Greasley St Mary

Archaeology

Core fabric 1882 and 1896 (rebuilt) with C15th west tower

Nave with north and south aisles, chancel, rebuilt 1896

Choir Vestry added 1910 on north side of chancel; vicar’s vestry added 1963 on centre south side of chancel

The building may have retained its medieval plan form though the body was rebuilt, possibly on its original foundations, in 1896

Significant Interior Features

Font base possibly C15th

Some fragments of medieval glass

C19th and C20th interior fittings

Timbers and roofs

  Nave Chancel Tower
Main Arched braces and ties 1896 Barrel and boarding 1896 3 ties and boarding, multiperiod
S.Aisle Arched braces and ties 1896 1963 pitched S.side vestry  
N.Aisle Arched braces and ties 1896 1910 N.side vestry;  
Other principal      
Other timbers      

Bellframe

Cast-iron, low-sided frame, Elphick Z / Pickford 8.2A - 1922 by Taylors of Loughborough

Not scheduled for preservation. Grade 5

Walls

  Nave Chancel Tower
Plaster covering & date Not plastered, 1896 rebuild Plastered, probably 1896  
Potential for wall paintings None Highly unlikely  
  Aisles plastered 1896    

Excavations and potential for survival of below-ground archaeology

No recorded excavations have been undertaken. The interior floors of the body were severely disrupted in the 1896 rebuild. However, the basic plan of the building may reflect the medieval scheme and may be set close to, on on, the medieval foundations. The tower has survived intact from the C15th.

The overall potential for the survival of below-ground archaeology in the churchyard is considered moderate-high and below the present interior floors of the nave, aisles, and chancel is considered to be LOW-moderate. The potential below the tower floor is moderate-high.

Exterior: Largely inhumation burials, medieval to C19th. Boundaries may have importance in the development of the site.

Interior: Nave and Chancel severely disturbed; destruction and building debiris from 1896 likely to dominate, though medieval material probably interspersed. Some medieval stratigraphy may survive intact at lower levels. The tower is C15th and has remained from the medieval building, the potential for medieval stratigraphy in this area is therefore higher than for the remainder of the building.

Standing fabric of nave and chancel is largely late C19th, though some earlier work reused in the chancel east wall.