Haydon Old Church
Haydon Bridge, Northumberland
Dedicated to St Cuthbert, this church is a hidden gem with amazing views over the tyne valley.
A regularly used beautiful old church. set in a quiet historical corner of Northumberland, it’s the finest example of 15th century Perpendicular style in the country.
Beltingham, Northumberland
A much loved and regularly used Grade I listed church, the finest example of 15th century Perpendicular style in the country. Restored in 1884, a vestry was added. An earlier window remains however as does a squint, a small barred open window.
There are fine stained glass windows by Kempe 1891 and two of his pupils and a modern window by Leonard Everetts 1982. A medieval font stands by the entrance, where Bishop Ridley was baptised, who was martyred by Queen Mary in 1555. In the stone window frames on the south side there are relief carvings of a rabbit, flowers, fleur de lys and a grotesque mask.
Adjacent to the churchyard is a restored Pele tower and an old family home of the Bowes Lyon (Queen Mother's family), both in private ownership.
In the churchyard there is a Roman Altar and Nancy Ridley author is buried by the lychgate. There is a shaft of a Saxon Cross c680AD on the the east side and a large yew tree on the north side, possibly 2000 years old. The south and east walls of the church are marked by scratches, thought to have been made by arches sharpening arrowheads.
Haydon Bridge, Northumberland
Dedicated to St Cuthbert, this church is a hidden gem with amazing views over the tyne valley.
Whitfield, Northumberland
The church is a Grade II* listed building.
Keenley, Northumberland
The year 1750 is embossed in lead on the porch doorway and services are held once every fortnight. Inside there is a warm and welcoming atmosphere of a traditional country chapel complete with a pot bellied stove. Sheep and cattle graze in the next field and dry stone walls bound a woodland fringe and hay meadows. It is a place of peace and tranquillity.</span></span></p>