English Heritage sites near Hardingstone Parish

Porth Hellick Down Burial Chamber

PORTH HELLICK DOWN BURIAL CHAMBER

1000 miles from Hardingstone Parish

A large and imposing Scillonian Bronze Age entrance grave, with kerb, inner passage and burial chamber all clearly visible.

Halliggye Fogou

HALLIGGYE FOGOU

1000 miles from Hardingstone Parish

Roofed and walled in stone, this complex of passages is the largest and best-preserved of several mysterious underground tunnels associated with Cornish Iron Age settlements.

Innisidgen Lower and Upper Burial Chambers

INNISIDGEN LOWER AND UPPER BURIAL CHAMBERS

1000 miles from Hardingstone Parish

Two Bronze Age communal burial cairns of Scillonian type, with fine views. The upper cairn is the best preserved on the islands.

Harry's Walls

HARRY'S WALLS

1000 miles from Hardingstone Parish

An unfinished artillery fort, built above St Mary's Pool harbour in 1552-53.

Garrison Walls

GARRISON WALLS

1000 miles from Hardingstone Parish

You can enjoy a two-hour walk alongside the ramparts of these defensive walls and earthworks, dating from the 16th to 18th centuries.

Cromwell's Castle

CROMWELL'S CASTLE

1000 miles from Hardingstone Parish

The castle stands guarding the lovely anchorage between Bryher and Tresco and is one of the few surviving Cromwellian fortifications in Britain.


Churches in Hardingstone Parish

St Edmund, Hardingstone

High Street Hardingstone Northampton
(01604) 374379
http://hardingstonechurch.co.uk

The greater part of the present building is of 14th century date, but the lower part of the tower may belong to an earlier structure. The tower is of rubble, and the nave, aisles, and porches of roughly coursed dressed ironstone. The roofs are no longer leaded, due to thefts, and of low pitch behind straight parapets, except in the north aisle where the parapet is battlemented.

The tower is of two stages, the older lower stage serving as an entrance porch. The square-headed west window, like the north doorway, was inserted during the 1868 restoration and represents no ancient feature.  The pointed bell-chamber windows are of two trefoiled lights with quatrefoil in the head, and the tower terminates in a battlemented parapet with 18th-century angle pinnacles surmounted by iron vanes. The wide pointed tower arch is of three square orders towards the nave, on chamfered imposts, the voussoirs being alternately of dark- and light-coloured ironstone.

On the north wall of the Chancel is a large marble monument by Rysbrack with portrait busts to Bartholomew Clarke of Roehampton (d. 1746) father of Lady Bouverie, and Hitch Young (d. 1759) brother to Mrs. Clarke, and in the chancel floor are the marble grave-slabs of Bartholomew Tate (d. 1704) and Mary widow of William Tate (d. 1699). Within an arched recess in the south wall of the chancel is a table-tomb, the slab of which is without inscription and at present forms a seat. The arch is enriched with Renaissance ornament and is surmounted with the Tate crest. A tablet at the west end of the south aisle records the burial in a vault under the chancel of Benjamin Clarke (d. 1765), and the chancel contains a number of marble tablets to members of the Bouverie family of Delapre Abbey, including one of alabaster to John Augustus Sheil Bouverie (d. 1894) and his son Francis Kenelm (d. 1891).

There are older monuments in the Harvey chapel, to the south of the chancel. The fine alabaster monument, erected 'to the pious memory of Stephen Harvey Esq. [d. 1606] auditor of the Dutchy of Lancaster', his wife (d. 1590), and three sons, stands against the north wall at its east end. The kneeling figures of the man and wife together with a shield of arms are above the cornice, below which are three canopied recesses containing the effigies of their sons, all kneeling, the youngest, Stephen Harvey, citizen and merchant of London 'by whose appointment this monument was erected', being in the middle. On either side are Sir Francis Harvey, kt., one of the Judges of the Common Pleas (eldest son) who died 1632 and 'lyeth hereby buried', and William Harvey, who died 1633 and was buried at Weston Favell. The arched canopies are supported by columns of black marble, and in the lower part of the monument are inscribed black marble tablets.

The monument of Sir Stephen Harvey, Knight of the Bath (d. 1630), son of Sir Francis, is against the south wall of the chapel, and is of white marble with recumbent figure in the habit of the time. Information about the organ, which was installed in 1894, can be found at the following link Hardingstone Organ.

The font dates from the Victorian restoration, as does the oak pulpit in memory of the Rev. N. T. Hughes, vicar 1892- 1913. In the aisles are a number of memorial tablets of 18th- and 19th century date, and one in oak in memory of twenty-five men of the parish who fell in the war of 1914-18. In the south aisle is an iron-bound chest with three locks.

Most of the above information is taken from  A History of the County of Northampton: Volume 4
L. F. Salzman

Pubs in Hardingstone Parish

Crown Inn

57 High Street, Hardingstone, NN4 6BZ
(01604) 876677

Large Northampton stone fronted village pub, sited on the main road through the village with bus stops just outside. A central bar serves all areas which include a games room with pool and darts, the main bar area with a Northants skittles...
Sun Inn

9 High Street, Hardingstone, NN4 7BT
(01604) 700007
thesuninnhardingstone.co.uk

A friendly, attractive old white-washed pub with a good atmosphere in the older part of the village on the main road with bus stops just outside. The interior is very welcoming and cosy with soft lighting, a beamed ceiling, two character fi...