
Download your own personal audio guided tour of All Hallows Church.
You can now download a personal guided tour of All Hallows Church straight to your mobile phone. Let our guide take you around our ancient church and tell you all about its long history and show you some of the impressive features that are hidden in plain sight. The tour will tell you all about the Dukes of Leeds and other family members who are buried in their family crypt.
The tour lasts 55 minutes but you can stop and start it where you want, or listen to it at a later date as it is downloaded to your mobile phone where it will play automatically once you have paid. Please scan the QR code below using your mobile phone camera to download this unique audio guided tour.
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Audio Guided Tour £9.99.

PLEASE NOTE:
Please be respectful of other people in the church when you are listening to your audio guided tour.
If other people are in church please use headphones if possible or turn the sound down to a level that won't disturb other visitors.
Thank you for your understanding.
A Brief History of All Hallows Church
The exterior has wonderful examples of architecture between the 12th and 16th centuries and inside can be seen exquisite Italian wooden carvings, a large chancel with marble floors, beautiful stained glass windows and the tomb of the 1st Duke of Leeds. The large peaceful churchyard contains many ancient monuments and the 17th century Old Schoolroom is adjacent.
Walk around the outside of the church to see the architecture. The original Norman church was widened by adding side chapels and aisles and raised in height during the next 200 years. The tower was raised in height in the 15th century. Looking up, you can see the ancient gargoyles and dripstone heads.
Inside the door is the ancient font. The wooden Jacobean cover, for safety reasons is now positioned in the Leeds chapel. Nearby is a scratch dial (an early sundial), and an ancient stoup.
At the end of the nave see the original rounded Norman arches on the left, whilst the south side has more recent pointed arches. Looking up, the stonework changes where the roof was raised and upper clerestory windows were added. The wooden roof has carved bosses of flowers and grotesque faces.
One of the beautiful stained glass windows is attributed to the Florentine master, Ulisse De Matteis.
Before the Leeds (north) chapel is the tomb of Sir Hugh de Serlby, Lord of the Manor who died in 1298. In the Leeds chapel is a monument to Sir Edward Osborne who fought for King Charles I. His gauntlets are on display. His son Thomas, another powerful politician, became 1st Duke of Leeds after involvement in the revolution of 1688. He restored the chapel and built a family crypt beneath it. His tomb lies within the chapel. The organ workings, sadly, obscure much of this chapel.
The pulpit, lectern and altar front show exquisite wooden carvings and are inscribed Carlo Scarcelli 1886. The chancel is as long as the nave and has imported marble flooring with choir stalls of Canadian walnut installed during the restoration work in the 1890s. The roof timbers were also replaced and some ancient features uncovered including two aumbries behind the altar, a lancet window, an Easter sepulchre and piscinas.
The south chapel was renamed St George’s after the two World Wars. There is a lovely east window. The priest’s door was added in Victorian times. The 16th century metal gates probably came from nearby Kiveton Hall.
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