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The Great Britain Guide

Historic churches · South Wales

Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire

Free admission

Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire — Grade II listed building-listed church in wales-south, United Kingdom.

St Pedrox church - geograph.org.uk - 8063623

Eirian Evans — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
30 min–1 h
  • Free entry

About

Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire is a Grade II listed building-listed church in wales-south, United Kingdom, registered on the Cadw register of listed buildings (Wales) (entry 6015). Listed status protects buildings and structures of special architectural or historic interest. See the linked Wikipedia article for further details.

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Heritage listing

Exterior: Prominently sited at N side of B4319 road. A small church dedicated to the C6 Saint Pedrog. Perhaps C13, but much restored in 1854 (by R K Penson?) at the expense of Lord Cawdor. At this time the chancel was rebuilt and a vestry added. Chancel approx. 5.5 m by 3.5 m, nave approx 10 x 5 m, with vestry and transept at N. Porch at S and tower at W. Exterior: The original masonry appears in the N wall of the nave and the W wall of the transept. Large sandstone courses, battered at the base. Smaller rubble courses at the head of the wall. A blocked low doorway is visible externally in the N wall of the nave. The tower is built in large irregular limestone courses, battered at base. The tower has a corbelled parapet with deep crenellations. There are louvred belfry openings to all faces. The stairs turret projects 0.3 m at the N and W, and is also crenellated. Exposed rafter verge without a bargeboard at the gable of the porch and the chancel. To match the new chancel the whole of the original S side apart from the tower was thinly refaced in snecked masonry to no aesthetic advantage in the 1850s restoration. This was carried out in red sandstone, the stone of the porch being from a different source (or different quarry stratum) to that of the nave refacing. New bell-turret above the chancel arch, where there was one originally. Slate roof covering throughout, with rafter sprockets at eaves. Interior: Nave, tower, transept and porch have pointed vaults. Tower vault open fully to the nave. Chancel arch C19 of two orders with Early English style corbel caps. C19 windows throughout in lancet form, but E window in three lights, cinquefoiled, with tracery. Single step at chancel arch and at altar rail. Minton encaustic tile paving in chancel with arms of Lord Cawdor. C19

From Cadw under OGL v3.

Place summary

The Church of St Petrox is located in Pembrokeshire, South Wales. This Grade II listed building is notable for its architectural significance within the region.

AI-generated from the structured facts on this page (operator, designation, listing, era). Not a substitute for visiting.

Coordinates
51.6401, -4.9341
Parish
Stackpole and Castlemartin
Postcode
SA71 5EQ
Parliamentary constituency
Mid and South Pembrokeshire

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire?
Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire is in South Wales, United Kingdom (postcode SA71 5EQ), in the parish of Stackpole and Castlemartin.
Is Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire a listed building?
Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire is officially recognised as Grade II listed building listed.
Is Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire free to visit?
Yes, Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire is free to enter.
How do I get to Church of St Petrox, Pembrokeshire?
Drivers can navigate to postcode SA71 5EQ. It sits within the Mid and South Pembrokeshire parliamentary constituency.