Cartmel Fell: St Anthony

Name:
Cartmel Fell: St Anthony
Record Type:
Church
Church code:
607204
Diocese:
Carlisle
Archdeaconry:
Westmorland & Furness
Parish:
Cartmel Fell

Statutory Designation Information

Listed Building?
This is a Grade I Listed Building
View more information about this Listed Building on the National Heritage List for England web site
Scheduled Monument?
There is no Scheduled Monument within the curtilage or precinct

National Park

The church is in the following National Park: Lake District

Conservation Area

The church is not in a Conservation Area

Heritage At Risk Status

On Heritage At Risk Register?
This church is not on the Heritage at Risk Register
 

Approximate Date

Approximate Date:
Medieval

Exterior Image

Exterior image of 607204  St Anthony, Cartmel Fell
Caption:
Exterior image of 607204 St Anthony, Cartmel Fell
Description:
Photograph of the exterior of St Anthony, Cartmel Fell
Year / Date:
2017, October 05
Copyright:
This image is licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic licence.
Originator:
David Purchase (of geograph.org.uk)

Summary Description

An extraordinary survivor, perhaps protected from Cromwell by its remoteness and from the Victorians by lack of funds for ‘improvements’. Shouldered down into the side of a fell, it has the characteristics of a Lakeland long barn but somehow possesses a dignity above agricultural utility. An array of label-moulded, three-light, round-headed windows is evidence of date and purpose: 1504-5. The (unfinished - Salter) west tower, squat, plain and not unlike a dovecot, sits well alongside the broad, shallow-roofed nave, terminating in modest east transepts. Slab seats form a continuous plinth along the south wall, falling w-e with the ground, like the floor inside. The interior, under a barn-like roof of trusses, purlins and rafters, is plain without being austere, setting off the rare three-decker pulpit of 1698 and two box pews: the C16 Cowmire was made from the 1571 chancel screen and used as a school until the adjoining mid C19 building superseded it; faint painted figures and children’s exercises engraved in the seats provide evidence of each respectively) and the more decorated C17 Burblethwaite. The oak pews, reredos, rough plastering and re-setting of stained glass formed part of a scheme of re-ordering in 1911 in a quite sympathetic “Arts and Crafts” intervention alongside the more mellowed, graffiti-ed dark oak. There is debate whether the striking east window was brought from elsewhere – specifically, Cartmel Priory (Salter, Pevsner) or made for St Anthony’s.

Visiting and Facilities

The church is open for worship.
Work in progress - can you help?
 

Church Website

Church Website:
https://www.crosthwaiteandlyth.co.uk/stanthonys.php

Sources and Further Information

David Purchase (of geograph.org.uk) (2017, October 05) Exterior image of 607204 St Anthony, Cartmel Fell [Digital Archive/Graphic material]
Exterior image of 607204  St Anthony, Cartmel Fell
CWGC (2016) Commonwealth War Graves Commission CWGC Unique File Reference Number: 2000 [Bibliography/Data]
Number of War Graves: 1
Church of England (2021) A Church Near You https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/12361/ [Digital Archive/Index]
View information on worship and access at this church
James Miles (2019) Bell frames of historic importance 1 Listed Bell Frame [Archive/Index]
1 Listed Bell Frame
Church Buildings Council (2019) Church Bells 2 Bells [Archive/Index]
2 Bells