St Catherine's Church, Birtles, Cheshire

St Catherine's Church, Over Alderley stands in an isolated position in Birtles Lane, near to Birtles Hall, in the civil parish of Over Alderley, Cheshire, England. It is a Grade II* listed building.

It is unusual in that its tower is octagonal. It contains furnishings and stained glass from Germany and the Netherlands. The stained glass came from the Netherlands and dates from the late 16th and early 17th centuries. The church is listed in England's Thousand Best Churches.

History

St Catherine's was built as a private chapel by Thomas Hibbert of Birtles Hall in 1840. It became the parish church of Birtles and Over Alderley in 1890.

Structure

The church is built in red brick with buff sandstone dressings. It has a Kerridge stone-slate roof with a stone ridge. At its southwest corner is an octagonal tower. The plan of the body of the church consists of a five-bay nave, a short chancel and a south porch. The tower has three stages with stone bands at each stage, single light windows, and is surmounted by an openwork stone lattice balustrade with plain pinnacles.

Fittings and furnishings

The furnishings include a pulpit dated 1686, a manorial pew made from 17th century carved Flemish oak and a medieval eagle lectern, which may be the earliest of English origin in the county. The two large brass chandeliers are copies of chandeliers in Milan Cathedral. The tower contains eight bells giving a full octave. The bells were donated in 1895 by the three Hibbert sisters.

The internal walls were formerly covered in frescoes by Colonel Hugh Robert Hibbert, son of Thomas, who also built an organ for the chapel. The organ was replaced in 1909 by Peter Conacher of Huddersfield. Improvements and renovations were carried out in 1949, 1951 and 1983. The frescoes were painted over in 1950. In 1999 two etched glass memorials to Major Hugh and Mrs Susan Hibbert by Simon Whistler were installed.