]

The church is the subject of a painting by Yorkshire artist Peter Brook.[5]

Architecture

The tower is square in cross-section and constructed in hammer-dressed stone with ashlar dressings. On the west face is a round-headed window with a circular window above. At belfry level is inscribed stone taken from an earlier church on the site. At the top of the tower is an octagonal cupola with a ball finial.[1] Inside the tower are an inscribed stone dated 1529, benefaction boards, and a monument from 1830 designed by Richard Westmacott.[6]

gollark: The redstone generator bit just throws redstone into a conjuration-catalyst mana pool.
gollark: Then I hooked it up to the actual mana-generation flowers and TNT-placement dispenser, and added some mana storage and a computer controller.
gollark: Most of it is a mana generator. For that, I looked at ways to make mana, then how to make the fuel each of them needed, and how I could make *that*, found one which seemed easiest, and then built small subunits for making each thing and connected them up.
gollark: What whole thing, the bunker or redstone generator?
gollark: It's already energy-shielded and reasonably blast-proof, but teleportation is a thing, so I'm thinking about putting some internal defenses.

References

  1. Historic England, "Tower to Old Church of St Matthew, Brighouse (1133792)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 8 December 2011
  2. "Lightcliffe Old St Matthew", Friends of Friendless Churches, retrieved 21 November 2019
  3. "Lightcliffe Old St Matthew", The Friends of St Matthew’s Churchyard, Lightcliffe, retrieved 21 November 2019
  4. From Weaver to Web: Lightcliffe, Calderdale Council, retrieved 8 December 2011
  5. "Peter Brook: 1927–2009", artuk.org, retrieved 5 November 2018
  6. Saunders, Matthew (2010), Saving Churches, London: Frances Lincoln, p. 44, ISBN 978-0-7112-3154-2
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