Thursday, 14 May 2026

A Day Out to Wortley - Part 2

 
A view of Reading Room Lane

Continuing my day out to Wortley, I retraced my steps along the Halifax Road and took a few photos of St. Leonard’s church, which was open for the Heritage Open Days festival and which I would visit after taking photos of some of the buildings at Wortley Hall for my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge. 
 
A view of St. Leonard's church
 
According to the National Churches Trust, records indicate that there was a chapel in Wortley in the reign of Henry III and there is evidence that the church existed in 1318, but the church that is seen today consists of a tower (1754) by the Rotherham based sculptor and architect John Platt, but with the rest rebuilt c.1815 and later work in the C19. 
 
The Wortley Arms public house
 
The next building on my Photo Challenge was the Grade II Listed Wortley Arms public house, which Historic England date as mid C18. I just took a couple of photos of its north-west elevation and then turned to photograph the south side of the nave of the church, which shows the 3-light windows with Y-tracery and a reset C14 3-light window with reticulated tracery at the east end.
  
A view of the south nave of St. Leonard's church
 
Continuing along Sheffield Road for a short distance, my next building was the mid C18 Ivy Cottage, with a C19 addition, where dirt obscures the yellowish colour of the massive sandstone. This is again very probably Grenoside Sandstone, which produces very large blocks - as seen in the very large lintel above the central door and for its surrounds – with Greenmoor Rock probably used for the stone slate roof.
  
Ivy Cottage

Looking at the south-west and rear elevations of the Wortley Arms, where the stonework isn’t very dirty and the patina isn't well developed, the same yellowish Grenoside Sandstone is seen here, but the C19 rear wing is quite blackened and I couldn’t confirm that is again used for this. 
 
The rear of the Wortley Arms
 
Attached to the south-east end of the Wortley Arms is the Wortley Men’s Club and Institute, which was built as the Reading Room for Wortley Hall and its front elevation on Reading Room Lane has Mock Tudor style timbers attached to it. 
 
A view up Reading Room Lane to the Wortley Men's Club
 
This building and another row of terraces on the opposite side of Reading Room Lane, which has a similar pattern of Mock Tudor style timbers and were presumably built at the same time, appear on the 1855 Ordnance Survey (OS) map and, although they are not listed, their architectural style and the use of red plain tiles for the roof is very unusual. 
 
The terrace of houses opposite the Wortley Men's Club
 
I headed down Reading Room Lane to the next building on my Photo Challenge, the Old Vicarage (1880), but it is set in private grounds and is obscured by a large hedge and trees and the single photo that I took just shows its chimney stacks and its stone slate roof. 
 
A partial view of the Old Vicarage
 
Returning to the Wortley Arms car park, the dry stone walls are made with a flaggy sandstone that looks quite similar to that used for the boundary walls on Halifax Road. Stone for walling like this would usually be obtained very locally but, I can only see a couple of very small quarries on the 1855 OS map, which are some distance away, and the proximity of the quarries at Green Moor do not rule these out as being the source. 
 
A boundary wall at the Wortley Arms Car Park

Before going to have a quick look at Wortley Hall, I took a couple of photos of the village school, which was built some time between the publication of the 1855 and 1892 OS maps and is likely to have been built after the Forster’s Education Act in 1870, but it has now been converted to residential use.
 
The former school in Wortley
 
 

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

A Day Out to Wortley - Part 1

 
A panoramic view from the A629 road in Wortley

Following on from my visits to Walkley and St. Marie’s Cathedral Church in Sheffield, as part of the 2022 Heritage Open Days (HOD) festival, my next day out a few days later was to Wortley – a small village that I had passed through many times in my MG Midget, when living just a couple of miles away in High Green. 

Treeton and Wortley as shown on Google Map

The only time I have spent any time there was back in 2018, when the gardens of Wortley Hall were chosen by the wedding photographers Photogenick as the backdrop for the modelling of my Glowing Edges Designs silk scarves. 
 
Modelling Glowing Edges designs silk scarves at Wortley Hall
 
St. Leonard’s church regularly opens for the HOD but, being a Georgian church that isn’t easy to get to by public transport, it wasn’t high on my priorities but, when seeing that a British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge showed that were 14 other buildings in the village that didn’t have a photo, including Wortley Hall, I decided to make the effort to get there. 
 
My British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge for Wortley

Although only 17 km from Treeton as the crow flies, the only bus that I could catch was the No. 29 operated by South Pennine Community Transport, which first leaves Sheffield at 8:25 am but the next bus departs from Chapeltown at 11:25 am. 
 
The timetable for the No. 29 South Pennine Community Transport bus
 
Having first caught a bus to Sheffield and then taking the train to Chapeltown, I alighted from the bus at the Halifax Road/Park Avenue stop at approximately 11:39 am, which gave me nearly 2½ hours to explore Wortley before returning on the 14:08 pm bus. 
 
No. 6 Halifax Road
 
The first building on my list to photograph was No. 6 Halifax Road (1840), which I saw only from a distance but, despite the considerable blackening of the massive sandstone, the distinctly yellowish colour makes me think that this is Grenoside Sandstone - one of the principal sandstones in the Pennine Lower Coal Measures Formation (PLCMF). 
 
Quarries marked on the Building Stones Database for England map explorer
 
Looking at the Building Stones Database for England map explorer, this was worked from the Laycock quarry to the south and the Huthwaite Quarries to the north-west, which I visited when undertaking surveys for the South Yorkshire RIGS (Regionally Important Geological Sites) Group back in 1996 and 1997. 
 
Various buildings on Halifax Road

I simply didn’t enough time to have a close look at any of the other buildings along Halifax Road, very many of which appear on the 1892 Ordnance Survey map, but from my photos I can still see that the stone used to build these is very probably Grenoside Sandstone. 
 
The A629 road follows an escarpment of an unnamed PLCMF sandstone and, heading north-west through open countryside, there are some fine views of the scarp and vale topography formed by the sandstones and the intervening strata, which dip to the north-east. 
 
A view of the dip slope of the Greenmoor Rock
 
From here, there are also very good views of the dip slope of the thinly bedded Greenmoor Rock, which forms a prominent feature at Hunshelf Bank, where it forms a strong escarpment overlooking Stocksbridge and was extensively quarried for the best quality paving stone. The flaggy sandstone used for the boundary walls in Wortley looks very much like Greenmoor Rock, but the Penistone Flags or other unnamed PLCMF sandstones may be the source of this.
 
The garden wall of Anvil Cottage on Halifax Road

Thursday, 7 May 2026

St. Marie's Cathedral Church in Sheffield

 
A detail of the effigy of Fr. Charles Pratt
 
My visit to Walkley to take advantage of the properties opened for the Heritage Open Days festival of 2024 wasn’t very successful and I made a mental note to return the following year, when all of the buildings are open and hopefully the lighting conditions in St. Mary’s church will be better.
 
A view from Fargate

Alighting from the No. 95 bus in Sheffield city centre, I made my way down Norfolk Row to the Gothic Revival style Grade II* listed Cathedral Church of St. Marie (1847-1850), designed by Weightman and Hadfield, which is built on a very restricted site and is not easy to photograph.
 
A view up the tower

I had walked down Norfolk Row very many times over the years, without taking much notice of it, but since taking an interest in the building stones used for Sheffield’s historic architecture while undertaking my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenges, I had become very curious about the yellowish Upper Carboniferous sandstone that is used for the walling.
 
A view along the south elevation

Since leaving Walkley, the very gloomy weather hadn’t improved and, although I didn’t stop to examine the stonework, I have often thought that this could well be Grenoside Sandstone, but I haven’t seen any documentation to confirm this.
 
The sculpture of the Annunciation by Thomas Earp
 
At the south-east corner of the cathedral, at the junction of Norfolk Row and Norfolk Street, there are various extensions – one of which is decorated with a deep relief sculpture, which is set in a canopied niche with two ogee arches and cinquefoils. The long Historic England (HE) description, with its usual complete lack of sentences and paragraphs, provides no information about these and although the cathedral website has a photo of the sculpture, it is not annotated.
 
A detail of the sculpture of the Annunciation
 
 Referring to the Pevsner Architectural Guide for Sheffield, Ruth Harman says that the building is a sacristy that was added in 1879 by M.E. Hadfield and Son. She adds that the sculpture is the Annunciation and made by Thomas Earp’s studio and, looking at the pale cream colour of the stone, my educated guess is that Ancaster limestone from Lincolnshire has been used for this.
 
A view along the nave to the chancel
 
Entering by the south porch, where Heritage Opens Days banners had been placed, I expected to be greeted by a volunteer - as had been my experience at every property that I have visited during many of these festivals – but I could not find a single person in the cathedral who might be able to provide some help and I didn't see any printed guide for a tourist. 
 
A shrine made with alabaster and Frosterley and Derbyshire marbles
 
I had been informed that the cathedral has a set of C15 alabaster relief sculptures and also that there is an example of the use of Frosterley marble from County Durham, which I have seen used as flooring in the Church of St. John the Evangelist in Leeds and in the C12 font at the Church of St. Mary and All Saints in Chesterfield. Wandering around the cathedral, I found this in the colonnettes of what I presume to be some kind of shrine, with back panels made of alabaster.
 
A Frosterley mable colonnette
 
The principal feature of Frosterley marble is the abundance of large solitary rugose corals set in an a black micritic matrix, the like of which I have seen in the field at Mullaghmore in Co. Sligo in the Republic of Ireland and at Hob's House landslip in Monsal Dale, Derbyshire.

Derbyshire fossil 'marble' with crinoid stems

This structure is topped with a slab of Lower Carboniferous Derbyshire fossil 'marble', from the Peak District National Park, which contains large crinoid stems that are also broken down into their ossicle components. The limestone formed as knoll reefs, which are common in the Eyam Limestone Formation, and was once widely quarried and polished as a decorative stone but the only supplier now is at Rowsley, which still obtains Mandale stone from the Once-a-week Quarry.
 
A column made with Derbyshire fossil 'marble'
 
Having a very quick look around the chancel and sanctuary, I noticed that crinoidal limestone has also been used for several columns, but I didn’t see it anywhere else. Continuing my wander, an altar in the mortuary chapel is made of what I thought was probably a green marble but, looking closely at my photo, I am wondering if it might actually be scagliola. 
 
The altar in the mortuary chapel
 
There is also an effigy of Fr. Charles Pratt (d.1849) by Thomas Earp that is holding a model of the church, which was heavily influenced by St. Andrew’s church in Heckington, Lincolnshire. I didn’t look at the material that it is made of, which seems to be coated with a grey pigment and the angel on the corner looks like it has been replaced. 
 
A detail of the effigy of Fr. Charles Pratt
 
HE state that it is made of alabaster but, as described in my recent post on the architecture in Huddersfield, in my experience their field workers very often make schoolboy errors when trying to identify the stone used in a building.
 
A headstop 
 
Ruth Harman also mentions that the reredos in St. Joseph’s chapel, also by Thomas Earp, is made of Caen stone and that green Pyrenean marble has been used for the shrine in this chapel and other marbles can be seen around the cathedral.

A headstop

On this occasion, I just took a few photos of the headstops and grotesques when leaving by the south porch but I will make a point of coming back in the near future and make a formal appointment to see the alabaster carvings.
 
A grotesque

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Heritage Open Days in Walkley

 
A view along the nave at St. Mary's church

On the day after undertaking a recce for the Nether Edge Festival and having another quick walk through Sheffield General Cemetery, I returned to Sheffield on the second day of the 2024 Heritage Open Days festival, with an intention of visiting some of the places that were open in Walkley. 
 
Walkley Community Centre
 
The first of these was the Walkley Community Centre, which although not a listed building was originally built in 1909 as the Walkley Reform Club and is an important community venue. It still has its original features and fittings and war memorial glass in the snooker room, but when I arrived it was not yet open to the general public.
 
The datestone at Walkley Community Centre
 
The Walkley Ebenezer Methodist Church was not yet open either and so I proceeded to the Grade II listed St. Mary’s church, which I had only briefly photographed from the outside during a previous visit to Walkley as part of a British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge.
 
St. Mary's church

It was a very overcast day and I didn’t take much notice of the details of the exterior but, according to the Pevsner Architectural Guide to Sheffield by Ruth Harman, the chancel and 2 bays of a mission church were built in 1861 and the nave, aisles, north-west tower and broach spire were added in 1869 by John Grey Weightman, in association with T.A. Wilson in 1869. 
 
The tower of St. Mary's church

I just took a few more general record photographs before entering the church and going to find the Walkley Historians, who I had met a few times at the Sheffield Heritage Fair and had suggested that I give a talk or lead a walk for them. 
 
St. Mary's church
 
The interior of the church was really gloomy and, with much of the masonry plastered over except for the arcades, I just took a few photographs of the nave and the arcades. I didn’t look at these closely, but the massive nature of the drums to the columns suggests that this is Chatsworth Grit, which is used as dressings to the Crawshaw Sandstone walling in the external fabric. 
 
The west arcade

Moving into the chancel, which is fully plastered, I had a quick look around to see if there were any decorative stones, as I had often seen in later Victorian churches, but I saw nothing of interest to this Language of Stone Blog. 
 
The chancel

When returning to the nave, however, the very fine grained texture and very pale cream colour of the pulpit (1901) caught my eye and it made me immediately think that it is made of Caen stone, as has been used for the font and reredos at St. John’s church (1887) in Ranmoor.
 
The pulpit
 
Although not an expert in decorative stones, I was interested to see that the pulpit  has colonnettes that I think might be made of the polished limestones, Cork Red and Ashburton ‘marbles’, and a true marble from Connemara, but I didn’t get good photographs in the poor light. 

Colonnettes on the font