St Mary's Church Longsleddale
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Description
Deep into Longsledderdale, sandwiched between remnant ribbons of semi-ancient woodland along the valley floor, an earlier chapel of 1712 was replaced with an endowment from Lady Howard of Leven’s Hall, who held the manorial rights. A range of even earlier artefacts survive, mainly furnishings, but some elements have been built in, such as the aumbry cupboard door of 1662. Indeed, it is the furnishings and internal features that bring to life that which would otherwise be rather plain: the pulpit, unusually accessed by a rear door from the Vestry; the chancel arch inscription; the east window suspended stained glass pendant of the church’s chalice (of 1571, safeguarded off-site); wall-paintings; chests, etc. Photo by Colin Kinnear, 6 November, 2022, Geograph, CC-BY-SA 2.0 -
Owner
Geograph -
Source
Local (Co-Curate) -
License
What does this mean? Unknown license check permission to reuse
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Further information
Link: https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/7334644
Resource type: Text/Website
Added by: Simon Cotterill
Last modified: 3 hours, 15 minutes ago
Viewed: 13 times
Picture Taken: Unknown -
Co-Curate tags
