St Martin le Grand, York is a Grade II* listed parish church in the Church of England in York.
The church dates from the 11th century. The tower was built in the 15th century.
It was restored between 1853 and 1854 by JB and W Atkinson of York. The south side and eastern ends of the aisles were rebuilt, and the pierced battlement was added, to replace one removed 40 years earlier. The porch was added at the east end into Coney Street, and a south porch also added near the tower. New stained glass windows by William Wailes were added.
It was badly damaged by bombing on 29 April 1942 during the so-called Baedeker Blitz. It was rebuilt between 1961 and 1968 under the supervision of George Pace.
The clock on the east front was added in 1856 by Mr Cooke, with a carved figure of the âÂÂLittle Admiralâ dating from 1778. It is supported by an iron bracket which originally had a gas apparatus for lighting at night.
The church is noted as having a large medieval window showing scenes from the life of St Martin of Tours. The nine metre high window was removed for safe keeping in 1940, and was not destroyed in the bombing of April 1942. When it returned it was set in the north wall rather than its original location in the west wall, as part of a wholesale reconstruction of the church by George Pace. As a result its monumental scale now dwarfs the size of the much reduced church.
The east window in the former south aisle, which following rebuilding functions as the nave, was designed and manufactured by Harry Stammers and installed in 1963. It commemorates the destruction of this and other churches in the bombing raid on York, the form of the red flames taking hold of the buildings, and the rising smoke above, creating an almost abstract appearance. The reredos screen below was designed by Frank Roper.
The church is in a joint parish with St Helen's Church, Stonegate, York.
The pipe organ was built by J. W. Walker & Sons Ltd and dates from 1968. It was the gift of the West German government and the Evangelical Church. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.