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St Peter's Church, Sawrey

19th-century Church of England church buildingsChurch of England church buildings in CumbriaDiocese of CarlisleGrade II listed churches in CumbriaUse British English from October 2024
St Peter's Church, Far Sawrey geograph.org.uk 2539494
St Peter's Church, Far Sawrey geograph.org.uk 2539494

St Peter's Church is a parish church in Sawrey, Cumbria; it is located in Far Sawrey. It is dedicated to St Peter. The church is in the Archdeaconry of Westmorland and Furness, in the Diocese of Carlisle. The church is of 19th-century origin and is Grade II listed.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Peter's Church, Sawrey (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Peter's Church, Sawrey
B5285,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.34809 ° E -2.95758 °
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St Peter's Church

B5285
LA22 0LG , Claife
England, United Kingdom
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St Peter's Church, Far Sawrey geograph.org.uk 2539494
St Peter's Church, Far Sawrey geograph.org.uk 2539494
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Nearby Places

Storrs Hall
Storrs Hall

Storrs Hall is a hotel on the banks of Windermere in Storrs in the Lake District, Cumbria, England. The hotel, a Grade II* listed Georgian mansion, is also home to the National Trust-owned folly the "Temple" on the end of a stone jetty on Windermere. Situated in the Lake District, Storrs Hall sits alongside the Windermere. It stands in seventeen acres of grounds and woodland.The mansion was first built in the 1790s by Sir John Legard, a Yorkshire landowner. After 14 years of owning the building, Sir John Legard became increasingly crippled by gout, and eventually sold Storrs Hall in 1804. The new owner of Storrs Hall was John Bolton, born in Ulverston in 1756, who was a rich man and one of the wealthiest men of his class. He extended the mansion and created a park. John Bolton was a Cumbrian who made a fortune as a Liverpool slave trader. He bought Storrs Hall with some of the proceeds and used the residence to entertain in style, holding regattas on the lake which were attended by Wordsworth and Sir Walter Scott amongst others.Elizabeth Bolton died in 1848 and the hall passed to her nephew Reverend Thomas Staniforth. Thomas was the son of former Lord Mayor of London Samuel Staniforth and grandson of Thomas Staniforth, also former mayor and slave trader. Staniforth moved into the hall in 1859 after retiring from his parish and lived there until he passed in 1887. As he never had any children the estate was sold off in lots.Between 1940 and 1944, Storrs Hall (which had previously been used both as a girls' school and as a youth hostel) played host to the staff and boys of St Hugh's School, Woodhall Spa, who were evacuated from their own buildings amidst the airfields of Lincolnshire during World War II.Today, Storrs Hall is a 4 star hotel.