Grade I Heritage Walk: Walking to Church Of All Saints from The King’s Head — 1.6-Mile Easy Stroll via North Downs Way
Church Of All Saints — a Grade I listed building 1.6 miles from The King's Head, Wye.
Church Of All Saints is a brick in Boughton Aluph, 1.6 miles from The King’s Head. The NHLE entry singles out its gable. Historic England listed it in 1957.
Walking to Church Of All Saints — 1.6 miles from Wye
Rated Challenging at 1.6 miles with about 140m of ascent. Allow around 64 minutes at a steady 3 mph pace; add 15–20 minutes for photographs at the building and a pause at a viewpoint.
Why Church Of All Saints is Grade I listed — the 1957 designation
The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.
- Grade:
- I
- Listed:
- 1957
- Parish:
- Boughton Aluph
- District:
- Ashford
- Statutory address:
- Church Of All Saints, Church Lane
- NHLE entry:
- 1299904 ↗
TR 04 NW 5/6 27.11.57 BOUGHTON ALUPH CHURCH LANE (west end) Church Of All Saints I Parish Church. C13 chancel and chapel, otherwise C14 with C15 east windows. C17 porches. Restored in 1878. Flint and rubble, with rubble and ashlar dressings, and brick porches and buttresses. Nave, aisles, transepts, chancel, north-east chapel, crossing tower with prominent 2 stage stair turret, north and south porchs. The west and north transept windows are of same C14 curvilinear design, as was the now blocked south transept window, of 4 lights with cinquefoil over. North aisle with 2 C19 3 light windows in brick, south aisle with 2 C19 3 light windows in curvilinear style, all in plain chamfered surrounds. North chapel with 2 lancets to west, and 2 paired lancets with quatrefoils over to east, all C13. Chancel with 1 C15 three light Perpendicular window and 1 C14 two light curvilinear window on south wall. Chancel east window is 5 light C15 Perp., chapel east window 4 light C15 Perp. West door C18 plank in C14 roll-moulded surround between 2 large offset buttresses. C17 brick porches, that on north with rendered moulded arched opening, that on south with brick cornice and parapet gable, with large brick chimney to east. North chapel with plain ½ sunk doorway between 2 west lancets. Transept and aisles on weathered plinth, parapet roof, and several large offset buttresses repaired in brick, large brick flying buttress to south-east corner of chancel. Tower and turret have irregular single C14 lights. Interior- Nave, aisles, transepts and crossing: one build, 1329 – 61 on heraldic evidence. 4 bay nave arcade, octagonal piers on moulded bases, double chamfered arches. Crossing piers are continuation of nave arcade, only slightly more massive, with crossing arches of larger span. All of chalk blocks. All windows and doors possess original reveals with angular 4 centred arches over west and north door. North door C17 plank with door width plain metal hinges. South door plastered over. North chapel: 4 windows and door in north wall all of same C13 date, with plain chamfered reveals dying into plain jambs. C13 arcade to chancel of 3 squat round piers, various moulded and undercut capitals and ‘water-holding’ bases, but with same double-chamfered arches as nave. Chancel: chancel arch as nave and transept crossing arches. On chancel south wall 2 blocked window openings, the westernmost blocked by the C14 stair turret, the easterly cut through by C14 curvilinear window. Both chancel and chapel at lower level than transepts and crossing, with step down to east. Fittings. Holy water stoup by north door. C13 sedile in chancel, hollow- chamfered and undercut surround, attached shafts of uneven height in jambs, drip-mould over. Piscina to east with C14 leaf crockets over C13 trefoil. Small plain aumbrey cut by crockets over the piscina. Piscinas also in the north chapel and south transept this with ogee-head. C15 bracket carried on female head in chancel, and C15 demi-angel bracket in chapel. North transept east wall with C15 wall painting of the Trinity, with 2 brackets once supporting a C17 momument. C14 wooden screen in north chapel, with solid lower panels, and 8 light traceried screens either side of 4 light double door,roll moulded and hollow chamfered beam on top. C17 altar rails in chancel. Fragments of C14 glass in chancel east window, coronation of the Virgin, representations of Edward III and Eleanor, C14 heraldry in north transept window, and various fragments in west window. Cont… Cont. Church of All Saints Perpendicular C15 octagonal font. Monuments in north, or “Moyle” chapel. To Amye Clerk (nee Moyle), d.1631. Recumbent shrouded figure, children at head and feet, below a coffered pediment on corinthian paired capitals in white marble on black field. Possibly by Edward Marshall.(B.O.E. Kent II, 96). Black tablet on floor, badly damaged when removed from north transept, to Captain Robert Moyle d. 1639, moulded arch surround carved with military trophies. On chapel south pier, Sir Robert Moyle, d. 1661, wall tablet, black and white marble, on consoles with scrolls and broken pediment over containing achievement. Coat of arms in lozenge, C17, on north chapel north wall (B.O.E. Kent II 149). Listing NGR: TR0332048144
Listing metadata — from the National Heritage List for England
- NHLE entry number:
- 1299904
- Heritage Category / Grade:
- Listed Building, Grade I
- First listed:
- 1957
- Capture scale:
- 1:2500
- Grid reference (NGR):
- TR 03320 48144
- BNG Easting / Northing:
- 603,320 E / 148,145 N
- Coordinates (WGS84):
- 51.196330°N, 0.908682°E
- Parish:
- Boughton Aluph
- District:
- Ashford
- Kent Downs landscape zone:
- Crundale and the Western Ridge
- Distance to North Downs Way:
- 0.70 miles
- Distance from The King's Head:
- 1.59 miles
- Walk duration (round trip):
- 64 minutes
- Elevation gain:
- 140 m
- Difficulty rating:
- Challenging
Architectural features at Church Of All Saints
Keywords extracted from Historic England’s Official List Entry — each one is genuinely in the designation prose, not inferred.
The closest Grade I destination from Wye
Other heritage on the North Downs Way
| Listing | Grade | Parish | Distance from Wye |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walking to Wye Bridge from The King’s Head — 0.4-Mile Easy Stroll via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Wye with Hinxhill | 0.4 miles |
| Walking to Spring Grove And Walled Garden Attached from The King’s Head — 0.8-Mile Easy Stroll via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Wye with Hinxhill | 0.8 miles |
| Walking to Boughton Court from The King’s Head — 1.6-Mile Easy Stroll via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Boughton Aluph | 1.6 miles |
| Grade I Heritage Walk: Walking to Church Of St Mary from The King’s Head — 2.2-Mile Circular via North Downs Way | Grade I | Crundale | 2.2 miles |
| Walking to Hunt Street Farmhouse from The King’s Head — 2.4-Mile Circular via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Crundale | 2.4 miles |
| Walking to Lake House from The King’s Head — 2.8-Mile Circular via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Eastwell | 2.8 miles |
Buildings listed in the 1950s near Wye
| Listing | Grade | Parish | Distance from Wye | Listed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walking to Wye Bridge from The King’s Head — 0.4-Mile Easy Stroll via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Wye with Hinxhill | 0.4 miles | 1952 |
| Walking to Spring Grove And Walled Garden Attached from The King’s Head — 0.8-Mile Easy Stroll via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Wye with Hinxhill | 0.8 miles | 1952 |
| Walking to Boughton Court from The King’s Head — 1.6-Mile Easy Stroll via North Downs Way | Grade II* | Boughton Aluph | 1.6 miles | 1952 |
| Grade I Heritage Walk: Walking to Church Of St Mary from The King’s Head — 1.7-Mile Easy Stroll via Brook | Grade I | Brook | 1.7 miles | 1957 |
| Walking to Court Lodge from The King’s Head — 1.8-Mile Easy Stroll via Brook | Grade II* | Brook | 1.8 miles | 1957 |
The landscape around Church Of All Saints — Crundale and the Western Ridge
West of Wye the dip-slope climbs towards Crundale, Godmersham and the high ground above the Great Stour. This is wooded downland — pockets of beech hanger and coppice hazel survive on the steeper flanks, interleaved with sheep pasture and long-fallow headlands managed for wild flowers. Country houses of the 17th and 18th centuries (Godmersham Park among them) sit in mature parkland where the hedgerow oaks are old enough to have been saplings when the house was built. Footpaths here are sunken lanes and green roads — often the North Downs Way itself, which threads along the scarp-top before dropping back towards the village.
Pubs within 3 miles of Church Of All Saints
| Pub | Distance from route | Address | Postcode | Authority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Flying Horse open_in_new | 1.1 miles | Boughton Lees, Ashford, TN25 4HH | TN25 4HH | Ashford |
| The King's Head open_in_new | 1.5 miles | Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA | TN25 5EA | Ashford |
| The Tickled Trout open_in_new | 1.7 miles | Upper Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA | TN25 5EA | Ashford |
Plan your visit
Every walk on this site starts and finishes at The King’s Head — Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA.
Frequently asked about Church Of All Saints
How far is Church Of All Saints from The King's Head?
Is Church Of All Saints the closest Grade I walk to The King's Head?
Heritage data © Historic England NHLE · Trail & landscape data © Natural England (Open Government Licence) · Pub locations published under the Open Government Licence.