Church building

Church of St Thomas A Becket

United Kingdom Hampsthwaite Grade II listed building
Church of St Thomas A Becket
Church of St Thomas A Becket · Wikipedia

About

St Thomas a Becket's Church is the parish church of Hampsthwaite, a village in North Yorkshire, in England. Numerous Saxon and Norman graveslabs have been found in the vicinity of the church, suggesting there was an early church building here. The first recorded church was built around 1180, probably on behalf of Hugh de Morville, Lord of Westmorland, one of the knights who had been responsible for the murder of Thomas Becket.

The church is believed to have been damaged during the First War of Scottish Independence, and rebuilt later in the 14th century, with a new tower constructed in the 15th century. In 1820, all the church other than the tower was demolished and rebuilt. It was again rebuilt in 1902, in the Perpendicular Gothic style, by C.

Hodgson Fowler. The building was grade II listed in 1966. The church is built of gritstone with a grey slate roof, and consists of a nave, a south aisle, a south porch, a chancel with a south vestry, and a west tower.

The 15th-century tower has three stages, stepped diagonal buttresses, and a west doorway in Gothic style with a moulded surround, above which is a three-light Perpendicular window, and on the south face is a three-light window...