A
church dedicated to St Lawrence, the martyr, was first built
in Kirby Sigston
at the beginning of the 12th century. The Norman church consisted
of a nave and chancel, both of which were enlarged in the 13th
century. The original building can still be traced in the west
front, in stonework in the south wall of the nave and in the
windows in the south wall of the chancel and the priest’s
door which can only be seen on the outer wall. The arcade between
the nave and the north aisle is considerably earlier than the
chancel and can be dated as c1190 by the waterleaf capitals
of the arches.
In the chancel the piscina marks the site of an earlier
altar. In the north wall a blocked arcade of
two arches, the capitals decorated with dragons and leaves
and the outer columns with
two animals, perhaps hounds, once opened to a chantry. The
chantry was dedicated to Our Lady and established in 1343
by John Sigston, then lord of the manor.
In
the 1890s the church
was restored by the distinguished architect Temple Moore.
A carved oak screen and rood beam were added as a memorial
to the late rector, Thomas Atkinson.
On the west wall of the nave a modern pointed doorway
leads to the Georgian tower added in the 19th century;
above that
is a 12th century window. The bells were recast and rehung
in 1983. The font is from 1662, with the date and the initials
of the churchwardens inscribed upon its bowl.
In
the north-east corner of the churchyard a tiny National School
once stood. It was built about 1846 and catered for 35 children.
Today the parish church of Kirby Sigston stands in some
isolation but in Mediaeval times a village was just half
a mile to the south-east. The
parish
now includes the villages
of Kirby Sigston, Sowerby under Cotcliffe, Winton, Stank
and Hallikeld. The church is not normally open during the
week.
To find the church: leave Northallerton by Bullamoor Road
and go to the junction with the road leading to Sowerby-under-Cotcliffe
- a distance of approximately three miles from the town
centre. Turn right and proceed in front of the Manor House,
which
is to your left,
until
you
reach the
end of
its
wall.
Go
through
the
gate
on the left, then through the gate straight ahead, and
you will find a track leading to the church. The church and
the area around it are shown on this Ordnance Survey map.
|