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| A depiction of the tax collector carved in Caen stone |
When photographing the listed buildings on Great George Street, I took a short diversion to Leeds Central Library, by George Corson, which I had visited in the summer of 2018 and had later written Language of Stone Blog posts that briefly described the exterior, the marbles and granites and the limestones used in its interior.
I had also provided photographs for the British Listed Buildings website and I had no reason to visit it again, except to have another quick look at the owls on the cast iron railings, the various decorative stones used for the doorway and vestibule on Calverley Street and the fine Caen stone carving in the entrance hall.
Although the Building Stone Heritage of Leeds (BSHL) mentions the sandstone used for the exterior, Shap light granite with orthoclase feldspar phenocrysts for the steps, Peterhead and Rubislaw granites used for the columns and the Caen stone, it surprisingly doesn’t make any attempt to identify the Devonshire marbles in the vestibule, which are actually polished limestones and not true marbles.
Decorative Stone The Complete Sourcebook by Monica Price includes only Ashburton marble from Devonshire, which I am quite familiar with from its use in Sheffield Central Library and Sheffield City Hall, but I might need to purchase the books by Gordon Walkden, if these are still available, before I could throw further light on these.
The BSHL also doesn't mention the very dark alabaster that has been used for panels and the elaborate screen that decorate the doorway from the vestibule to the entrance hall, which Susan Wrathmell in the Leeds Pevsner Architectural Guide says is by Farmer and Brindley from London, who were responsible for the sculpture on the Natural History Museum.
The Caen stone, which King William I first brought to Britain after the Norman Conquest and was used for the White Tower at the Tower of London, Canterbury Cathedral and Rochester Cathedral, is very suited to fine carving and all the work seen is by John Wormald Appleyard.
I didn't have time to have another good look at the magnificent staircase, where various animals, including dogs and a lion, and grotesques adorn the handrails, which are made out of Hopton Wood limestone from Derbyshire.
The Caen stone capitals to the Peterhead and Rubislaw granite columns, gryphons and a roundel depicting a collector to the screen above the entrance to the lending library, which was formerly the pay office, are nevertheless fine examples of Wormald's carving.
At the Church of St. John the Baptist (1888) at Ranmoor in Sheffield, the canopy to the reredos provides an excellent example of carving in Caen stone by the eminent sculptor Frank Tory and St. Peter's church (1863-1870) in Birstall has a very ornate Caen stone pulpit. I have also seen a much simpler pulpit at St. Mary's church (1869) at Walkley in Sheffield, which seems to indicate that this stone was a very popular material with Victorian architects.

















































