St James the Great
Gretton, Northamptonshire
A wonderful juxtaposition of medieval England and the advance of 19th century technology.
Harringworth, Northamptonshire
This towered and spired church, built in both limestone and ironstone, lies adjacent to the great arched Welland Viaduct, in polychrome brick, built by John Underwood in the 1870s for the Midland Railway.
Internally the church is a square with arched divisions creating north and south aisles with a tower base and a chancel. It is as handsome an example of a medieval church as you will find in the north part of the county.
It is the sort of church that gave the county its sobriquet of 'spires and quires'. Here the squires were the Tryon family who were buried in the north aisle. It is a very curious affair with elaborate wrought iron railings from around 1700, projecting stairs descending to a vault and others ascending to a raised platform with their monuments.
Moses Tryon, a London merchant of Dutch origin, bought the estates here and at Bulwick from the Zouche family in 1620. Moses and the next three generations are well commemorated in John Stanton's baroque wall monument. Here amongst other such memorials stands the church organ on the platform giving the space a rather jaunty appearance.
In the north trancet you will discover a 16th century helmet hanging on the wall which is all that’s left of a funerary monument to Lord George Zouche (d1569). His descendant Edward, 11th Lord Zouche (1556-1625) is remembered as being the sole commissioner at the trial of Mary, Queen of Scots at Fotheringhay who voted against her sentence of death.
Gretton, Northamptonshire
Deene, Northamptonshire
A family church.
Bulwick, Northamptonshire
A 13th century church considerably extended in the 14th century in the perpendicular style and restored in 1870 by Slater and Carpenter with pew ends carved by the then incumbent, the Revd JH Holdich.