Peter Blannin Gibbons Binnall (1907–1980) was a minister of the Church of England and antiquary. He was a Canon of Lincoln and his final position was Sub-Dean of Lincoln.[1] He wrote books on English churches and cathedrals, which often included his own photography.[2] Binnall was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries for his contributions to scholarship on ecclesiastical architecture.
Peter Blannin Gibbons Binnall was born on 5 January 1907[3] and died on 29 November 1980 at Hemswell Gainsborough, Lincolnshire. He married Evangeline S. Goss, in October 1936 at Glanford Brigg, Lincolnshire.[4]
His parents were Richard Gibbons Binnall (22 Aug 1872 – 16 July 1961), Rector of Manton, Rutland, and Amy Geraldine Binnall, née Pearson (1879–1969). They married in 1906.
He was educated at Worksop College and Lichfield Theological College.
Binnall was a Church of England cleric. He was a Canon of Lincoln and held the positions of: Curate of Caistor (1932–1936); Perpetual Curate of Holland Fen (1936–1945); Rector of East and West Barkwith (1945–1961); and Sub-Dean of Lincoln (1961–1975).
Binnall wrote books about English churches, cathedrals and towns, often illustrated by his own photographs. The Conway Library at the Courtauld Institute of Art hold his photographs in their collection, and are currently digitising them as part of a larger digitisation project of the Conway Library collection.[5]
Papers, manuscripts, and his collections of ephemera and books are held in archives including Lincolnshire Archives, Society of Antiquaries of London, and the Church of England Record Centre at Lambeth Palace.[6]
Editor of the Buildings of England series Nikolaus Pevsner thanked Binnall in the Preface to the Lincolnshire volume of the series, noting that he: 'put his unparalleled knowledge of Lincolnshire churches at our disposal and went... through all I had written'.[7] In the volume, further credit to Binnall's work appears with reference to All Saints' Church, Beckingham, with Binnall providing a 14th-century dating for the Chapel of St Mary, and the masonry of St Peter's at Newton on Trent.