1
St Andrew's Court
With so many new places nearby built to look like something from times past, you could be forgiven for thinking that this was maybe another example.
But I think this is genuinely quite old. Converted farm buildings at a guess.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 30 Jan 2023
0.12 miles
2
Blunsdon Abbey, Blunsdon St. Andrew
Blunsdon Abbey was a Victorian mansion which was destroyed by fire in 1904. The ruins dominate the Blunsdon Abbey Park caravan site, which offers static homes and storage for mobile homes.
Image: © Vieve Forward
Taken: 30 Dec 2012
0.13 miles
3
St Andrew's churchyard, Blunsdon St Andrew (b)
Image: © Basher Eyre
Taken: 4 Sep 2023
0.13 miles
4
St Andrew, Blunsdon St Andrew: lych gate inscription (i)
Image: © Basher Eyre
Taken: 4 Sep 2023
0.14 miles
5
St Andrew, Blunsdon St Andrew: lych gate inscription (ii)
Image: © Basher Eyre
Taken: 4 Sep 2023
0.14 miles
6
St Andrew's churchyard, Blunsdon St Andrew (a)
Image: © Basher Eyre
Taken: 4 Sep 2023
0.14 miles
7
St Andrew's churchyard, Blunsdon St Andrew
This is a west-facing view past the main entrance porch of the church. The small housing development in the background is Lyall Close. More information on the church can be found in the description of this image
Image
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 23 Mar 2008
0.15 miles
8
Looking west from Blunsdon Abbey, Blunsdon St Andrew
Almost hidden in the trees is the small parish church of St Andrew. The horizon slopes the way it does because the view is diagonally up a small slope. It could have been straightened but then it wouldn't be a true representation of the view.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 23 Mar 2008
0.15 miles
9
St Andrew's church, Blunsdon St Andrew
The church is unusual in having a north-facing entrance. Typically churches have their main doors in the southern aspect. The church itself is Grade II* listed. The following information is extracted from the local authority website (Swindon.gov.uk)
"Church of St Andrew DCMS Ref: 7/90
Tadpole Lane Grade: II*
Blunsdon St Andrew First Listed: 26.01.55
Medieval traces. Practically rebuilt by Butterfield 1868. Small country church of rubble with red tile roof. C15 style grafted on early English. Chancel, nave and south aisle, west bell turret with 2 bells and odd spirelet. Three bay nave with central gabled porch to north with quatrefoil vent and trefoil heads to side buttresses. Hollow chamfered surround to pointed doorway (possibly C13), wrought iron strap hinges. A2 and a 3-light square headed Perpendicular style window with mouchette heads. Plain ashlar dressed paired lights to lower later 2 bay chancel with gabled organ vestry to north. Three light geometrical east window (with, inside, a foiled 'rere-arch' - in fact foiled reveal). The west front appears to be a different build: rough-faced rubble with ashlar bands. Central belfry break with 2 foiled openings and crenellated parapet to hipped roof; small octagonal spirelet and weathervane; this break is linked by wall thickening and buttress to small door to south-west with Caernarvon arch.
Foiled vesca-shape opening to right. Boiler house and chimney to south-west.
Interior: reused plain circa 1200 doorway (now a niche). Low 3 bay arcade, C13. Butterfield reredos, altar-rails, sedilia and pews retained. Nave roof: king post type with foiled braces. Rubble churchyard wall to south and to west, gabled doorway formerly entrance from Abbey. Numerous medieval fragments - sculpted stones, medieval tiles and some traces of an arcade found during work of 1868, indicating a later church in the Middle Ages."
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 23 Mar 2008
0.15 miles
10
St Andrew's churchyard, Blunsdon St Andrew
Viewed facing east, the south elevation of the church can be seen at the left. Beyond that is what was once an abbey, still known as Blunsdon Abbey, which is now a residential property having had a rather modern-looking extension added.
Image: © Brian Robert Marshall
Taken: 23 Mar 2008
0.15 miles