St John the Baptist | |
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54°58′12″N1°36′56″W / 54.9701°N 1.6155°W | |
OS grid reference | NZ245639 |
Location | Grainger Street, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 5JG |
Country | England |
Denomination | Anglican |
Churchmanship | Traditional Catholic |
Website | St John the Baptist Church |
History | |
Status | Parish church |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Active |
St John's Church is a 13th-century church on the corner of Grainger Street and Westgate Road in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, dedicated to St John the Baptist. It is a Grade I listed building. [1]
The old church of St John is believed to date from c.1287. [2] William Gray, a 16th-century topographer and burgess of Newcastle, called it "a pretty little church, commended by an arch-prelate of this kingdom because it resembled much a cross". [3]
The church, surrounded by modern buildings on three sides, is modest, with a low square tower featuring small pinnacles and windows with flattened arched tops. A stone in the south transept window commemorates Robert Rhodes, the builder of St Nicholas' Cathedral's steeple in Newcastle, and a benefactor to the town's churches. The current stone is a copy of the original, removed around 1861 during repairs, and now housed in the castle. [4]
The 15th-century font cover and the Jacobean pulpit are examples of local woodwork. The chancel, now the Lady Chapel, contains a window including the fragments of medieval glass with the earliest known representation of the arms of Newcastle. Further along the wall is a cruciform opening which enabled the anchorite, whose cell was above the present sacristy, to see the altar. The rood and reredos are both the work of Sir Charles Nicholson. [5]
Part of the graveyard was built over in the 1960s for meeting rooms and a hall. As of 2010, there remained about ten gravestones. Two of these, that to Solomon Hodgson (died 1800) [6] and Sarah Hodgson,[ dubious – discuss ] owners of the Newcastle Chronicle , and that to the artist Ralph Waters [7] are listed Grade II.
The Dublin-born actor and poet John Cunningham is buried in the graveyard. [8] Not far from the east window lies a stone slab, part of a table monument, its four supporting pillars lying half buried in the soil beneath it. The inscription on it reads as follows:
Here lie the Remains of |