Thursday, 26 June 2025

The Church of SS. Peter & Leonard I

 
The inscription on the pediment

Arriving in Horbury on the No.126 bus from Wakefield, I alighted at the High Street stop and walked up Queen Street to the Grade I Listed Church of St. Peter and St. Leonard, which was designed by the renowned architect John Carr and built between 1791 and 1793 at his own expense. 
 
The Church of St. Peter and St. Leonard

In Rotherham, I had encountered the Grade II* Listed Aston Hall (1772), Clifton House (1783) and St. James’ church (1756) in Ravenfield, as well as other country houses on my travels that he had substantially altered – the Grade I Listed Wentworth Woodhouse (1760-1804) and Heath Hall (1754-1780) and the Grade II* Listed Cannon Hall – and I was therefore  not surprised to see that it is designed in the Classical style. 
 
The portico on the south elevation

Except for the rustication on the first stage of the tower, which has four stages with a rotunda and spire, the fabric is built with sandstone ashlar and tall rounded windows and, except for the portico with its Ionic columns, nothing much caught my eye as I walked anti-clockwise around the exterior. 
 
General views of the south and east elevations.
 
On the east end, a motif in the form of a stylised cross is carved into one of the ashlar blocks, which has the letters AVG inscribed to the top left corner and the number 28 and possibly others in the right top corner, but I don’t know what its significance is. 
 
A stylised cross at the east end
 
Returning to the south elevation, the pediment to the portico contains a Latin inscription, which records that the church was built by the architect John Carr at his own expense in 1791. I tend not to take as much notice of Ionic capitals as the Corinthian order, but here they incorporate intricate egg and dart mouldings and acanthus leaves. 
 
A detail of an Ionic capital
 
The main reason for wanting to visit this church was because it provides a spectacular example of the use of the Woolley Edge Rock, a coarse grained sandstone from the Upper Carboniferous Pennine Middle Coal Measures Formation. 
 
Details of the Wooley Edge Rock
 
Where I have seen it used in Wakefield Cathedral, the Chantry Chapel of St. Mary, Sandal Castle and St. Helen’s church in Sandal Magna, it has very well defined cross-bedding, where beds of iron rich sediment with a purplish colour give it a very distinctive striped appearance. 
 
Details of the cross-bedding in the columns
 
The Horbury History and the Wild West Yorkshire websites both refer to the stone as Dam Stone, which was apparently the same stone used to build at least the barbican at Sandal Castle. The geological memoir (1940) refers to the Woodmoor quarries at Newmillardam supplying stone for the restoration of Wakefield Cathedral, which has the same colour and texture and I therefore presume that the stone for the church came from here too. 
 
A detail of a column base

I didn’t notice at the time but the walling of south chapel, which was was added in 1920, contains a mixture of striped Woolley Edge Rock and a uniformly pale buff coloured massive sandstone. The condition of the sandstone throughout the fabric is good and I couldn't see any signs of restoration and I therefore can't give an obvious explanation for this. 
 
The south chapel
 
Moving round to the north side of the church, I took a couple of photos of the north elevation at a distance and then got talking to a couple of visitors who had a copy of the latest edition of Pevsner, in which it mentions that Carr – who had started working in his father’s quarry as a stone mason before becoming an architect - deliberately chose this stone for effect. 
 
A view of the north elevation
 
Up to this point, although an online search before my visit confirmed that the church would be open, I had wondered if this was in fact correct because I thought that the locked south door would be the entrance and I saw no lights on; however, these visitors pointed out the entrance on the north side and, before having a look at the interior, I took a photo of the vestry (1884).
 
The vestry
 
 

Tuesday, 24 June 2025

Planning a Day Out to Horbury & Ossett

 
A worksheet for my day out to Horbury and Ossett

After a very slow start to 2024 due to the very wet weather, although I did manage to get out to Cressbrook Dale and Pilsley in the Peak District National Park, the first week of April was spent taking another look at the urban geology of Sheffield – an initial visit to Wardsend Cemetery Heritage Park, a recce of the Sheffield Botanical Gardens and Ecclesall Road for the next Sheffield U3A Geology Group field trip and a second visit to Wardsend Cemetery. 
 
A Google Map view of the country between Treeton and Horbury
 
For my next day out, I decided to visit the Grade I Listed Church of St. Peter and St. Leonard (1791-1793) in Horbury, by the pre-eminent architect of the C18 in the north of England, John Carr, who was born in the town and designed and financed this as his final resting place. 
 
The Building Stone Atlas of West & South Yorkshire

I had taken notice of a reference to this in the Building Stone Atlas of West & South Yorkshire, first published in 2012 as part of the Strategic Stone Study, when I was very interested to see that the very distinctive striped sandstone was described as being the Woolley Edge Rock, which I thought I had seen at Sandal Castle and St. Helen’s church in Sandal Magna and at Wakefield Cathedral and the Chapel of St. Mary the Virgin in Wakefield. 
 
The Building Stones of England - West and South Yorkshire

The revised version produced by Historic England in 2023 as part of the Building Stones of England series, however, describes it as Horbury Rock. I have been very reliably informed that this was undertaken as a desk top study, which would explain some glaring errors and omissions, particularly for South Yorkshire - where I possess a very good working knowledge of its geology, building stones and historic buildings. 
 
During my trip to Woolley the previous October, I had seen more examples of the Woolley Edge Rock in very many historic buildings in the village and at an old quarry on my walk from Woolley to Darton, where All Saints church is built from distinctly cross-bedded coarse grained sandstone that I think is from this formation. 
 
Listed buildings in Horbury
 
Although I had encountered several Victorian churches and a few Georgian churches on my travels, I had not made any effort to travel a long way to find them. In early 2023, when drawing up a long list of places to potentially visit in the year, a British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge for Horbury showed that, except for the church, more than 20 buildings required a photograph but, by the time of my visit, all of these had been photographed by other people. 
 
Being determined to visit Horbury anyway, I decided that I would also go and see Ossett, where the Grade II* Listed Church of the Holy Trinity forms a very prominent landmark that I had seen very many times when driving up the M1 motorway.
 
An extract from the No. 126 bus timetable

This was made easy by the fact that the No. 126 bus from Wakefield to Dewsbury runs every 15 minutes and the journey from Horbury to Ossett only takes 10 minutes and, entering a postcode for a Photo Challenge for Ossett, I found 4 buildings in Ossett and another in South Ossett. 
 
Listed buildings in Ossett
 
To make my day complete, I discovered that Horbury Quarry had been identified by the West Yorkshire Geology Trust as a Local Geological Site, where an expanse of the Horbury Rock is still visible and, after I had walked back from Ossett, I could get to it easily from a public footpath.  

The location of Horbury Quarry

Saturday, 21 June 2025

Wardsend Cemetery Revisted

 
A view of headstones in the 1901 extension to Wardsend Cemetery
 
The day after my recce for a field trip with the Sheffield U3A Geology Group - from the Sheffield Botanical Gardens to Endcliffe Park and Ecclesall Road - I returned to Wardsend Cemetery Heritage Park to coincide with a gathering of volunteers who attend on a monthly basis to clear vegetation and undertake other practical tasks.
 
A view along the public footpath

Having made an arrangement with Howard, who I had briefly seen with Hugh earlier in the week, I was introduced to various people and then I set off to explore the part of the cemetery above the railway line, where 2 acres of land just below the outcrop of Greenmoor Rock was added in 1901.

Another view along the public footpath

I had passed through this part of the cemetery a couple of years earlier, when walking from Burngreave to Owlerton, when I was very surprised to see an area of scrubland full of traditional sandstone headstones, which from a distance looked liked others that I seen in various Victorian cemeteries in Sheffield.
 
Old quarries on Brincliffe Edge
 
All of these headstones, I have always presumed, are made from the variety of Greenmoor Rock known in Sheffield as Brincliffe Edge Rock, which was extracted from several quarries on Brincliffe Edge and along the escarpment down to Hunter’s Bar and Brocco Bank.
 
Headstones of Anne Biggin and Ernest Faulkner
 
The simple slabs of Anne Biggin (d.1906) and Ernest Faulkner (d.1940) have essentially identical designs, which are a complete break from the Gothic form and are more akin to the kerbed headstones of John Dyson (1931) and Henry Lindley (d.1933).
 
Headstones of John Dyson and Henry Lindley
 
I didn’t closely examine the sandstone used for any of these headstones, but my initial impression was that they are not locally quarried Brincliffe Edge Rock, which is very fine grained and has a very distinct blueish/greenish colour. By 1920, Stancliffe Darley Dale stone from the Ashover Grit had become a common material for Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstones and Crosses of Sacrifice in South Yorkshire.
 
The kerbed headstone of Eliza and Robert Hooton

From the public footpath, I could see that the kerbed headstone of Eliza Hooton (d.1928) and her husband Robert (d.1928) is made of a stone that I immediately thought was white Carrara marble from Italy, which has lead lettering – including the abbreviation B&CCS, which marks this as the work of the Brightside and Carbrook Co-operative Society.

The headstone commemorating members of the Austick family

Next to this is another white marble kerbed headstone, which commemorates Annie (d.1933) and her father Frederick Austick (d.1946) and his wife Ann (d.1958). Although I had my hand lens, steel penknife and bottle of hydrochloric acid in my rucksack, I didn’t think it necessary to apply these standard tests, to confirm its composition but, 
when enlarging my high resolution photos, I can see calcite veins in the marble that have been highlighted by weathering.
 
The headstone of Harriet Middleton
 
Behind these headstones is another white stone monument that commemorates Harriet Middleton (d.1936), which has inscribed lettering, but I didn’t attempt to get to it through the brambles and thick undergrowth; however, from my photos, I can see that it has a completely different texture, which weathered out shell fragments indicating that it is Portland limestone.
 
Carrara marble headstones obscured algae, moss and lichen
 
Without leaving the footpath, I could see various other headstones, dating from 1917 to 1955, which I thought were probably further examples of Carrara marble, but were partly obscured by red and green algae, moss and lichen and I can’t determine their texture from my photographs.
 
The memorial to William Else and his family
 
In addition to the sandstones, marble and limestone, I also encountered a few headstones that are made from various igneous rocks, with the most interesting being those that are made in gabbro, which are probably from the Bushveld Complex at Rustenburg in South Africa.

The memorial to members of the Newton family

One commemorates William Else (d. 1923) his wife Sarah (d.1929) and two infant children aged 3 weeks and 2 years, with the other dedicated to George Newton (d.1910), his mother Jane (d.1930) and his father Edward (d.1942).

The headstone of Tom Wharton

Another gabbroic headstone - a stone of unknown provenance marketed under the name black granite - is that of Tom Wharton (d.1933), an extremely dedicated fan of Sheffield Wednesday F.C. who was buried in an unmarked grave, but a crowd funding project, aimed at supporters of the club, enabled this to be made.

Grey granite memorials

Having spent over an hour looking at this upper section of the cemetery, I found a couple of medium grained grey granites that I didn’t inspect closely, but which may be Scottish, then got talking to Lynne, another committee member of the Friends of Wardsend Cemetery.

A plan of Wardsend Cemetery

Although we had never met before, I discovered that this was the same Lynne who had been sharing very many of my Language of Stone Blog posts that I had tweeted on the social media platform now known as X. Although the rest of the volunteers had packed in for the day, she kindly took me on a very quick tour of plots L to T.

The headstone of George Beaumont

Adjoining the path next to the railway line, the headstone – with a footstone depicting a football - records the accidental death of George Beaumont in 1877 who, when trying to retrieve a ball during a football match, climbed over a wall and fell to his death in the adjoining quarry.

The footstone of George Beaumont

Continuing to the headstone of Samuel Wood (d.1858) and his family, the use of Welsh slate is a great surprise, given that the best monumental grade Brincliffe Edge Rock was being produced in great quantities only 5 km away as the crow flies.

The headstone of Samuel Wood

My second very brief visit to Wardsend Cemetery ended with a quick look at the tomb of Charles Burgon (d.1894), of Burgon and Ball, which developed its reputation as a supplier of sheep shears and is still a leading manufacturer of garden tools.

The tomb of Charles Burgon

I just took a couple of quick general photographs of this and didn’t take much notice of the stone that it is made from but, looking at my photos of this very dirty tomb, it looks like that this could be another example of Kemnay granite.

A detail of the inscription on the Charles Burgon tomb

Wednesday, 18 June 2025

Endcliffe Park and Ecclesall Road

 
Outcrops of Greenmoor Rock in Endcliffe Park

When undertaking a recce for the April 2024 Sheffield U3A Geology Group field trip, much of the planning for the day had already been done when preparing for the curtailed November 2023 meeting at Sheffield General Cemetery and while exploring Nether Edge and Ecclesall Road as part of various British Listed Buildings Photo Challenges in the Nether Edge and Sharrow and Broomhill and Sharrow Vale wards. 
 
The boundary wall on Botanical Road
 
Having visited Sheffield Botanical Gardens to identify several points of interest for the group, my next step was to decide on the route to Endcliffe Park, which I thought would be a good place to have our lunch and, after, leaving by the west entrance on Brocco Bank, its boundary wall on Botanical Road caught my eye. 
 
The geology around Brocco Bank

The Building Stones Database for England map explorer marks the road as following an outcrop of Grenoside Sandstone, but the wall is clearly built mainly of typically thin bedded Greenmoor Rock; however, judging by the very irregular nature of its lower part as seen from a distance, it looked liked the wall was built on an outcrop of sandstone. 
 
A detail of the boundary wall on Botanical Road
 
Getting much closer, I couldn’t determine any obvious continuous natural rock outcrop, but there are several large blocks of quite massive sandstone that seem to be incorporated in the foundations of a wall built with flaggy sandstone.
 
A boundary wall built with very thinly bedded flaggy sandstone
 
Continuing down the hill, the Greenmoor Rock in the boundary walls to the houses exhibit  that show various bed thicknesses and lithologies, which can be used to demonstrate the various flow regimes relating to the environment in which the Greenmoor Rock was deposited.
 
The entrance to the old Brocco Bank quarry
 
Approaching No. 23 Botanical Road, I was interested to see that the northern side of the drive to the house at its rear has a high wall, which looks like an old quarry face that has been faced to produce a basic retaining wall. The drive is still partially paved in a manner that I have seen in many approaches to old industrial sites and, later referring to the 1855 Ordnance Survey map, I discovered that this is the entrance to the former Brocco Bank Quarry. 
 
The location of Brocco Bank Quarry on the 1855 Ordnance survey map
 
The list of quarries produced by the Sheffield Area Geology Trust (SAGT), which is based on Hunt’s Mineral Statistics (1858), show that this is one of two quarries listed at Brocco Bank. It was owned by Thomas Broomhead and 2000 tons of stone were produced in this year – including flags, steps, heads, sills, gravestones, whitening stone and walling stone. 
 
The entrance to St. Augustine's church
 
By the time the 1894 edition was published, the quarry had become disused and several detached houses had been built in the area along the newly constructed Botanical Road and. The 1906 edition shows that St. Augustine’s church (1897) had been erected on the site, where small exposures of the Greenmoor Rock, which I had first encountered during a walk from Shepherds Wheel to Hunter's Bar, can be seen behind thick undergrowth on the site. 
 
The Porter Brook in Endcliffe Park
 
Before entering Endcliffe Park at Hunter’s Bar, I noted that the Porter Brook was at a much higher level than I had seen before and, keeping to the paths, I continued towards the Mi Amigo memorial to look at the small outcrops of Greenmoor Rock that occur in the hillside to the north of it.
 
The hillside to the north of the Mi Amigo memorial
 
On previous occasions when the ground was much drier, I had scrambled up the moderately steep slope to examine the small outcrops, which are mainly exposed amongst the tree roots, but this time I just took a few photos with the zoom lens on my Panasonic Lumix TZ100 camera.
 
Small outcrops of Greenmoor Rock
 
Having identified suitable places where we could take our lunch on the day of the field trip, I headed up Ecclesall Road. Passing various Victorian and Edwardian terraced houses, which are all built with Greenmoor Rock that has a distinct green tinge, the last part of my recce was to check accessibility to the old quarry faces on the site of the former John Gregory brickworks.
 
Terraced houses on Ecclesall Road
 
The old quarry face on Marmion Road behind the car park to the Co-Op supermarket is readily accessible to the general public, but the south part of the exposure is occupied by a nursery and various shops and I wanted to notify them about the arrival of our group in the near future.
 
The old quarry face behind the Co-Op car park

The Greenmoor Rock here consists mainly of mudstone and this was exploited for brick making, as also seen at Neepsend, Chesterfield Road and Wadsley Bridge, although moderately thick beds of sandstone are seen in the upper sections.
 
The old quarry face at the southern end of Marmion Road
 
By this point, it had started to rain and, having already investigated the old quarries on Brincliffe Edge, I finished my recce here and caught the bus back to Sheffield. Having time before my bus to Treeton, I popped into Sheffield Central Library to see an exhibition of photos - LAND by Matthew Conduit - which included views of sites on the east coast of Yorkshire where alum had been quarried until the second half of the C19. 
 
Photos by Matthew Conduit at the LAND exhibition