St James the Great
Pudsey, Yorkshire
A Late 1950s quasi mediaeval gem!
St Thomas church, with its unusual layout and ceiling, is a wonderful place to meet together for worship or to trace the industrial history of Stanningley.
Stanningley, Yorkshire
The church was consecrated in 1841 and is of notable neoNorman style. Since then, it has stood as a place of worship, serving the community of Stanningley.
Inside the church, instead of the more common central aisle, there are two side aisles, reminiscent of a non conformist chapel of the time. The six stained glass windows are of quality Victorian craftsmanship, the most singular being on the south side, in memory of two young Sunday School teachers who were struck by lightning in 1869 and who are buried together in the churchyard. The organ chamber houses an instrument made locally by Binns of Bramley in 1906 and is accessed through an arch supported by curved steel plates rivetted together; a tangible connection to our local steel bridge manufacturing heritage. The industrial history of Stanningley is recalled further in the memorial inscriptions within the church and graveyard. Family names, including Butler, Gaunt, Wade, Vickers, Roberts and Gott, once significant local industrialists active in woollen cloth manufacturing and iron founding, are present.
The tower houses the Coronation Clock, manufactured by Potts of Leeds and paid for by public subscription to mark the coronation of HM Queen Elizabeth II.
Pudsey, Yorkshire
A Late 1950s quasi mediaeval gem!
Woodhall and Waterloo, Yorkshire
Bramley, Yorkshire
Perkins & Backhouse Gothic Revival built in 1861-63, rebuilt 1979 to provide additional community spaces with Robert Thompson furniture and William Morris glass.