Church of St Oswald, Rockhampton
DESCRIPTION: Church of St Oswald
GRADE: II*
DATE LISTED: 30 March 1960
ENGLISH HERITAGE BUILDING ID: 35352
OS GRID REFERENCE: ST6549593294
OS GRID COORDINATES: 365495, 193294
LATITUDE/LONGITUDE: 51.6374, -2.5000
5/249 Church of St. Oswald
30.3.60
G.V. II*
Parish church. C14 tower and porch; nave and chancel rebuilt 1860-1 by Kempson of Hereford. Coursed limestone and sandstone rubble with limestone dressings, slate roofs with raised coped verges with kneelers and cross finials. West tower, nave, south porch, chancel. Decorated and Perpendicular style. 3-stage tower has 2-light Decorated west window in splayed reveal with hood mould, trefoil-headed lancet to north and south at 2nd stage, 3rd stage has 2-light Decorated window to all 4 sides with stone bell-louvres and hood moulds linked by a string course which continues round the top set-offs if the diagonal weathered buttresses; north east stair turret has angled top and finial, limestone quoins forming chequer-work with sandstone walling; former roof line of nave visible on east side, Perpendicular parapet pierced with tracery, pinnacles missing, angels as rainwater spouts to north and south 3-bay nave has 3 Perpendicular 2-light windows to north, hood moulds with unfinished stops, wall battered below weathered string, quoins, porch in central bay to south has slightly pointed arched opening with moulded surround, raised coped verges and sundial on block at top of gable, south wall weathered at each side. Chancel has 3-light Perpendicular east window, 2 cinquefoil-headed single lights to south, all in same surround as nave windows, plinth and weathered string. Interior: C15 south door with Perpendicular panelling, now cut in half to make double door, in moulded surround and hood mould. West window has plain stone surround and relieving arch, tower was vaulted but only springings survive, tower arch of 3 chamfered orders which die off into the responds. Nave has brattished wall-plate, wagon roof with moulded purlins and ridge purlin, all windows in splayed reveals with chamfered and stopped jambs and segmental heads, south door has chamfered, Tudor-arched head. Chancel has high pointed arch in moulded surround with hood mould with foliate stops; wagon roof of 5 bays divided into 30 painted panels by ribs, moulded with rosette bosses in 2 bays to east, brattished wall-plate; windows in same surround as nave, east window also has hood mould with foliate stops, north wall has pointed arched door in chamfered surround, now blocked on outside and cinquefoil headed piscina, south window cill has sedilia made from C14 tomb chest with ogee shaped canopies, crocketed finials and blank shields, remains of wall painting on lower part of east wall, moulded string under cill of windows. Fittings: Perpendicular octagonal bowl font with quatrefoils in panels in nave; Jacobean chest in nave; royal arms on south wall of nave; marble monument in chancel to William Davies, 1848, nephew of Edward Jenner, the discoverer of vaccination; chancel floor made up of early C17 to early C18 ledger stones, including one to William Quintin, parson, 1632-40; early Cl7 ledger stone in west nave by font. (Sources: Verey, D. : Buildings of England, Gloucestershire : The Vale and The Forest of Dean. 1970)
The Final coordinates are N51 F(C+C).FDE - W002 F(B-E).F(B-E)B
Congratulations to USAndy on FTF