Kingsheadwye

Grade I Heritage Walk: Walking to Church Of St Lawrence from The King’s Head — 2.3-Mile Circular via Godmersham

Church Of St Lawrence — a Grade I listed building 2.3 miles from The King's Head, Wye.

straighten2.3 miles timer91 min round trip
Kent Downs landscape above Wye

Church Of St Lawrence is a brick in Godmersham, 2.3 miles from The King’s Head. The NHLE entry singles out its gable. Historic England listed it in 1957.

Walking to Church Of St Lawrence — 2.3 miles from Wye

straighten

Distance
2.3 miles

timer

Duration
1 hr 31 min

terrain

Terrain
River-side footpath and meadow

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Elevation
40m ascent

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Difficulty
Moderate

Start & finish: The King’s Head, Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA

Elevation profile
0 mi 1.1 mi 2.3 mi Peak ~40m
Surface: River-side footpath and meadow
Landscape zone: The Stour Valley Floor

Rated Moderate at 2.3 miles with about 40m of ascent. Allow around 91 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 St Lawrence 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:
Godmersham
District:
Ashford
Statutory address:
Church Of St Lawrence, Canterbury Road
NHLE entry:
1299528 ↗

TR 05 SE GODMERSHAM CANTERBURY ROAD (east side) 4/40 Church of St. Lawrence 27.ll.57 GV I Parish church. C11 tower, C12 nave and chancel, chancel extended C13. Some C14 and C15 windows and fittings, south transept, south aisle, south porch and general restoration by William Butterfield, 1864-6. Flint and rubble, part plastered, with ashlar and rough dressed quoins and dressings, and plain tile roofs. Nave, south aisle and transept, chancel, north tower and south porch. West front: nave and south aisle, south aisle with coursed flint and ashlar quoins and bands. Gabled roof with C19 wrought iron gable cross. West door blocked, arch of single order with dogtooth ornament, tympanum of (re-used?) diapered and dog-toothed blocks. West window C19 curvilinear style with drip mould, south west window C19 paired lancets. South porch: 1 storey, timber framed on flint plinth. The gable end is open to expose the framing, with wrought iron gable cross. Inside a C19 doubel plank door with large iron hinges. South aisle: with 2 ashlar bands and 3 lancet windows. South transept: single ashlar band, ashlar quoins, 2 offset buttresses, with triple lancet south window, and single lancet on east wall. South east chapel (the organ chamber): ashlared quoins, and covered by catslide extension from chancel roof, with paired lancet window, and trefoiled wall niche, to Mary Agues Bolton, d. 1928. Chancel: south wall with exposed quoins of Normal chancel half way along its length, 2 C19 lancet windows, and 2 trefoiled wall niches, to children of Alfred and Mary Lyall, d. 1844, and Lucy Verena Holland, d. 1866. East wall part rendered in plaster painted as flint, with 2 dragonal offset buttresses in brick and flint, and C13 triple lancet east window. Between and forward of the 2 buttresses is a mid C19 cast iron railing on stone plinth, encircling an unmarked horizontal grave slab. North wall, with exposed quoins of Normal nave, single lancet to east. C14. Decorated window of 2 lights with sexfoil in head to west, and central blocked C15 doorway, 4 centred arch, double hollow chamfer and drip mould. Trefoiled niche on north-east buttress to Sackree. Tower: 3 stage tower of flint with rough-dressed quoins and eastern semi-circular apse with tiled roof and 2 C19 windows to east, with single light in tower second stage, and large belfry opening over. North wall with single lights to first and second stages and large belfry opening, and C19 board door in original semi-circular arched opening. West wall with single light to each stage, and projecting chimney/garderobe corbelled out to right. Nave north wall: to east. C15. 3 light window hollow chamfered surround and 4 centred drip mould. West, a single round-headed window, C19. Interior: 4 bay nave with C19 arcade to south aisle and south transept, 3 square-section piers and one round pier with plain chamfered arches. Roof of plastered barrel-trusses and 3 crown posts, the trusses higher and exposed to the east, to accentuate transept/crossing. The tower intrudes in the east end of the nave with a hollow chamfered doorway and plank door to the tower, and blocked doorway to rood loft. South aisle has masonry screen to transepts with 2 lancets and trefoil over, and square-headed and shouldered arch to nave pier. South transept with barrel truss roof, and chamfered arch through to south east chapel (nor organ room). Chancel,with hollow chamfered reveal to mullion and transomed 4 light and traceried C15 Perpendicular opening to south-east organ room. Attached shafts in chamfered surround of easter triple lancet window. Barrel-truss roof, plastered, with exposed lattice-framing at east end. Fittings: in chancel, cusped piscina and trefoiled sedile. Vestigial remains of C19 reredos on chancel east wall. Full height wood chancel screen, by Butterfield, 3 open bays. Solid, spandrel painted with crucifixion, with 2 central gates with open wrought iron tracery. Octagonal font also by Butterfield date.C12 stone relief of Archbishop Becket on chancel south wall, under canopy with colonettes. Monuments: south aisle. Thomas Knight, d. 1794 signed Shout, Holborn, London,wall plaque. A broken Ionic pillar on plinth over sarcophagus with claw feet, and west of this another by Shout to Harriet Knatchbull d. 1791, a white tablet wall plaque with pillars. Over this a foliated and scrolled cartouche wall plaque to Thomas Carter d. 1707, with cherubs either side and blowing trumpets over. On the north wall a similar draped cartouche with garlands of fruit and flowers and cherubs supporting a shield, to John Christmas, d. 1712. West of it a wall plaque to Edward Knight d. 1852. Jane Austen’s brother, by S. Manning. Angled sarcophagus, draped, with obelisk over. To east, a black plaque in white marble surround, chamfered and lugged, with scrolled pediment and achievement over, to Richard Munn, M.A. Vicar of Godmersham, d. 1682. Glass in south west and east window, by Gibbs, 1866-7, those to west in memory of Edward Knight and wife Elizabeth. Listing NGR: TR0665250705

Listing metadata — from the National Heritage List for England
NHLE entry number:
1299528
Heritage Category / Grade:
Listed Building, Grade I
First listed:
1957
Capture scale:
1:2500
Grid reference (NGR):
TR 06204 50451
BNG Easting / Northing:
606,204 E / 150,451 N
Coordinates (WGS84):
51.216014°N, 0.951219°E
Parish:
Godmersham
District:
Ashford
Kent Downs landscape zone:
The Stour Valley Floor
Distance to North Downs Way:
2.11 miles
Distance from The King's Head:
2.28 miles
Walk duration (round trip):
91 minutes
Elevation gain:
40 m
Difficulty rating:
Moderate

Architectural features at Church Of St Lawrence

Keywords extracted from Historic England’s Official List Entry — each one is genuinely in the designation prose, not inferred.

Material
brickflintstonerubbleashlar
Feature
gablemullionbelfrytowerchancelnaveaisletranseptporchbuttress

Buildings listed in the 1950s near Wye

The landscape around Church Of St Lawrence — The Stour Valley Floor

The Great Stour winds east through a broad, flat-bottomed valley of alluvium and river terrace gravels. Meadows close to the river are traditionally managed as damp grazing; in summer the banks are hung with willow and the still pools hold mayfly and brown trout. Historic watermills and gauged river stretches survive along the reach — material reminders of the valley’s medieval milling economy. The valley edges rise sharply into the flanking downs on both sides: looking east from Wye, one is reading a landscape section in real time, from chalk-grassland rim to river-meadow floor and up again.

Pubs within 3 miles of Church Of St Lawrence

Pub Distance from route Address Postcode Authority
The Compasses open_in_new 1.8 miles Sole Street, Crundale, CT4 7ES CT4 7ES Canterbury
The King's Head open_in_new 2.2 miles Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA TN25 5EA Ashford
The Tickled Trout open_in_new 2.3 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.

Reserve a Table

Frequently asked about Church Of St Lawrence

How far is Church Of St Lawrence from The King's Head?
2.3 miles one-way, roughly 2.3 miles round-trip. Expect about 91 minutes on foot at a steady pace.

Heritage data © Historic England NHLE · Trail & landscape data © Natural England (Open Government Licence) · Pub locations published under the Open Government Licence.