Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
4224
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
19/10/1971  
Date of Amendment
26/07/2000  
Name of Property
Aberdaron New Church  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Gwynedd  
Community
Aberdaron  
Town
Pwllheli  
Locality
Aberdaron  
Easting
217526  
Northing
327254  
Street Side
 
Location
Situated about 1.1 km NNE of Aberdaron, on S side of road from B4413 to Uwchmynydd, E of Bodernabwy farm.  

Description


Broad Class
Religious, Ritual and Funerary  
Period
 

History
Anglican Parish Church, now cemetery chapel. Built in 1841 for £1,300 to designs by John Welch of St Asaph, to replace the then decayed medieval church in Aberdaron. The abandonment of the old church and Welch's neo-Romanesque design for the new aroused such outcry that the old church was repaired between 1849 and 1868. The new church continued in use until the 1940s, and has been used for burial services only thereafter. It remains an unusual survival of a church interior of the early part of the Gothic Revival. It was presumably also dedicated to St Hwwyn.  

Exterior
Parish church, now chapel. Large squared rough granite blocks with minimal dressings in grey stone. Broad low-pitched slate roof and coped gables on thin corbels. Neo-Romanesque, 6-window nave, NE vestry and minimal chancel. Twin towered W front. Broad W end with outer square buttresses, raised plinth and twin square towers, stair-towers to a former gallery, flanking a broad neo-Romanesque porch. Porch has coped corbelled gable and big round arched entry with chamfered piers and heavily rusticated arch, the arch blocks alternately chamfered. Stone slab steps and stone paving within, gallery stairs each side and inner doorway with double ledged doors with scrolled iron hinges. Towers have narrow loops lighting stair, one on outer face, one to front set higher, chamfered jambs and arched heads. Tower tops are more Italianate than Romanesque, slightly inset on chamfered plinth, with round-arch opening to each face and slate pyramid caps on corbels. Main gable has a blocked recessed dressed-stone 2-light window, arched heads and over-arch with stone voussoirs. 6-window sides have long arched leaded windows with chamfered jambs and flat buttresses between. NE vestry has arched W door and arched N window. Chancel is short, inset with lower roof and similar gable detail, 2-light window similar to that in W gable.  

Interior
Interior unaltered save for loss of a W gallery. Broad span roof of 5 trusses with queen-post trusses braced from wall-posts. Plain 2-chamfer segmental-pointed chancel arch, plastered. Date plaque over arched NE vestry door. The most interesting feature is the completeness of the surviving fittings in grey-painted timber. Turned-column altar rails. Panelled square pulpit to right of chancel arch, with far projecting moulded cornice, and timber steps up with bulbous newel. Reading desk left of chancel arch, Gothic, 5-sided with cusped open panels and moulded cornice/book rest. Box pews at the front of the church, open benches behind, all with unusual pierced finials to bench-ends, like pointed shovels. Benches have open backs, pews are in 2 blocks each divided such that there are 3 rows of inward facing pews looking over 5 or 6 E facing pews. Panelled in long panels, panelled doors with roll mouldings. S block has quadrant curve taken out at NE angle to allow for pulpit. Quarry-tiled floor. At back of church a small wooden octagonal font on octagonal stem, presumably designed to have a bowl inserted.  

Reason for designation
Included for the unusual neo-Romanesque style and the complete surviving interior of 1841.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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