Country Life

Crusading spirit Bunting War Memorial Chapel, Scotch Corner, North Yorkshire

A MILE south-east of Sutton Bank along the edge of the dramatic escarpment that drops from the edge of the North Yorkshire Moors to the Vales of Mowbray and of York, in the woods above the village of Oldstead, there is a small building modestly constructed of tile and local stone. It looks like an old barn —as, indeed, it once was—but what clearly marks it out as something of much greater interest is the entrance. This is ornamented with sculpture and hung with intricately carved doors. On the threshold is an inscription that reads simply: ‘John Joseph Bunting Sculptor and artist of Ryedale built this chapel 1957 Died 19 November 2002 aged 75.’

John Bunting recalled that he had first seen the abandoned barn that became his War Memorial Chapel on June 6, 1944, a day now familiar as D-Day. He was then a student at the nearby school attached to the Benedictine Abbey at Ampleforth. Both the school and abbey played an important part in Bunting’s life, but, to an extraordinary degree, it was this building that became the focus for his ideas and energy. It stands today as his monument and a physical expression

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Country Life

Country Life2 min read
The Legacy Sir John Soane And His Museum
EXASPERATED and despairing at the provocative behaviour of his sons, Sir John Soane (1753–1837) decided towards the end of his life to make the British public his heir. His eldest son, John—whom he had hoped would follow him as an architect, but who
Country Life6 min read
A Hungry Heart
WHEN the Nazis mounted an exhibition in Munich in 1937, their purpose was not to celebrate art, but condemn it. The so-called ‘Entartete Kunst’ or ‘Degenerate Art’ show was a macabre blockbuster designed to represent what was perceived to be the very
Country Life4 min read
Smart Thinking
A private family garden near Godalming in Surrey IMAGINE standing in a garden for the first time and trying to work out what it can become. Will it be minimal or traditional? Will the planting be cottagey, Mediterranean or jungly? How is the garden g

Related