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United Kingdom
England
West Midlands Region
Warwickshire
Stratford-On-Avon
Tysoe

Tysoe Village – St Peter's Church, Whatcote loop from Tysoe CP

Easy

10

riders

Tysoe Village – St Peter's Church, Whatcote loop from Tysoe CP

01:11

19.8km

110m

Cycling

Easy bike ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: April 19, 2026

Tips

Includes a segment in which cycling is not permitted

After 5.82 km for 104 m

Waypoints

A

Start point

Bus stop

Get Directions

1

274 m

Tysoe Village

Highlight • Religious Site

Wonderful ancient church here

Tip by

2

368 m

Lovely friendly welcoming pub.

Tip by

3

455 m

War Memorial Cross

Highlight • Monument

4

3.58 km

St Lawrence Church

Highlight • Historical Site

The parish church of ST. LAWRENCE consists of a chancel, nave, north porch, and west tower.
Both nave and chancel date from about the middle of the 12th century, but the south wall of the chancel has been considerably repaired several times, and the east wall was entirely rebuilt in the 17th or 18th century.


The nave retains its original doorways, one north window, and the chancel arch, but the south wall has been largely restored in later periods. The clearstory was added early in the 16th century. The west tower and the north porch were early-15th-century additions. Dated restorations are 1865 (chancel), 1877–8, and 1908.
The chancel (about 25 ft. by 17½ ft.) has a modern east window of 14th-century character of three lights and tracery. In the north wall are two windows of the 12th century, widened in the 16th or 17th century. The ancient splays are of ashlar, the round heads, also splayed inside, have cheveron moulds which appear to be later restorations. At the west end of the wall is a 14th-century low-side window with a trefoiled head; the jambs are deeply splayed externally and the internal splays are unequal, the western being the wider. It has an iron grille and hooks outside for a former shutter.
The south wall has features of various periods. Opposite the Norman north-west window is the bottom quoin of the west splay of a contemporary window. Of the two windows the eastern, probably early-16th-century, is of three cinquefoiled ogee-headed lights and vertical tracery in an elliptical head with an external hood-mould and human-head stops. The jambs are of two hollowed orders and the masonry partly yellow and partly grey. The western, probably late-15th-century, is a much smaller and lower window, of three trefoiled ogee-headed lights and vertical tracery, including a transom to the middle light, in a four-centred head with an external hood-mould, all of grey-white stone not coursing with the walling. The priest's doorway between them is probably 14th-century: it has hollowchamfered jambs and an acutely pointed head and segmental rear-arch. Near the east end is reset an early14th-century piscina with a trefoiled pointed head and square basin in a projecting sill. The wall is recessed below the south-east window for a sedile, partly restored.


The east wall is of coursed yellow rough ashlar of the 17th or 18th century with the diagonal buttresses at the angles. In the gable head is a narrow loop-light. The north wall has a low chamfered plinth and is of 12thcentury yellow-brown rubble, roughly squared and coursed. In the middle is a shallow buttress or 16-in. pilaster of ashlar that stops about 5 ft. below the eaves and probably marks the original wall-height, the masonry above it being of the 14th or 15th century and having a hollow-chamfered eaves-course.
The south wall is mostly of yellow ashlar like the east wall, but older: the east jamb stones of the south-east window course with the walling, but west of the window the masonry is rougher 14th- or 15th-century work. The original wall seems to have been pressed outwards by the roof and was refaced vertically about the time the windows were inserted. The masonry below the south-west window is of the original rubble, but above, west of the window, the wall face is stepped and curved back to agree with the plumb vertical wall east of it. On a stone east of the doorway is a scratched circular sundial. Inside the north wall below the windows is an original chamfered string-course: a scrap of the south string remains by the fragment of the original window, with another piece reset above it.


The modern high-pitched roof is of trussed rafter type with a panelled soffit.

The chancel arch has 12th-century responds of two square orders on the west face, the outer with nookshafts, the inner with larger half-round attached shafts: the capital of the north nook-shaft is carved with zigzag ornament below a grooved and hollow-chamfered abacus enriched with hatch ornament; and that of the south nook-shaft with enriched scallops, below a moulded abacus. The capitals of the inner shafts have been cut back, the southern retaining the slightest nail-head ornament. The large window east of it is a traces of original scallop-work. The bases are moulded. Most of the pointed head is a 13th-century reconstruction of two chamfered orders with small voussoirs, but the lowest 7 to 10 voussoirs of the outer order above the responds are the 12th-century square stones with the original chamfered hood-mould.

The nave (about 42½ ft. by 21½ ft.) has two north windows. That in the middle of the wall is a 12thcentury round-headed light with a chamfered hoodmould inside: the external hood-mould is a make-up of contemporary cheveron ornament, from this window or another, with a roll-mould and an outer edging of 14th-century insertion of three trefoiled ogee-headed lights and net tracery in a two-centred head of yellow masonry. It is like the chancel east window, which was evidently a copy of it. The wall is recessed inside below the sill and fitted with a stone seat: against the east splay is a reset piscina with a round basin and drain.
The north doorway has a round head of three plain square orders. The outer two orders of the jambs have nook-shafts with carved capitals, the eastern with upright foliage and the western with human faces spouting foliage from the mouths; the abaci are grooved and hollow-chamfered. The bases are worn away. The inner order is chamfered. The chamfered external hood-mould had heads, now defaced, carved on the lower ends. The round rear-arch is of square section, the double-chamfered string-course that passes along this wall being lifted over it to form a hood. The wall at the doorway is a foot thicker than the 2 ft. 11 in. main wall and there are three steps down from the porch to the nave floor.


There is only one lower window in the south wall, at the east end, and that is modern. It is of two cinquefoiled pointed lights and a quatrefoiled spandrel in a two-centred head.

The south doorway is original but the round head has been rebuilt. It is of three orders, the innermost plain, the middle with cheveron ornament on both face and soffit: the outer order is zigzagged on the soffit, each voussoir forming one cheveron, but the face is carved with shallow circular flowers. The jointing east of this order shows that there was originally a hood-mould: evidently the head had lost its semicircular form, which was restored at the sacrifice of the hood-mould. The two nook-shafts in each jamb have carved capitals, the outer two with masks and foliage, the inner with foliage only: the bases are perished. The rear-arch, of square section, is depressed to a three-centred arch and the string-course is lifted over it as a stilted hood-mould. Above the doorway outside is reset a length of a 12thcentury corbel-table—a range of 8 small arches of peculiar form and 7 corbels carved as human faces, except one which is a grotesque mask.

The walls are of 12th-century yellow ashlar with some later repair and low chamfered plinths. The north wall, east of the porch, has a double-chamfered string-course, cut by the 14th-century window, and is divided into two bays by an original shallow buttress, and there is another at the east angle. There is a length of straight joint near the west end marking the rebuilding of the west wall in the 15th century with the northwest diagonal buttress. The south wall has been much repaired and the original string-course survives only at the east end, where there is also an original shallow buttress with a later buttress against it. Three other buttresses divide the wall into four bays and are probably of the date of the clearstory as they rise above its string-course. They and the lower south-west diagonal buttress have moulded plinths like that of the tower. The masonry in the easternmost bay is mostly modern with the window; that in the second bay is coeval with the buttresses, destroying the 12th-century window that doubtless existed here opposite the other. Near the west end is a vertical seam and near it below the clearstory string-course a reset 12th-century stone with cheveron ornament. On the easternmost buttress is scratched a circular sundial.

The clearstory has three north windows, each of two plain ogee-headed lights under a square main head, probably of the 16th century. The wall face sets back above a double weather-course and is of small irregularly squared yellow rubble. On the south side are four similar windows, but with trefoiled heads and all restored except the jambs. The wall is of regular coursed yellow rubble and also sets back. The embattled parapets are modern.
The low-pitched roof is divided into four bays by moulded main beams. Each bay is panelled with moulded ribs. Some part of it may be 16th-century but it has been renovated. It is covered with red tiles.


The 15th-century north porch has an entrance with jambs and pointed head of two moulded orders (rebated later for a door), with an external hood-mould. The wall has diagonal buttresses and a low-pitched gable with an ancient string-course and coping and three weatherworn pinnacles. The sides have narrow lights, and in the parapets are gargoyles. The masonry is ashlar of brown and red stones and the plinths are like that of the tower.
The west tower (about 10 ft. square inside) is of three stages with plain string-courses. The walls are of coursed yellow ashlar. The plinth has a moulded and splayed top member and chamfered lower. The parapet is embattled, with returned copings to the merlons, and has crocketed pinnacles at the angles: in the stringcourse are carved faces and gargoyles. At the angles are diagonal buttresses rising to the parapet.


The two-centred archway from the nave is of three hollow-chamfered orders, the outer two continuous, the innermost with a late-15th-century moulded capital. These stop on acutely splayed bases about 5 ft. high, which are probably earlier forms of the responds. The head and upper stones of the responds are of whitish stone, perhaps an old restoration or heightening, the lower stones being brown.

In the south-west angle is a stair-vice entered by a doorway in the splay, the threshold of which is 7 ft. above the floor; it has chamfered jambs and a segmental-pointed head. At the third stage the wall is thickened out as wide pilasters to take the stair and it is lighted by west loops.

The west window is of three cinquefoiled lights and vertical tracery in a pointed head with a hood-mould. It has been restored two or three times but some of the yellow jamb-stones are original, the rest being of greywhite stone. In the second stage is a south rectangular light. The south window of the bell-chamber is of two cinquefoiled pointed lights and a quatrefoil in a twocentred head. The other three are of two cinquefoiled acutely pointed lights under a two-centred head, the line of the mullion being continued up to the apex. All have hood-moulds.

The 12th-century font is of unusual design. It is a stone bowl of flower-pot shape with the sides carved in low relief in 16 bays formed by pilasters and interlacing round arches. In two of the bays are figures of Adam and Eve, the other 14 contain conventional trees, flowers, &c.

Now refixed in the tower archway are remains of the 15th-century chancel screen, including the segmentalheaded doorway with carved cusp-points, over which are two traceried bays: there are also two open traceried side bays with restored foils to the trefoiled heads: the lower part has four closed bays (two to the door) with traceried heads below the middle rail, which is enriched with a series of quatrefoil circular panels. The door itself has double trefoil-headed bays with rosette cusppoints.

At the west end of the nave are six 15th-century oak benches with square-headed free standards with trefoiled panels, foliated spandrels, and moulded top-rails. The wall-standards are plain.

There are floor slabs, of 1710 to Margaretta Perletta, infant daughter of Thomas and Perletta Bewchamp, 1714 to Thomas Pippin, 1715 to the Rev. Nicholas Meese, Rector, and others with defaced or hidden inscriptions.

Of the five bells two are by William Bagley, 1701, and the others of 1878 by John Taylor. (fn. 102) There is also a small sanctus bell without marks.

The communion plate includes a 17th-century chalice.

The registers date from 1568.

In the churchyard near the north doorway is the base of a medieval cross.

Tip by

5

5.87 km

St Peter's Church, Whatcote

Highlight • Historical Site

The church of ST. PETER is a small building with a chancel, nave, south porch, and west tower.

The nave dates from early to mid-12th century, the north doorway remaining in place, and probably two windows. Other windows are of the 13th century, when the chancel was rebuilt and the tower added: the upper part of the tower is a later 13th-century sequence, but it has been constantly repaired and altered during the subsequent centuries, as two of the bell-chamber windows, at least, are of the 15th century, as well as the parapet. There have been modern restorations including the rebuilding of the east wall.

The church was damaged by an enemy bomb in 1941. The south wall of the nave west of the porch was completely destroyed as well as part of the porch, and also the west half of the nave roof. The font was smashed and practically the whole of the window-glass shattered. The other walls were left standing, and during 1947 the church was completely restored.

The chancel (about 25½ ft. by 14½ ft.) has an east window of three pointed lights and plain intersecting tracery in a two-centred head with an external hoodmould: the jambs are of two chamfered orders. It is probably of the early 14th century and therefore reset.
In the north wall the only window is close to the west end: it is a plain rectangular light with jambs of one chamfered order, perhaps an alteration of a 13th century lancet: the rear-arch is elliptical and of modern stone.
There are two windows in the south wall, the western like that opposite but with an old rear-arch; the eastern is a 14th-century window of two trefoiled ogee-headed lights under a square head with piercings and a plain hood-mould. The jambs are of two chamfers, and the wide splays are of rubble. Near the west window is a 13th-century priest's doorway with chamfered jambs and pointed head, with a moulded square impost and a modern elliptical rear-arch.


The east wall, probably rebuilt in the 19th century, is of alternate courses of yellow ashlar and grey-white lias stone. The north and south walls are of ancient coursed yellow rubble. The interior is plastered, but a plain string-course with a chamfered lower edge runs round the walls below the window-ledges.

The roof is steeply pitched and concealed by a plastered coved ceiling except for two old tie-beams: it is covered with tiles.

The chancel arch has splayed responds with a chamfered impost and a two-centred head of two chamfered orders. It is very plain and hard to date but possibly 13th-century.

The nave (about 46½ ft. by 20½ ft.) has three north windows. That near the east end is a rectangular light set high in the wall with ancient yellow stone jambs and head, and a splayed segmental rear-vault. The jambs are chamfered and the splays are of old rubble with ashlar angle-dressings. The other two windows are round-headed lights: the eastern has a 12th-century head in one stone that once had traces of carving. The western has restored head and splays but the chamfered external jambs are of old yellow stone. Between the last two is the blocked 12th-century doorway. It has a round head with an edge-roll, a cable-mould, and, on the vertical face, a series of small lozenges. The hollowchamfered hood-mould is enriched with billet ornament and, on the vertical face, hatched ornament. In it is a plain tympanum. The arch is carried on nookshafts, with perished cushion capitals, once carved, and moulded abaci and perished bases.

The opposite entrance in the south wall is perhaps of the 14th century and is of two chamfered orders, with a pointed head, but the semicircular rear-arch may be a 12th-century survival. East of the doorway are three windows. The easternmost, set low in the wall, is a 13th-century lancet with rebated and chamfered jambs and head, external hood-mould and segmental-pointed rear-arch. The second, a single pointed light set high in the wall, was probably a later medieval enlargement of the 12th-century window: it has ancient singlechamfered jambs and a modern head, and the inner splays and the splayed rear vault have been rebuilt. The third, of about mid-height on the wall, is an early14th-century window of two cinquefoiled pointed lights and a plain spandrel in a pointed head with an external hood-mould: the top foils are ogee-pointed. The jambs are of one chamfer, the splays are of rubble, and the pointed rear-arch of ashlar. The destroyed window, west of the entrance, was of two plain pointed lights and spandrel in a two-centred head without a hood-mould. It does not appear to have been very old.

The north and south walls, to the east of the doorways, are of yellow small coursed rubble roughly squared and probably of the 12th century, with ashlar angle-dressings at the east end. The west part of the north wall is of later coursed ashlar and the south wall was similar. The 4 or 5 ft. at the tops of the walls are of modern grey lias coursed stonework, having been heightened for a moderately low-pitched roof which is covered with blue slates. The weather-course of the much higher former steep-pitched roof is marked on the east wall of the tower. The east half of the modern roof remains in place, with a plastered soffit.

At the east end of the north wall is a 16th- or 17thcentury wide buttress of rubble with yellow dressings.
The south porch (8½ ft. square) may have been a 15th-century addition: the entrance had moulded jambs and a segmental-pointed head with a hoodmould. In the east wall is a small pointed light with a segmental-pointed rear-arch. The walls are of largish coursed rough ashlar.


The west tower (about 10½ ft. by 10 ft.) is of two stages divided by a plain string-course low down. The stonework suggests constant repairs through the centuries. The lower stage of the west and south sides is of coursed yellow ashlar; the upper part of the south side is of smaller yellow stones as coursed rough ashlar up to the parapet; the west face up to one course below the parapet is of much later small grey lias stones, but the yellow angle-dressings are ancient; the north face is all of yellow coursed rough ashlar of large and small stones. At the west angles are low 15th-century diagonal buttresses of ashlar. The east wall is of small squared white stone rubble up to the old nave-gable but above the weather-course it is like the north and south sides. There is no plinth. The Hornton-stone ashlar parapet is embattled with 15th-century returned copings to the merlons: on one of the east merlons is carved a shield with a cheveron.

The entrance from the nave to the tower is by a low doorway with chamfered jambs and pointed head of the 13th or 14th century. In the west wall of the lowest story is a tiny lancet with the head in two stones. In the south wall of the second story is a small rectangular light. The bell-chamber has a different kind of window in each wall. In the south wall is a small lancet, in the west a pair of lancets, of which the northern has a restored head. In the north is a 15th-century window of two cinquefoiled pointed lights and tracery in a two-centred head with a hood-mould, and in the east another 15th-century window of two trefoiled ogee-headed lights and plain piercings in a square head with a label.

There are several bad cracks in the south and east walls, and the walls were strengthened with iron bolts and straps in the 19th century.

The fittings in the church have been largely injured or destroyed. The font is a plain round one of uncertain age: the bowl is made of a very hard, gritty stone with thin sides (2 in.) and has a chamfered lower edge. The stem is plain. It was broken by the bomb but has been repaired.
There were five panelled bench-ends of the early 16th century and an 18th-century communion table and communion rails with moulded balusters.


In the chancel is a floor-slab on which is incised a cross and a chalice with a Latin inscription to Thomas Nelle, rector 1490. East of it was a brass effigy of a priest bearing a chalice, but the head of the figure was missing: it had an inscription to William Auldyngton, rector [1511]. The indent remains in the floor. There is also a mural monument to the Rev. John Davenport, who was rector for 70 years and 6 months and died at the age of 101 in 1668, and his wife: and there are later monuments. Near the entrance to the nave is a floor-slab to John Neele, 1683, and his wife Elizabeth.

There are three bells, one by John Clark, 1711, the others of 1878 and 1897. 

The communion cup is of 1719, but the paten given with it in that year is without hall-mark and clearly belonged to a larger cup.

The registers begin in 1572.

In the churchyard south of the nave is a tall medieval cross with an octagonal shaft on a chamfered base and two steps. The head was replaced by an 18th-century cube sundial surmounted by a ball finial.

Tip by

6

11.8 km

Ramblers Rest

Highlight • Cafe

Pop up cafe since 2020. Family run business. Reasonable prices. Good for a break in your walk.

Tip by

B

19.8 km

End point

Bus stop

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

19.5 km

186 m

108 m

< 100 m

Surfaces

12.5 km

7.14 km

125 m

< 100 m

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Monday 25 May

32°C

16°C

52 %

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