![]() |
| An impost in the south aisle |
Entering the porch of Halifax Minster, having spent 15 minutes photographing its exterior, I stopped briefly to have a look at the grave slabs that, according to the Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture for Britain and Ireland, Peter Ryder considers to be C12.
Once through the door, I found myself in a part of the Minster that is used as a shop and picked up a leaflet that highlights some of the main points of interest to a general visitors. Having a quick look around me, before going to explore the church, I was quite struck by the scale of the church and immediately realised that I would only have time to photograph its principal elements and details that immediately caught my eye.
Looking back at the south door, several wall monuments from the C17 to C19 are made mainly with white or veined Carrara marble from Italy, with some of these attached to a simple slab that are made of stone that I think may be Carboniferous Limestone from Belgium or the Republic of Ireland, which are essentially unfossiliferous and when polished were marketed as ‘black marble’.
I have seen very many of these ‘white on black monuments’ during my exploration of mediaeval churches, but I have never been able to get close enough to examine any of the materials used for them. Historic England (HE) or the church guide don’t mention the wall monuments and Pevsner describes them as “Nothing outstanding and much minor”, with only five being highlighted.
One of these is the memorial to John Markland Rawson (d.1826), with the inscription recording that he perished with other seamen when the pinnace of HMS Owen Glendower was swamped in Simon’s Bay at the Cape of Good Hope and it incorporates a sail and an anchor in its design.
It was made by Richard Westmacott the Younger, who produced the pediment frieze at the Royal Exchange – the restoration of which I supervised as a site manager with Triton Building Restoration Ltd. back in 2000, several years after I left the company that I co-founded.
At the west end of the south aisle is the monument to Robert Ferrar, the Bishop of St. David’s Cathedral in Wales who was born in Halifax and was burned at the stake on 13th March 1555 at Carmarthen, during the reign of Queen Mary I.
The monument was made in 1847 by Joseph Bentley Leyland, a sculptor from Halifax who seems to be best known as being a friend of Branwell Brontë, the brother of the Brontë sisters of Howarth, and dying as an alcoholic in a debtor’s prison, having failed to live up to his potential. From the couple of photos that I took, I can see that the monument is made of a limestone that I suspect could be Caen stone, but I would need to take a much closer look.
The 5-bay nave, which Pevsner dates to c.1437, has tall arches to both arcades with octagonal columns, except for the westernmost column to the south arcade which for some unknown reason is considerably larger and has an irregular shape.
The spectacular spire shaped C15 font cover is nearly 8 m high, but Pevsner, Historic England (HE) and the church guide make any mention of the font itself and, based on the simple octagonal design that I have seen in many churches, I presume that it has a similar date.
Entering the base of the tower up the 6 steps, the like of which I had never encountered before during my visits to very many mediaeval churches in South Yorkshire and the surrounding counties, I was very surprised to see so much floor space – especially since in very many churches, this area is used as a storage space and there is hardly enough room to swing a cat.
Set into the centre of the tower is the chest tomb (1880) of Charles Musgrave, archdeacon of York in the C19, with his effigy carved in white Carrara marble, which Pevsner states was made by William Day Keyworth of London.













































