BARTON ST DAVID . SOMERSET – St David

File:St David, Barton St David (geograph 2586554).jpg
Photo: Geoff Pick / Wiki

ST DAVID . BARTON ST DAVID . SOMERSET

GRADE II* ❖ C12 to C15, with major C19 restoration. Local lias stone. Cruciform plan. Tower octagonal, in three stages, probably C15. In an area with several octagonal tower churches, this is the only one with 3 stages. Earliest recorded rector 1309. Close to Keinton Mandeville (2 dials). 3m NE of Somerton. 51.0828 /  -2.6585 / ST539317

DIAL

DEH visited on 26 May 1914. On W side of the blocked doorway on S side of the church, he found a dial low down. He noted a 5 inch noon line and a blocked style-hole in the mortar joint.

Eventually I found the dial, LHS amidst ivy both alive and dead. Its position close to ground level renders it useless for its purpose, yet it doesn’t seem to have been relocated. The ‘design’ consists of 4, perhaps 5, spidery radials descending untidily from the mortar line. It is 100+ years and a lot of ivy since DEH recorded the dial, and we can predict that it will soon be concealed by ivy, or eroded away.

B & W COMPARISON

A fine Squint and a handsome Norman doorway

GSS Category: Scratch Dial; Mass Dial; Church erosion; Squint; Norman Doorway

All photos: Keith Salvesen / Rolling Harbour except excellent main photo, Geoff Pick / Wiki

BABCARY . SOMERSET – Holy Cross

CHURCH OF THE HOLY CROSS . BABCARY . SOMERSET

GRADE II* ❖ Early origins; mainly C14 / C15; additions C19 (inc. Ferrey). PEV gives this small church quite a detailed entry. This is lias stone country. The building, the churchyard, and the setting make this a fine country church. There are 2 scratch dials. Visited by DEH on 10 Sept 1912. 12m N of Yeovil. 51.0566 /  -2.6271 / ST561287

DIAL 1

On a quoin stone W side of S porch, the gnomon hole easily seen. DEH calls it a faint scratchy dial, and thought that the hole may still contain the style. He seems not to have checked; later in his dialing project, he would have. There’s no trace now.

DIAL 2

A few inches above Dial 1 is an indistinct dial, noted by DEH. But for his careful records, no one would notice it now, a century later. 4 faint and somewhat wonky radials can just be made out LLQ, descending from a shallow hole now covered by lichen. This has a slight bluish tinge suggestive of a copper rod being used as a gnomon, a speculation too far.

GGS Category: Scratch Dial; Mass Dial; Somerset Scratch Dial

All photos: Keith Salvesen / Rolling Harbour