Reg No
30338014
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic, Social
Original Use
Church/chapel
In Use As
Church/chapel
Date
1825 - 1830
Coordinates
191447, 216595
Date Recorded
04/08/2009
Date Updated
--/--/--
Freestanding cruciform-plan Catholic church, dated 1828, having altar at east end, full-height transepts, single-bay pitched-roof chapels to side walls of chancel, single-bay boiler house with pitched roof to south elevation of nave, single-bay entrance porch to north elevation of nave, and recent two-bay single-storey flat-roofed extension to east elevation of south transept. Main entrance through north transept. Pitched artificial slate roofs throughout with cast-iron rain water goods. Square-profile snecked limestone belfry with crenellations, moulded string courses, and hood-mouldings to pointed-arch openings with timber louvers. Wet-dashed rendered walls with smooth rendered plinth. Pointed-arch window openings, four-light with tracery to chancel east window, two-light to transept and single-light elsewhere, with cut limestone hood-mouldings, chamfered surrounds and slate sills, having stained-glass and leaded glass windows with secondary protective glass. Square-headed opening with replacement window to south elevation of nave. Timber open truss king-post roof with limestone corbels, timber gallery to west end, and stained-glass windows to chancel and chapels, to interior. Site is located on corner site adjacent to road, set in lawned grounds, bounded by cast-iron gates and railings with cut limestone plinth. Double-height screen wall to west of site, with vestigial slate roof, roughcast rendered walls with smooth rendered soffits, and pointed-arch niches above round-arched blind arcade. Plaque to grounds dates church to 1828.
Saint Brendan’s Church is situated on a prominent corner site and forms a key part of the built heritage of Eyrecourt. A plaque to the site reads 'O Lord have Mercy on the Soul of Christopher B. Martin Esq and his Posi who erected the material of this chapel at his own expense. Solely aided by the very Revd Bernard Kelly PP of Eyrecourt AD 1828.' The cut-stone window dressings and belfry show evidence of skilled craftsmanship and stone-cutting. The unusual positioning of the main entrance in the north transept appears to be original. The decorative screen wall between the church site and the former presbytery to the east is a notable feature.