Milton Mausoleum

Milton Mausoleum
All Saints Church, West Markham

A neoclassical church seen from an angle with the nave in the foreground and towards the back a lantern with a dome

Milton Mausoleum from the southwest
Milton Mausoleum
Location in Nottinghamshire
Coordinates: 53°14′57″N 0°55′47″W / 53.2493°N 0.9297°W / 53.2493; -0.9297
OS grid reference SK 715 730
Location Milton, Nottinghamshire
Country England
Denomination Anglican
Website Churches Conservation Trust
History
Founder(s) 4th Duke of Newcastle
Consecrated 27 December 1833
Architecture
Functional status Redundant
Heritage designation Grade I
Designated 1 February 1967
Architect(s) Sir Robert Smirke
Style Neoclassical
Completed 1833
Closed 1950s
Specifications
Materials Stone ashlar, lead roofs

The Milton Mausoleum is a redundant Anglican church in the village of Milton, Nottinghamshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building,[1] and is under the care of The Churches Conservation Trust.[2] The church, which stands on a hill and is visible from the Markham Moor junction on the A1 road,[2] has also been known as All Saints Church, West Markham,[1] and been confused with the medieval parish church of All Saints' Church, West Markham.

History

The building was commissioned by the 4th Duke of Newcastle in memory of his wife. It was designed by Sir Robert Smirke and completed in 1833. Most of the building served as a family mausoleum, with the nave as a parish church.[2] It was consecrated by the Archbishop of York on 27 December 1833. It closed as a parish church in the 1950s,[3] and was vested in the Churches Conservation Trust. It is the only surviving mausoleum in Nottinghamshire.[3]

Architecture

Exterior

The mausoleum is designed in Neoclassical style, and constructed in ashlar stone with lead roofs and set on a plinth. It has a cruciform plan, with a Doric pilasters at each corner supporting an entablature and pedimented gables. It contains a nave, tomb chambers to the north and south acting as transepts, and a mausoleum at the east end. At the crossing is an octagonal lantern set on a square base. It has two stages, the lower stages consisting of a colonnade of eight Doric columns with rectangular windows in the walls between them. The top stage consists of an octagonal drum containing eight louvred openings, and this is surmounted by a dome with a cross. Two steps lead to a central doorway in the west front. The doorway is flanked by pilasters and has a moulded architrave. On the north and south sides of the nave are five rectangular windows. There are similar windows on the north and south sides on the transepts. The east front contains a portico with four free-standing Doric columns.[1]

Interior

Inside the west entrance is a porch, with a doorway on the south side, and steps leading up to a gallery to the north. At the east end of the nave is a screen in Ionic style with a dentil cornice containing boards painted with biblical texts. In the nave are box pews. Its ceiling is panelled, and on the south wall is a monument dated 1863. Beyond the screen is a rotunda with four round archways alternating with four round-arched niches. In the south chamber is a mid 19th-century memorial to the Dukes of Newcastle. On its south wall is a board containing seven brass memorial plaques. The eastern arch leads by a passage to the east door. On its south side is a door leading to the vestry, and on the north side a similar door leads to steps down to the burial vault.[1]

See also

References

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