Harbourside View Whitby
Whitby Harbour Buildings
Whitby Abbey
Whitby Abbey reflection
Whitby Boats
Whitby in Blue
Along the beach to Whitby from Sandsend, North Yor…
Whitby whale watching boat "SPECKSIONEER" heads fo…
Beach and West Pier/lighthouse, Whitby, North York…
North Eastern Guardian III passing the East Pier l…
Very, Very, HFF Everyone - 28th April 2017
Silhouette
Whitby of Old
The Church of St. Mary and Graveyard, Whitby, Nort…
Church of St. Mary high over Whitby Harbour, North…
Waiting for Summer Visitors (HFF everyone) (1 x Pi…
HFF from sunny Whitby, North Yorkshire
Whitby Town and Harbour - North Yorkshire
Whitby rooftops and chimneys
Whitby Abbey Church and pond
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Whitby Abbey Church silhouette
Whitby Abbey Church - North Transept and Nave wall
Whitby Abbey Church - West Front (2 x PiPs)
Whitby Abbey Church - West Front 15th century wind…
View east from the West Front & Nave towards North…
Whitby Abbey Headland from the clifftop path (HFF…
Whitby Harbour Pier Extensions
The Church of Staint Mary - Whitby
Coastal Patrol
A few of the 199 (HFF Everyone)
Whitby Abbey Church - Eastern wall of the Presbyte…
East Pier Lighthouse, Whitby (for Pam) - (HFF ever…
Daffodil Fence, Whitby (HFF everyone)
Whitby Harbour and Tate Hill beach at low tide
Coble - Sea Salt (HFF Everyone)
Masts, spars and rigging, oh! and at least six sea…
Tate Hill beach, Whitby harbour
A welcome sight! (see note)
Resting place at the top (HBM everyone)
Harbour mouth and piers from the Abbey Steps (HFF…
Harbour flowers (HFF everyone)
Dracula Territory
Henrietta Street, Whitby
Whitby Trio
Whitby, East Pier Lighthouse (HFF everyone)
Whitby West Pier and Lighthouse (HFF Everyone)
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Cottages shelter below The Church of St. Mary
The Church of Saint Mary is an Anglican parish church serving the town of Whitby in North Yorkshire England. It was founded around 1110, although its interior dates chiefly from the late 18th century. The church was designated a Grade I listed building on 23 February 1954. It is situated on the town's east cliff, overlooking the mouth of the River Esk overlooking the town, close to the ruins of Whitby Abbey. Church Steps, a flight of 199 steps lead up the hill to the church from the streets below. The church graveyard is used as a setting in Bram Stoker's novel, Dracula.
A Norman church was built on the site around 1110 and added to and altered over the centuries. The tower and transepts are from the 12th and 13th centuries. The tower is square and crenellated, as are the walls.
One of the oldest parts of the church is the quire which has three round-headed windows at its east end. Its side walls originally had three bays with similar windows but have been altered. It has three aumbries, one with a small piscina. The nave has five bays and is contemporary with the quire, its south wall is much altered but three external buttresses remain. When the church was enlarged in 1818 most of the north wall was removed and replaced by columns to accommodate an aisle, four large square-headed windows were inserted on the south side, the south porch was built in 1823 and a north porch built in the new annexe. The ceilings over the nave are boarded with several skylights. The transept was built in the 13th century and has three altered lancet windows in its northern arm while its southern arm is considerably changed and its windows all replaced.
The three-stage west tower has a squat appearance, its corners supported by flat buttresses and its embattled parapet is a 16th-century addition. Of its ring of eight bells, six are inscribed, "Whitby 1762 Lester and Pack of London fecit" and two were added in 1897.
A Norman church was built on the site around 1110 and added to and altered over the centuries. The tower and transepts are from the 12th and 13th centuries. The tower is square and crenellated, as are the walls.
One of the oldest parts of the church is the quire which has three round-headed windows at its east end. Its side walls originally had three bays with similar windows but have been altered. It has three aumbries, one with a small piscina. The nave has five bays and is contemporary with the quire, its south wall is much altered but three external buttresses remain. When the church was enlarged in 1818 most of the north wall was removed and replaced by columns to accommodate an aisle, four large square-headed windows were inserted on the south side, the south porch was built in 1823 and a north porch built in the new annexe. The ceilings over the nave are boarded with several skylights. The transept was built in the 13th century and has three altered lancet windows in its northern arm while its southern arm is considerably changed and its windows all replaced.
The three-stage west tower has a squat appearance, its corners supported by flat buttresses and its embattled parapet is a 16th-century addition. Of its ring of eight bells, six are inscribed, "Whitby 1762 Lester and Pack of London fecit" and two were added in 1897.
Fred Fouarge, Totylkoja, micritter, and 4 other people have particularly liked this photo
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