Nottingham
St Mark

Glass

West window

Set over the west door it was a large window of ten lights set five over five. The lower five were of equal height with pointed heads. The upper group were set within an arch, with the central light reach the apex and the outer ones graduated to fit. Over the arch there was a drip hood with carved stops. A lithograph produced before the church was built suggest that these lights were glazed with stained glass, but no images have been located to confirm this.

Tower lancets

On the twin towers which flanked the west window there were three narrow pointed lights set in flat-headed stone frames. Presumably these illuminated the staircases or floors within the towers one on each floor.

South side windows

Close to the south-west corner was a tall pointed single light set over a small doorway. It was set in a stone frame with a drip hood. On the same level to the west of this was a three-light window. These two windows possibly illuminated the gallery.

In the remainder of the south wall are four three-over-three light windows.

East window

The lower five lights of the east window can be discerned in the interior photograph. When the chancel was extended in 1875 the window is known to have been reused. The glass appears to be of a lightly-coloured, sparse geometric design with roundels in the centre and a border around the edge.

Other windows

It is probably safe to assume that the north wall was a mirror image of the south wall. No images of this elevation have been found.

No information has been found regarding the imagery, if any, within the glazing.