Survey Data

Reg No

22901507


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Historical, Social


Original Use

House


In Use As

House


Date

1815 - 1835


Coordinates

233420, 104944


Date Recorded

05/01/2004


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Detached five-bay two-storey house, c.1825, with single-bay single-storey end bay to right (west), single-bay two-storey canted bay to side elevation to left (east), single-bay two-storey return to south-east, and four-bay two-storey lower return to south-west. Burnt, 1923. Extensively reconstructed, post-1925. Burnt, c.1975. Extensively reconstructed, post-1975, with two-bay single-storey flat-roofed entrance bay added to front (north) elevation having prostyle tetrastyle Tuscan portico to left (east). Pitched roofs (behind parapet to end bay; half-polygonal to canted bay) with replacement artificial slate, post-1975, clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stacks, rendered coping, and iron rainwater goods on rendered eaves. Flat roof to entrance bay not visible behind parapet. Painted roughcast walls with rendered chimney breast to front (north) elevation, crow-stepped parapet to end bay, and concrete coping to parapet to entrance bay. Square-headed window openings with replacement concrete sills, post-1975, and replacement timber casement windows, post-1975. Round-headed door opening under prostyle tetrastyle Tuscan portico (having cut-stone columns on pedestal supporting frieze and moulded cornice) with replacement glazed timber panelled door, post-1975, overlight, and round-headed flanking window openings with replacement concrete sills, post-1975, and replacement fixed-pane timber windows, post-1975. Set back from road in own grounds with gravel forecourt, and landscaped grounds to site.

Appraisal

A substantial house of irregular quality, the present form and massing resulting from two phases of comprehensive renovation works in the early and late twentieth century. The house is of particular interest for its associations with “The Troubles” (1922 – 1923), which necessitated the first phase of reconstruction. Although much of the original fabric has been lost, the house retains some of its early character, and remains an important feature in the landscape.