In its description of the Church of St. Peter the Apostle in Kirkthorpe, Historic England states that the chief merit of the church is a fine collection of C18 wall monuments but, as with other features in the church, the fieldwork officer essentially relies on Pevsner’s entry in his architectural guide for the West Riding of Yorkshire.
As a geologist, my main interest in mediaeval churches is in the stones used to build their fabric and, although I do have some interest in the decorative stones used in the monuments, any detailed description of church wall monuments is beyond my ability and is best left to members of organisations such as the Church Monuments Society.
While photographing the principal architectural elements of the church, however, I did record some of the monuments and the first one that I came across in the north chapel was a simple memorial to Charles Smyth, who was mortally wounded during the Battle of Quatre Bras on 16th June 1815. It consists of a white Carrara marble plaque with a black brecciated marble surround, which is similar to the photo of Marmo Portoferraio from Elba, which is listed in Decorative Stone - The Complete Sourcebook by Monica T. Price.
Further along the wall of the north chapel is the substantial monument to Sir Charles Dalston 3rd Baronet (d.1723), who once occupied Heath Hall, along with his daughter Anne who died aged only 5 weeks. It is made with veined white marble that is probably also from Carrara, with the inscribed panel set in an arch with a broken segmental pediment above and flanked by Corinthian columns with fluted corbels at their base.
Next to this is the monument to Thomas Stringer (d.1731) and his wife Katherine, which was made by Giovanni Battista Guelfi, a leading Italian sculptor who worked in the late Baroque style and was favoured by established architects such as James Gibbs and William Kent.
Pevsner describes it as “Two detached busts on a sarcophagus with straight tapering sides. Background by Kent with inscription, a frame starting from two big volutes and crowned by an open segmental pediment. Carved coat-of-arms with putti”. It is made with a veined white marble, with the surround to the sarcophagus in black marble of unknown provenance.
Briefly returning to the nave, an interesting design on the sandstone grave slab of Joseph Thornton (d.1712) caught my eye, but again this would be best described by a specialist in this field and I returned to the north chapel to photograph the monument to John Smyth (d.1731).
The original squire of Heath was John Smyth (1654-1729), who made his fortune as a wool stapler, but this is presumably his son (1685-1731) and a genealogist is best qualified to unravel the history of the Smyth family. Pevsner’s description is “Two putti uncovering his portrait on an oval medallion. A pretty conceit, prettily rendered”.
The white marble monument of Lady Georgiana Smyth (d.1799), the mother of the Charles Smyth whose memorial has been briefly described above, also commemorates 2 infant children and her husband, another John Smyth (d.1811). According to Pevsner, this and other monuments in the north chapel are signed by John Flaxman and he describes it as “A perfectly plain tablet with an attic over. A shield and some ornamental enrichment on this”.
The only other monuments that I noted were those of the vicar of Warmfield cum Heath, John Leake (d.1740), which has its painted inscription cut into a triangular veined white marble panel that is topped with a heraldic crest and escutcheon, and John Burton (d.1743), a London merchant who, due to ill health, retired to Heath and spent the last 20 years of his life there.