All Saints Church, Bolton | |
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![]() All Saints Church, Bolton, from the southeast
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Coordinates: 54°36′17″N 2°33′36″W / 54.6046°N 2.5599°W | |
OS grid reference | NY 639 234 |
Location | Bolton, Cumbria |
Country | England |
Denomination | Anglican |
Website | All Saints, Bolton |
Architecture | |
Status | Parish church |
Functional status | Active |
Heritage designation | Grade I |
Designated | 6 February 1968 |
Architectural type | Church |
Style | Norman, Gothic |
Specifications | |
Materials | Stone, slate roofs |
Administration | |
Parish | Bolton |
Deanery | Appleby |
Archdeaconry | Carlisle |
Diocese | Carlisle |
Province | York |
Clergy | |
Priest(s) | Revd Stewart Fyfe |
Laity | |
Reader(s) | David Jones |
All Saints Church is in the village of Bolton, Cumbria, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Appleby, the archdeaconry of Carlisle, and the diocese of Carlisle. Its benefice is united with those of five local churches to form The Leith-Lyvennet Group of Parishes. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.
All Saints dates from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, with later alterations. It was restored in 1848.
The church is long and narrow, constructed in stone with slate roofs. It has a simple plan consisting of a nave, and a chancel with a south porch. On the west gable is a bellcote with a saddleback roof. Its Norman features include the south and north doorways (the north is blocked), and slit windows towards the east end of the north and south walls of the chancel.
Along the south wall of the nave are three eighteenth century round headed windows. In the south wall of the chancel are, in addition to the slit window, a fourteenth/fifteenth century square headed window, and two lancet windows, one of which has been shortened to accommodate a seventeenth century square headed doorway. The east window has three lights.
The main south doorway in the porch has a semicircular head, carved capitals, and a hoodmould decorated with rosettes. Above the north doorway are two twelfth century carved stones, one depicting two jousting knights, the other with an illegible inscription. Inset in the south wall to the west of the porch is upright female effigy that was probably originally a coffin lid.