A good ‘chaste and correct’ Early English church and attached presbytery by George Goldie, set within a burial ground. Unusually for Catholic churches at this time, the church, presbytery and school were paid for by a single donor, the convert Lady Priscilla Beckwith of Silksworth House.
Unlike many of the missions in the Sunderland area, which struggled in the early years, the colliery village of New Tunstall benefitted from a major benefactor. This was Lady Priscilla Beckwith (1806-77) of Silksworth House, who was a member of the Durham Hopper family, noted recusants in penal times. Born an Anglican, Lady Beckwith was a Catholic convert and associate of John Henry Newman (who later presented a silver finger bowl to the church). Her husband, General William Beckwith, had led the hussars in the notoriously bloody suppression of the 1831 reform riots in Bristol. He died in 1871; according to Deacon Barron, he paid for the building of the Anglican church of St Matthew, Silksworth, which opened that year. The foundation stone for the church of St Leonard (there had been a medieval chapel in Silksworth with this dedication) was laid on 12 July 1872 and the church opened by Bishop Chadwick on 16 September 1873. A presbytery was built at the same time. The architect was George Goldie of Goldie & Child, Yorkshire-born and the grandson of Ignatius Bonomi (architect of St Mary, Sunderland and other churches in the diocese). The builder was a Mr Allison of Whitburn. A school was built in 1874, also paid for by Lady Beckwith (replaced in 1971 by a new building designed by Anthony J. Rossi’s practice). Because there was no debt, the church was consecrated early on, on 10 October 1875.
An account of the 1873 opening of the church in The Tablet (quoted in the parish history) stated as follows:
The style is Early English and the chasteness and correctness of the architecture have elicited much admiration. The buildings consist of a spacious nave, sanctuary, porch and bell turret, with a commodious presbytery for the priest. Accommodation is provided in the church for a congregation of 300 persons. The church is well lighted by three windows on each side, a beautiful west window, and five lancet windows in the apse. The centre window in the apse is of stained glass from the manufactory of Messrs Wailes of Newcastle. It represents the Resurrection and is a memorial to the late General Beckwith of Silksworth. The altar is of Bath stone, finely sculptured by Mr S. Ruddock of Pimlico. A statue of the Blessed Virgin by the same artist is a well wrought figure of the Ancilla Domini. The fittings of the altar are handsome and in good taste.
Mr Ruddock’s high altar, and a sense of the original stencil decoration of the walls and window surrounds, is indicated in an early photograph in the centenary history of 1973. The altar was reduced in size in a post-Vatican II reordering, when a new forward altar was formed using the old font, and part of the altar rails was used in a new lectern.
The church is in Early English Gothic style, and is built of rock-faced stone (a darker stone is used for the dressings), with a slate roof. There is an attached contemporary presbytery to the east, of the same materials. On plan the church consists of unaisled nave, apsidal sanctuary and southwest porch. A projection on the north side of the nave houses a sacristy with a gallery and organ loft above (with a cheaply-built single storey addition on its eastern side), and there is a polygonal bell turret at the southwest corner.
The south elevation faces the street, from which a path gives access to the gabled and buttressed south porch, its boarded doors with strapwork hinges within a plain pointed archway. The porch gable is crowned with a stone cross. The nave elevations have a high stone band with paired lancets in plate tracery openings, with plain hoodmould over. These and all the windows are protected by polycarbonate sheeting. An attached buttress marks the junction with the canted apse, which has single lancet windows on each face. At the west end, an attached polygonal bell tower occupies the southwest corner. The louvred belfry stage is surmounted by a tall polygonal slate-clad turret. The west elevation is dominated by the west window, of four lights with quatrefoils and an octofoil above.
The interior is almost a single volume, broken only by the wide chancel arch. The walls are plastered and painted, and there is a projecting band around the interior at sill level. The windows are set within deep splays. The chancel arch is supported on corbels bearing plain shields, perhaps intended for painted decoration. Above the chancel arch is a painted text (‘Glory be to God on high and on earth peace to men of goodwill’) surmounted by a representation of the Trinity. Braced collar rafter roof over the four-bay nave, the braces pierced with trefoils. Giving off the south side of the nave are two doors with shouldered heads, one leading to the sacristy and one to a stair to a first floor gallery and organ loft. A large pointed arched opens from the gallery to the nave, with a projecting stone front bearing shields and supported on bracketed corbels. The gallery front is surmounted by a decorative iron balustrade. To the east, the apse is rib vaulted, the ribs picked out partly in gold, and the interstices painted blue with gold stars. A door leads from the sanctuary to the sacristy, and there is a simple Gothic stone piscina to the right of the high altar. GRADE II LISTED
Site Type: Broad
Place of Worship
SITEDESC
A good ‘chaste and correct’ Early English church and attached presbytery by George Goldie, set within a burial ground. Unusually for Catholic churches at this time, the church, presbytery and school were paid for by a single donor, the convert Lady Priscilla Beckwith of Silksworth House.
Unlike many of the missions in the Sunderland area, which struggled in the early years, the colliery village of New Tunstall benefitted from a major benefactor. This was Lady Priscilla Beckwith (1806-77) of Silksworth House, who was a member of the Durham Hopper family, noted recusants in penal times. Born an Anglican, Lady Beckwith was a Catholic convert and associate of John Henry Newman (who later presented a silver finger bowl to the church). Her husband, General William Beckwith, had led the hussars in the notoriously bloody suppression of the 1831 reform riots in Bristol. He died in 1871; according to Deacon Barron, he paid for the building of the Anglican church of St Matthew, Silksworth, which opened that year. The foundation stone for the church of St Leonard (there had been a medieval chapel in Silksworth with this dedication) was laid on 12 July 1872 and the church opened by Bishop Chadwick on 16 September 1873. A presbytery was built at the same time. The architect was George Goldie of Goldie & Child, Yorkshire-born and the grandson of Ignatius Bonomi (architect of St Mary, Sunderland and other churches in the diocese). The builder was a Mr Allison of Whitburn. A school was built in 1874, also paid for by Lady Beckwith (replaced in 1971 by a new building designed by Anthony J. Rossi’s practice). Because there was no debt, the church was consecrated early on, on 10 October 1875.
An account of the 1873 opening of the church in The Tablet (quoted in the parish history) stated as follows:
The style is Early English and the chasteness and correctness of the architecture have elicited much admiration. The buildings consist of a spacious nave, sanctuary, porch and bell turret, with a commodious presbytery for the priest. Accommodation is provided in the church for a congregation of 300 persons. The church is well lighted by three windows on each side, a beautiful west window, and five lancet windows in the apse. The centre window in the apse is of stained glass from the manufactory of Messrs Wailes of Newcastle. It represents the Resurrection and is a memorial to the late General Beckwith of Silksworth. The altar is of Bath stone, finely sculptured by Mr S. Ruddock of Pimlico. A statue of the Blessed Virgin by the same artist is a well wrought figure of the Ancilla Domini. The fittings of the altar are handsome and in good taste.
Mr Ruddock’s high altar, and a sense of the original stencil decoration of the walls and window surrounds, is indicated in an early photograph in the centenary history of 1973. The altar was reduced in size in a post-Vatican II reordering, when a new forward altar was formed using the old font, and part of the altar rails was used in a new lectern.
The church is in Early English Gothic style, and is built of rock-faced stone (a darker stone is used for the dressings), with a slate roof. There is an attached contemporary presbytery to the east, of the same materials. On plan the church consists of unaisled nave, apsidal sanctuary and southwest porch. A projection on the north side of the nave houses a sacristy with a gallery and organ loft above (with a cheaply-built single storey addition on its eastern side), and there is a polygonal bell turret at the southwest corner.
The south elevation faces the street, from which a path gives access to the gabled and buttressed south porch, its boarded doors with strapwork hinges within a plain pointed archway. The porch gable is crowned with a stone cross. The nave elevations have a high stone band with paired lancets in plate tracery openings, with plain hoodmould over. These and all the windows are protected by polycarbonate sheeting. An attached buttress marks the junction with the canted apse, which has single lancet windows on each face. At the west end, an attached polygonal bell tower occupies the southwest corner. The louvred belfry stage is surmounted by a tall polygonal slate-clad turret. The west elevation is dominated by the west window, of four lights with quatrefoils and an octofoil above.
The interior is almost a single volume, broken only by the wide chancel arch. The walls are plastered and painted, and there is a projecting band around the interior at sill level. The windows are set within deep splays. The chancel arch is supported on corbels bearing plain shields, perhaps intended for painted decoration. Above the chancel arch is a painted text (‘Glory be to God on high and on earth peace to men of goodwill’) surmounted by a representation of the Trinity. Braced collar rafter roof over the four-bay nave, the braces pierced with trefoils. Giving off the south side of the nave are two doors with shouldered heads, one leading to the sacristy and one to a stair to a first floor gallery and organ loft. A large pointed arched opens from the gallery to the nave, with a projecting stone front bearing shields and supported on bracketed corbels. The gallery front is surmounted by a decorative iron balustrade. To the east, the apse is rib vaulted, the ribs picked out partly in gold, and the interstices painted blue with gold stars. A door leads from the sanctuary to the sacristy, and there is a simple Gothic stone piscina to the right of the high altar. Granted Grade II listed status in August 2016 for architectural interest, fixtures and fittings and group value.
Site Name
New Silksworth, RC Church of St. Leonard and Presbytery
Site Type: Specific
Roman Catholic Church
HER Number
8381
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
ol; Historic England 2020, https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1431019
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2016
English, British
Class
Agriculture and Subsistence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
27
District
Sunderland
Easting
439190
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ35SE
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
553770
General Period
MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Medieval 1066 to 1540
Place
Tunstall
Description
An aerial photograph of 1980 shows ridge and furrow earthworks as cropmarks in the fields to the north, east and west of Tunstall.
Site Type: Broad
Cultivation Marks
SITEDESC
An aerial photograph of 1980 shows ridge and furrow earthworks as cropmarks in the fields to the north, east and west of Tunstall.
A pond is shown on a plan of the township of Tunstall dated 1830 south of the village green.
Site Type: Broad
Pond
SITEDESC
A pond is shown on a plan of the township of Tunstall dated 1830 south of the village green.
Site Name
Tunstall, pond
Site Type: Specific
Pond
HER Number
8378
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
Plan of the township of Tunstall, 1830
SURVIVAL
None
YEAR1
2006
English, British
Class
Water Supply and Drainage
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
27
District
Sunderland
Easting
439190
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ35SE
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
553400
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Tunstall
Description
A pond is shown on a plan of the township of Tunstall dated 1830 south of the village green.
Site Type: Broad
Pond
SITEDESC
A pond is shown on a plan of the township of Tunstall dated 1830 south of the village green.
Site Name
Tunstall, pond
Site Type: Specific
Pond
HER Number
8377
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Sources
Plan of the township of Tunstall, 1830
SURVIVAL
None
YEAR1
2006
English, British
Class
Agriculture and Subsistence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
27
District
Sunderland
Easting
438980
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ35SE
MONTH1
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
553300
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Tunstall
Description
West Farm is shown and named on a plan of the township of Tunstall dated 1830. Still shown on 4th edition Ordnance Survey map of 1946, but now demolished.
Site Type: Broad
Farm
SITEDESC
West Farm is shown and named on a plan of the township of Tunstall dated 1830. Still shown on 4th edition Ordnance Survey map of 1946, but now demolished. In 1830 the tenant was Edward Dale, who also leased a cottage near the smithy and 130 acres including one half of Windmill Hill. His rent was £32 13s 4d.