Continuing my exploration of the interior of Halifax Minster, the walls of the north aisle are again adorned with a variety of wall memorials that include ‘white on black’ varieties made with white Carrara marble and what I think is probably Carboniferous Limestone, with alabaster used for some of the simple memorials.
I just took a few general photographs of these and crossed back to the south side of the Minster to have a quick look at the Holdsworth Chapel, where the highlight was the grave slab of Thomas Haldsworth (d.1709) and members of his family.
Next to this is the simple wall memorial to the preacher Oliver Heywood (d.1702), which was erected in June 1906. Unlike the other memorials that I had see in the Minster, this is made with a polished granite that looks like it could be the Scottish Kemnay granite from Aberdeenshire.
Moving further along the south aisle, the memorial to William Rawson (d.1828) is described by Pevsner as a “Relief of the Good Samaritan”, without actually mentioning Rawson – who was a partner in Rawson’s bank. According to Malcolm Bull’s Calderdale Companion, this was made by Richard Westmacott Junior, who Pevsner describes as the maker of the memorial of his nephew, John Markland Rawson.
Continuing to the Wellington Chapel, which was rededicated in 1951 to the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment, but I didn’t take much notice of the stone used - gritstone from the Rough Rock – for the walling and the arcade.
A war memorial slab is set into the flagstones and its distinctly green colour suggests that this is made of volcanic green slate from the Borrowdale Volcanic Group in the Lake District, although I didn’t take a close look at it and just took record photographs
The altar at the east end of the chapel is made of limestone, but I again didn’t closely inspect the stone but, enlarging the photograph that I took, the paving that immediately surrounds it looks like it contains some crinoid ossicles, which is a characteristic of Derbyshire ‘fossil marble’.
Moving into the chancel, the floor has a chequerboard pattern, with squares of white Carrara marble and Carboniferous Limestone, which is probably from Belgium. This combination is quite commonly seen in later Victorian churches and mediaeval churches that were restored during this period and the floor was probably laid during Sir George Gilbert Scott’s restoration of 1878.
The steps to the altar are made with another Carboniferous Limestone, this time Frosterley marble from County Durham. It is characterised by an abundance of solitary corals, Dibunophyllum bipartitum, which I have seen in a few churches and at the Hob’s House landslip at Monsal Dale in the Peak District National Park.
Set into the paving of the chancel, which is very probably flaggy sandstone from the nearby Elland Flags formation, is a memorial to George Horsfall Frodsham (d.1937), who was the Bishop of North Queensland from 1902 to 1913 and the vicar of Halifax from 1920 until his death.
Being conscious that I still had to complete my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge, which would entail a good walk around Halifax, I just took a few record photographs of the nave, the arcades and a few details of the columns.
I had a very brief look around the Rokeby Chapel, which was built in memory of William Rokeby - the vicar from 1502 to 1521 and the Archbishop of Dublin - and has inscribed slabs commemorating Mary Midgley (d.1704), which also has a coat of arms in shallow relief, and John Waterhouse (d.1732), his wife Ellen and their children.
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| Memorials to Mary Midgley and John Waterhouse and his family |
Making my way back along the north aisle, I stopped briefly to take a photograph of another ‘white on black’ wall memorial to John Waterhouse (d.1847) and his wife Grace (d.1849), which has intricately carved crocketed pinnacles, cinquefoil arches, floriated capitals, a coat of arms and carved heads, but are not mentioned in the reference sources that I have access to.
I finished my brief look at the interior of Halifax Minster, which took just 30 minutes, at the west end of the north aisle where I noticed a reset block with chevrons, which would have come from the original C12 church. The Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland notes that the fieldworker found four of these, although many more are mentioned in the literature.


















































