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St Andrew's Church, Starbeck

St Andrew's Church, Starbeck
St Andrew's Church 2.jpg
St Andrew's Church, Starbeck, from the northwest
St Andrew's Church, Starbeck is located in North Yorkshire
St Andrew's Church, Starbeck
St Andrew's Church, Starbeck
Location in North Yorkshire
Coordinates: 54°00′02″N 1°29′47″W / 54.0006°N 1.4964°W / 54.0006; -1.4964
OS grid reference SE 330 561
Location High Street, Starbeck, Harrogate, North Yorkshire
Country England
Denomination Anglican
Churchmanship Evangelical
Website St Andrew, Starbeck
History
Dedication Saint Andrew
Architecture
Status Parish church
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Grade II
Designated 26 April 1994
Architect(s) Austin and Paley
Architectural type Church
Style Gothic Revival
Completed 1910
Specifications
Materials Stone, slate roofs
Administration
Parish St Andrew, Starbeck
Deanery Harrogate
Archdeaconry Richmond
Diocese Leeds
Province York
Clergy
Vicar(s) Francis Wainaina

St Andrew's Church is in High Street, Starbeck, Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Harrogate, the archdeaconry of Richmond, and the Diocese of Leeds. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.

St Andrew's was built in 1909–10, and designed by the Lancaster architects Austin and Paley. It replaced a school and mission church of 1889, which had provided seating for 200 people, with a church seating 608, at a cost of £6,800 (equivalent to £630,000 as of 2015).

The church is constructed in rubble stone with ashlar dressings, and has a slate roof. Its plan consists of a nave and chancel under a continuous roof with a clerestory, north and south aisles, north and south transepts, and north and south porches. Rising from the northwest corner is a single bellcote with its long side facing north. At the west end is a canted full-height projection containing a five-light window, supported by two short buttresses. Along the sides of the aisles are two and three-light windows under flat heads; the clerestory windows have two lights under pointed heads. The east window has five lights.

Inside the church is an open wooden roof, a wooden pulpit, a marble font, and reredoses behind the main altar and the altar in a side chapel. The two-manual pipe organ was made in 1898 by J. J. Binns of Leeds.


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