St Luke's Church, Broughton Sulney

St Luke's Church is a Grade I listed parish church in the Church of England[1] in Upper Broughton.

St Luke's Church, Broughton Sulney
St Luke's Church, Broughton Sulney
52°49′46.34″N 0°59′13.12″W
LocationUpper Broughton
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
History
DedicationSt Luke
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade I listed
Administration
ParishBroughton Sulney (Upper Broughton)
DeaneryEast Bingham
ArchdeaconryNottingham
DioceseDiocese of Southwell and Nottingham

History

It was built in the 12th century. It was restored in 1855 by S. S. Teulon.

It is in a joint parish with two other churches of the same dedication:

Memorials

Memorials include:

  • John Brett, 1788
  • Elizabeth, wife of John Brett, 1823 signed Pratt, Nottingham

Organ

A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.[2]

gollark: If I were to enter this I may deliberately write my programs in the most stupid and ridiculous way possible (or at least I find it favorable to claim that now maybe), such as by, for example, using preprepared pickle streams for arbitrary code execution, doing everything in one line, horrible overuse of `exec`/`eval`, using that thing where python will execute code from a ZIP concatted onto an image, downloading data from pastebin or whatever, blatantly ignoring all available Python style guides, or mucking with the AST module and importlib to transform the code into other stuff.
gollark: Iterator functions vs for loops, classes versus namedtuples and dataclasses and whatever else, APLish array programming type solutions versus... not that?
gollark: I mean, they claim that, but you can solve many things in lots of different ways.
gollark: There is not *actually* one way to do it in python though.
gollark: For purposes only.

References

  1. The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire: Nikolaus Pevsner.
  2. "N001765". National Pipe Organ Register. Retrieved 16 June 2013.
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