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  1. History. Windows. References. External links. St Nicholas' Church, Moreton. Coordinates: 50.702834°N 2.276956°W. Window number 3. St Nicholas' is a Church of England parish church at Moreton, Dorset, England. It is known for its thirteen windows, engraved by the poet and artist Sir Laurence Whistler. [1] . T. E.

  2. Wikipedia has an entry on St Nicholas which may be of interest: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Nicholas,_Moreton. ABOUT OUR BUILDING. ABOUT OUR PEOPLE. Trinity Chapel Window. Our Rector is Revd. Gemma Donnell. Gemma is always happy to hear from people. Contact her on 01305 852514, 07749 926531 or revdonnell@outlook.com. Our LLM is Will Spackman.

  3. Address. Moreton. Dorset. DT2 8RH. View map. It was built in 1776 and is an unusual shape, almost square, with a large semi circular apse. The south side is particularly graceful, with an ogee headed doorway under the tower. The inside is flooded with light from the large windows.

  4. Our Parish Safeguarding Policy can be downloaded. If you have any Safeguarding questions or concerns you can contact the following: Parish Safeguarding Adviser: Rebecca Best Email: Tel: 0844 357 8888. Diocesan Safeguarding Advisers: Mon 9am – Wed 1pm Suzy Futcher Email: Tel: 07500 664800. Wed 1pm – Fri 5pm Jem Carter Email: Tel: 07469 857888.

  5. Moreton is also known for the windows of its church, St Nicholas, which were designed and engraved by Sir Laurence Whistler over a period of about 30 years. These replaced the dull panels of coloured glass that had been installed when the original windows were blown out by a bomb in World War II .

  6. The church is open daily from 9am to 6pm (4pm in Winter). Our main web site is http://www.stnicholasmoreton.org.uk. Our church contains the Unique Art of Sir Laurence Whistler. People come from all over the world to see the amazing engraved glass windows by Sir Laurence Whistler, and the grave of Lawrence of Arabia in the churchyard.

  7. St. Nicholas Moreton . The little church is built on raised ground within sight of its sponsor's mansion house and some distance from the village. It was built in 1776 to replace a medieval predecessor on the same site. The style is Georgian Gothic and it was erected for James Frampton, who had completed his house in 1774.