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organ, said to 'boast a richly carved oak screen with handsomely decorated front pipes'. In 1889 the same firm installed a detached console besides the choir stalls and pneumatic action was added throughout. In 1908 it was completely rebuilt by Messrs Lewis & Co of London, when the oak case of the previous organ was discarded. In 1954 a major overhaul was carried out by local firm Messrs Hall & Broadfield which replaced the pneumatic action with an electro-magnetic mechanism and transformed the three-manual organ into a four-manual instrument. The completed rebuild was dedicated in 1957.
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394:, a Yorkshire man, at his death the following year left £200 in his will for the rebuilding works. Those who gave money for the piers of the north arcade are commemorated in inscriptions on the hoodmould stops: merchant John Crossley and his wife; the good wives of Beverley; and the minstrels, five of whom are depicted as statues on corbels against their pier.
327:. The mouldings of the tracery, windows, vault, and piers all merge fluidly with each other, unifying the space. The mouldings of the vault ribs on the north wall spring from the floor and form fluted columns without capitals, and on the south wall spring from the column capitals, intersecting and running through the arcade mouldings.
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on 29 April 1520, the central tower collapsed, ‘and overwhelmed some that then were in ’. Much of the work on the eastern end of the nave was undone, though the aisle walls were little damaged. The central tower and the nave arcades and clerestory were entirely rebuilt, though the clerestory windows
322:
by the addition of a south aisle to the previously aisle-less chancel, in conjunction with a widening of east aisle of the south transept. The nave aisles were completely rebuilt in the early 14th century. In the 1330s or 1340s the chancel was given a north aisle, the three easternmost bays of which
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According to George Oliver (writing in 1829), an organ built by
Donaldson of York was placed in the rood loft at the east end of the nave in 1792, at a cost raised by voluntary subscription of £311, the subscribers appointing Mr Lambert as organist. In 1869, Messrs Forster and Andrews built a new
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arches were reused, but set on new piers. Bequests for this work were made in 1451–3, and further bequests in 1498–1500 funded the rebuilding of the west end of the nave aisles. Also installed throughout the 15th and into the 16th centuries were the series of fine wooden ceilings for which the
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A few 12th and early 13th century fragments remain scattered throughout the church. These are numerous enough to determine that by the mid-13th century, the church consisted of an aisle-less chancel and transepts, an aisled nave, and probably a crossing tower.
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suggests that "ossibly they were reused in spite of the radical damage done by the falling tower". This rebuilding work began immediately after the collapse, the south arcade bearing an inscribed date of 1524 at both east and west ends.
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In 2021, as part of a programme celebrating women in the restoration of the stonework of the church, it was announced that stone figures of nine women will include Hull born pilot and engineer
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building is known. The most recognized is the chancel ceiling, originally of the mid-15th century but entirely repainted in 1863, with depictions of forty
English kings from the mythical
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was added to the nave. The south porch and a clerestory for the chancel followed in the early 15th century. The transepts were rebuilt with clerestories in the mid-15th century; the
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In 2020, the restoration of the stonework started with the replacement of some weathered stone carvings with newly commissioned figures based on characters from
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The 19th century saw significant restoration undertaken at St. Mary's, in 1829–30 under
William Comins, then under
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Building work at St Mary's ceased in the mid-14th century, as in so many cases throughout
England, because of the
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East window of northeast chapel, built in the 1330s or 1340s. The stained glass is from the 19th century, by
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period, when a large chapel was added on to the east side of the north transept. This was followed
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The present font dates from 1530, the gift of a
Beverley draper, William Leryffax. Made of
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623:(1979), p.1; text mainly by W.C.B. Smith, publisher Jerrold Colour Publications, Norwich.
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742:"Carvings of local heroes and global pioneers commissioned to replace damaged stonework"
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St Mary's was established in the first half of the 12th century as a daughter church of
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were made into a superb chapel with
Flowing tracery and a tierceron-star
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Pevsner, Nikolaus; Hutchinson, John; Neave, David; Neave, Susan (2002).
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Pevsner, Nikolaus; Hutchinson, John; Neave, David; Neave, Susan (2002).
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428:(who refitted the nave and chancel), and numerous other architects.
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Church of
England church buildings in the East Riding of Yorkshire
660:"Yorkshire church to be adorned with Chronicles of Narnia statues"
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Systematic rebuilding began in the late 13th century, during the
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575:. Toronto and Buffalo: University of Toronto Press. p. 58.
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637:. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 294–8.
685:"Yorkshire church to install stone carvings celebrating women"
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600:. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 295.
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marble, it is richly ornamented with a defaced inscription.
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The
Decorated Style: Architecture and Ornament 1240–1360
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Grade I listed churches in the East Riding of
Yorkshire
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Grade I listed churches in the East Riding of
Yorkshire
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with east aisle, north transept with east chapel and
712:"Medieval church puts historic women on a pedestal"
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268:, to serve Beverley's trading community. It is a
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292:and priests’ rooms above, and a crossing tower.
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341:, when the west front was rebuilt in the
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545:"The parish church of St Mary (1162693)"
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420:took over the work, and was followed by
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272:church, 197 feet in length, with aisled
288:below, northeast chapel with adjoining
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467:the aeronautical engineer educated at
252:, England. It is designated a Grade I
24:The Parish Church of St Mary, Beverley
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658:Sherwood, Harriet (19 August 2020).
927:Benefice of Etton with Dalton Holme
849:Churches in the Deanery of Beverley
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635:Yorkshire: York and the East Riding
598:Yorkshire: York and the East Riding
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899:Benefice of Beverley St Nicholas
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1012:1120 establishments in England
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448:Designs for the carvings of
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571:Coldstream, Nicola (1994).
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782:St Mary's Church, Beverley
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621:St Mary's Church, Beverley
345:style and a Perpendicular
334:. It did not resume until
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944:Benefice of Four Towers
471:will feature alongside
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228:The Revd Becky Lumley
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469:Beverley High School
426:George Gilbert Scott
392:Archbishop of Dublin
362:, and a portrait of
176:197 feet (60 m)
120:Heritage designation
982:St Mary, Lockington
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956:St Michael, Skidby
805:53.8442°N 0.4340°W
497:Queen Elizabeth II
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112:Functional status
70:Church of England
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18:Church in England
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493:Ada Lovelace
477:Mary Seacole
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454:Ada Lovelace
450:Mary Seacole
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416:in 1844–52.
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351:Early Gothic
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133:1 March 1950
107:Architecture
65:Denomination
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481:Marie Curie
461:Amy Johnson
439:C. S. Lewis
418:E. W. Pugin
379: 1400
366:from 1939.
339: 1400
332:Black Death
320: 1300
996:Categories
793:53°50′39″N
644:0300095937
607:0300095937
582:0802007007
556:20 January
524:References
465:Hilda Lyon
407:Derbyshire
347:clerestory
130:Designated
96:Dedication
796:0°26′02″W
720:0140-0460
437:books by
364:George VI
313:Decorated
270:cruciform
160:Completed
1002:Beverley
512:See also
371:Evensong
360:Henry VI
358:through
290:sacristy
282:transept
280:, south
246:Beverley
239:Anglican
224:Vicar(s)
195:Province
383:Pevsner
369:During
278:chancel
260:History
248:in the
207:Diocese
101:St Mary
90:History
76:Website
59:England
56:Country
751:23 May
725:23 May
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695:23 May
669:23 May
641:
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463:, and
356:Brutus
237:is an
218:Clergy
173:Length
154:Gothic
115:Active
503:Organ
325:vault
286:crypt
181:Bells
149:Style
753:2021
727:2021
716:ISSN
697:2021
671:2021
639:ISBN
602:ISBN
577:ISBN
558:2022
495:and
491:and
452:and
276:and
274:nave
163:1520
83:.org
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244:in
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.