Church of St. Peter at Yoxall (Grade II* Listed Building)

Stafforshire Walks, Yoxall


Folder: Staffordshire Walks
A 7.5m circular walk in May 2006 from Yoxall, via Morrey, Olive Green, Cowley Hill, Hunger Hill Trig Point (96m), Hamstall Ridware, and Sandborough House Farm. Weather hot and sunny with a stiff breeze (26C)

04 May 2006

126 visits

Church of St. Peter at Yoxall (Grade II* Listed Building)

"Yoxall's main street is now the A515 from Lichfield to Ashbourne and the church stands back from this in a spacious churchyard. St Peter's is mostly by Woodyer of 1865-68 and has an aisled nave with a clerestorey, a chancel with N and S chapels and a W tower. The nave is spacious with five-bay arcades in a Decorated style and a clerestorey with square-headed quadruple lights. The S doorway is genuinely medieval and of c.1200 and has no porch; the N is 19thc. The chancel chapels are both of two bays, and the N now contains the organ. The W tower has a battlemented parapet and tall crocketed finials. Drawings predating Woodyer's restoration show a similarly aisled nave, apparently without a clerestorey and with no N porch; a very similar W tower and a much lower chancel without chapels." Wikipedia...."In October 2004, an extremist group of animal rights campaigners stole Gladys Hammond's body from the village's graveyard. A group called the Animal Rights Militia claimed responsibility for the act as an attempt to force the closure of the nearby Darley Oaks Farm, owned and run by family members, where guinea-pigs were bred for medical research. On 23 August 2005 the farm's owners announced that they would be ceasing breeding of animals in the hope that Mrs Hammond's remains would be returned. Following a police investigation, arrests were made and on 10 April 2006 three men pleaded guilty to blackmail. They were subsequently given substantial prison terms."

04 May 2006

171 visits

Church of St. Peter at Yoxall (Grade II* Listed Building)

"Yoxall's main street is now the A515 from Lichfield to Ashbourne and the church stands back from this in a spacious churchyard. St Peter's is mostly by Woodyer of 1865-68 and has an aisled nave with a clerestorey, a chancel with N and S chapels and a W tower. The nave is spacious with five-bay arcades in a Decorated style and a clerestorey with square-headed quadruple lights. The S doorway is genuinely medieval and of c.1200 and has no porch; the N is 19thc. The chancel chapels are both of two bays, and the N now contains the organ. The W tower has a battlemented parapet and tall crocketed finials. Drawings predating Woodyer's restoration show a similarly aisled nave, apparently without a clerestorey and with no N porch; a very similar W tower and a much lower chancel without chapels." Wikipedia...."In October 2004, an extremist group of animal rights campaigners stole Gladys Hammond's body from the village's graveyard. A group called the Animal Rights Militia claimed responsibility for the act as an attempt to force the closure of the nearby Darley Oaks Farm, owned and run by family members, where guinea-pigs were bred for medical research. On 23 August 2005 the farm's owners announced that they would be ceasing breeding of animals in the hope that Mrs Hammond's remains would be returned. Following a police investigation, arrests were made and on 10 April 2006 three men pleaded guilty to blackmail. They were subsequently given substantial prison terms."

04 May 2006

104 visits

Zig Zag Path of the Millenium Way south of Morrey

04 May 2006

106 visits

Looking towards Hamstall Ridware

04 May 2006

108 visits

04 May 2006

102 visits

Hunger Hill Trig Point (96m)

The Trig Point proved a bit difficult to find, hidden by the vegitation!

04 May 2006

116 visits

Hunger Hill Trig Point (96m)

The Trig Point proved a bit difficult to find, hidden by the vegitation!

04 May 2006

107 visits

Looking towards the Church of St Michael and All Angels at Hamstall Ridware

04 May 2006

126 visits

Church of St Michael and All Angels at Hamstall Ridware (Grade I Listed Building)

11 items in total