• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Keys To The Past

MENUMENU
  • Search the Records
  • Sites to Visit
    • Anglo-Saxon Sites
    • Medieval Sites
    • Post Medieval Sites
    • Prehistoric Sites
    • Roman Sites
    • Favourite Sites
  • Local Histories
  • Get Involved
  • Overviews
  • Glossary
  • Help
You are here: Home / Search the Records / Search Results / Results of Search / Site Details

Site Details

St. Pauls Church, Hunwick (Hunwick)

Church of 1844 by W. Thompson, glass by Heaton, Butler & Bayne & L.C. Evetts (1). The church is located at the junction of Church Lane and Station Road, streetview images (2) showing that it is set back from the road behind low stone walls within its own churchyard with gravestones and trees. The entrance is through a pitch-roofed porch at the south western corner, approached through the churchyard from the south from Station Road. The southern wall features 6 narrow lancet windows. The western gable end also has lancet windows, one either side of a large three tiered buttress. The gable is surmounted by a broad belfry which has a finial in the form of a stone cross. Further finials adorn the apex of the eastern chancel and at the point where the roofline drops in height between the main body of the church and the chancel. At the eastern end of the northern wall is another protruding porch.

The church is known to contain a number of features dedicated as war memorials (3-4).
D49374
Victorian (1837 to 1901)
First World War (1914 to 1918)
21st Century (2001 to 2100)


Source of Reference
Local History of Hunwick

Disclaimer -

Please note that this information has been compiled from a number of different sources. Durham County Council and Northumberland County Council can accept no responsibility for any inaccuracy contained therein. If you wish to use/copy any of the images, please ensure that you read the Copyright information provided.

Top of Page

Contact us | Useful links | Legal Information | Accessibility Statement | Acknowledgements

© 2021 Durham County Council and Northumberland County Council