English Heritage sites near Stainton le Vale Parish
GAINSTHORPE MEDIEVAL VILLAGE
15 miles from Stainton le Vale Parish
A deserted medieval village, one of the best-preserved examples in England, clearly visible as a complex of grassy humps and bumps.
THORNTON ABBEY AND GATEHOUSE
16 miles from Stainton le Vale Parish
Thornton Abbey’s enormous and ornate fortified gatehouse is the largest and amongst the finest of all English Monastic gatehouses.
LINCOLN MEDIEVAL BISHOPS' PALACE
19 miles from Stainton le Vale Parish
Standing almost in the shadow of Lincoln cathedral, with sweeping views over the ancient city and the countryside beyond.
ST PETER'S CHURCH, BARTON-UPON-HUMBER
19 miles from Stainton le Vale Parish
Located in North Lincolnshire, St Peter's Church is an archaeological and architectural treasure trove waiting for you to discover. It is home to over 2800 burials from Anglo-Saxon to Victorian times.
BOLINGBROKE CASTLE
21 miles from Stainton le Vale Parish
The remains of a 13th-century hexagonal castle, birthplace in 1367 of the future King Henry IV, with adjacent earthworks. Besieged and taken by Cromwell's Parliamentarians in 1643.
TATTERSHALL COLLEGE
23 miles from Stainton le Vale Parish
Remains of a grammar school for church choristers, founded in the mid-15th century by Ralph, Lord Cromwell, the builder of nearby Tattershall Castle (National Trust).
Churches in Stainton le Vale Parish
Stainton le Vale - St Andrew
Brookfield Close
Stainton-le-Vale
Market Rasen
01673-844521
https://www.walesbychurches.org
The village of Stainton le Vale has a population of around 50.It is situated in the valley of the Stainton Beck and is a mixed community of working and retired people.
St Andrew's Church is used regularly: there are two services each month and Harvest Festival and the Christmas Day Carol Service are particularly popular. The church is popular, too, with walkers and others who, according to our visitors' book, appreciate both its peaceful setting and the fact that it is always open during daylight hours.
Location
The church is in a sheltered position at the eastern end of the village on the road to Binbrook and opposite the bridleway to Thoresway.
History
Stainton was an Anglo-Saxon settlement and a village by the time of the Norman Conquest. The present church was begun in Norman times and its oldest feature is the Norman north door into the vestry. It was enlarged in 1300, but fell into decay during the 17th and 18th centuries. By 1846, however, the church was described as being "in good order" and further restorations, of the interior in 1886 and the roof, vestry, east wall and window in 1913, created the church as it appears today, at about a third of its original size.
No churches found in Stainton le Vale Parish
