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Northumberland County Council

Listed building outline

Reference Name Listed building Geometry Description Notes Organisation Uprns Entry date Start date End date
1371137 41, Queen Street 1371137 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.584528 55.333572,-1.584404 55.333622,-1.584466 55.333679,-1.584549 55.333646,-1.584585 55.333675,-1.584632 55.333654,-1.584528 55.333572))) AMBLE QUEEN STREET NU 2604 (North side) 13/55 No. 41 GV II Shop with domestic accommodation above. 1837. Tooled squared stone of near- ashlar quality; mixed green and blue slate roof with stacks rebuilt in yellow brick on stone base. 2 storeys, 2 windows. Late C19 double shopfront; to right pair of pilasters carrying frieze with 3 scrolled brackets and cornice; single pilaster and bracket to left. 1st-floor moulded sill band to 12-pane sashes, and clasping pilaster to right. Moulded eaves band. Roof hipped to right; ridge stack. 2-bay return, to North Street: Left bay detail as front except that ground-floor pilasters are paired at each end and the cornice they carry extends across the bay; right bay has altered sash and 12-pane sash above, with slightly-projecting sills. Blocked door to left with inserted window above; small slate-hung roof dormer; coped gable to right with end stack. The return is continued by Nos. 3, 5 and 7 North Street (q.v.). Part of the original planned development coeval with the harbour, built by the contractors Sandersons. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371138 The Waterloo Public House 1371138 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.585470 55.332938,-1.585562 55.333022,-1.585678 55.332975,-1.585553 55.332852,-1.585428 55.332899,-1.585470 55.332938))) AMBLE QUEEN STREET NU 2604 (South side) 13/60 The Waterloo Public House GV II Public House, 1837. Squared stone with tooled dressings, painted; Welsh slate roof with brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays, irregular. Basement plinth, wooden fascia board under stone cornice at 1st floor level, eaves cornice. Left-of-centre 6-panel door with plain overlight, flanked by pilasters with block capitals; similar pilasters at left end and flanking window in right bay; both ground-floor windows renewed but in old openings with projecting moulded stone sills. 1st floor, carried slightly further to left than ground floor, has left end pilaster and 4-pane sash windows in surrounds with pilasters and raised aprons. Coped left gable; left end stack and ridge stack, set axially, on right. Part of the original planned development coeval with the harbour, built by the contractors Sandersons. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371139 White House 1371139 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.833281 55.288840,-1.833364 55.288848,-1.833369 55.288832,-1.833407 55.288836,-1.833413 55.288816,-1.833511 55.288825,-1.833506 55.288842,-1.833541 55.288845,-1.833542 55.288834,-1.833626 55.288843,-1.833653 55.288749,-1.833573 55.288741,-1.833569 55.288753,-1.833410 55.288737,-1.833415 55.288722,-1.833319 55.288713,-1.833281 55.288840))) BRINKBURN B 6334 NZ 19 NW (North side) 10/64 White House II Former Brinkburn Estate Office, built 1856 or 1857, converted to 2 cottages in late C19, and later to one house. Mixed rubble and brick rendered and whitewashed; tooled-and-margined quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roof. H-plan. Single storey; centre of 5 narrow bays between projecting gabled end bays; symmetrical. Plinth. Central vertical-panelled door with margined overlight; margined sash windows, tripartite in end bays, with blind slits above. All openings in raised stone surrounds. Centre has moulded cornice, end bays have gable coping on moulded kneelers. 2 stepped-and-corniced ridge stacks on centre; one similar ridge stack on each wing. 2-bay left return shows vertical-panelled door with 3-pane overlight between 12-pane sashes; similar sashes on right return. Altered late C19 rear extensions are not of special interest. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371140 Ruined Outbuilding And Attached Wall To East Of Brinkburn Mill 1371140 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.816527 55.278764,-1.816589 55.278812,-1.816660 55.278781,-1.816567 55.278709,-1.816496 55.278740,-1.816527 55.278764))) BRINKBURN BRINKBURN PRIORY NZ 19 NW 10/78 Ruined outbuilding and attached wall, to east of Brinkburn Mill GV II Former stable and barn, with attached retaining wall. C18. Squared stone with roughly-cut dressings. Rectangular building set at right-angles to river. On west 2 doorways with alternating-block jambs (lintels fallen) and a slit vent between; on east a slit vent and 2 window openings with timber lintels. Roofless and gable tops fallen. The line of the south end is continued westwards by a retaining wall of the same build, which links to the brick-arched exit of the mill tail race. Included for group value with mill. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371141 Butterknowes Farmhouse 1371141 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.857610 55.286550,-1.857652 55.286647,-1.857735 55.286636,-1.857726 55.286613,-1.857830 55.286598,-1.857821 55.286572,-1.857890 55.286563,-1.857867 55.286511,-1.857796 55.286521,-1.857791 55.286508,-1.857748 55.286514,-1.857755 55.286527,-1.857610 55.286550))) BRINKBURN BUTTERKNOWES NZ 09 NE 9/82 Butterknowes Farmhouse GV II Bastle, late C16 or early C17; extended and refronted c.1800; rear wing and outshut second quarter of C19. Original parts heavy rubble; extension, porch and front wall squared stone; C19 parts squared stone with tooled-and- margined dressings. Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys, 1 + 2 bays. Right part has 4-pane sash windows, in chamfered surrounds, with slightly-projecting sills. Coped gables with stepped-and- banded end stacks. c.1800 left part, slightly set back, has renewed door in chamfered surround on left return of projecting porch with 6-pore casement and gable slit in front wall; windows, to left of porch, similar to right part. Coped left gable with stepped-and-banded end stack; 4-pore sash on left return. Rear elevation shows original bastle masonry above outshut with part-latticed window; to left is projecting wing of 2 low storeys with hip-ended roof. Interior: North and west walls of bastle 1.20 metres thick. life east end wall, where by analogy with Brinkheugh and Thropton bastles one would expect to find both byre and upper doorways, is not exposed. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371142 Outbuilding Range To North Of Westhills Farmhouse 1371142 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.942650 55.311863,-1.942772 55.311851,-1.942756 55.311802,-1.942259 55.311854,-1.942273 55.311902,-1.942650 55.311863))) ROTHBURY WESTHILLS NU OO SW 16/307 Outbuilding range to north of Westhills Farmhouse GV II Cottage and attached barn. Later C18. Tooled stone with tooled-and-margined dressings; roughly-squared stone to rear. Welsh slate roof. South elevation in 2 parts: Left section 2 storeys, 1 bay; boarded door with altered window on right and stone-surround window with old bars set directly beneath eaves. Right section 1 storey, 3 wide bays; 3 boarded doors, a 4-pane casement and 9-pane fixed windows. Very steeply pitched roof with reverse-stepped gable coping and corniced left end stack. Right return shows boarded double doors under segmental arch with boarded pitching door above. Interior; collar-beam roof trusses with feet of principals set into the wall face in upper-cruck fashion; and 1 level of purlins. , 1987-08-25 1987-08-25
1371143 Thropton Bridge Over The Wreigh Burn 1371143 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.953182 55.313682,-1.953169 55.313779,-1.953519 55.313817,-1.953885 55.313870,-1.953894 55.313776,-1.953591 55.313760,-1.953463 55.313742,-1.953182 55.313682))) THROPTON THROPTON VILLAGE NU 00 SW 16/311 Thropton Bridge, over the Wreigh 21.10.53 Burn GV II Bridge, 1810; end walls later C19. Tooled-and-margined stone. Hogback bridge with segmental arch, arch ring and band below parapet with chamfered coping; end pilasters carrying round piers with domed caps. Flat-coped wing walls except to north-east. Built by George Robson, a local Catholic landowner, at a cost of #365. , 1953-10-21 1953-10-21
1371144 Roadside Wall And Gatepiers To East Of Roman Catholic Presbytery 1371144 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.954929 55.313984,-1.954314 55.313828,-1.954292 55.313835,-1.954301 55.313845,-1.954917 55.314001,-1.954936 55.313997,-1.954938 55.313990,-1.954929 55.313984))) THROPTON THROPTON VILLAGE NU 00 SW (South side) 16/316 Roadside wall and gatepiers to east of Roman Catholic Presbytery GV II Garden wall and gatepiers, probably c.1811. Squared roughly-tooled stone with cut dressings; piers tooled-and-margined stone. Tall section of wall with flat coping ramped down to join rusticated gatepiers with swept moulded caps; to right a short length of similar wall links to north wing of Presbytery (q.v.); to left similar but lower wall runs downhill to join outbuilding, which is not of special interest. , 1987-08-25 1987-08-25
1371145 Ruined Chapel On West Side Of Church Hill 1371145 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.613629 55.383051,-1.613672 55.383077,-1.613756 55.383033,-1.613713 55.383007,-1.613629 55.383051))) NU 20 NW NU 24580996 ALNMOUTH A 1068 (East side, off) 10/1 Ruined chapel on west side of Church Hill II Mortuary Chapel, 1870. Snecked rubble with roughly-tooled quoins and dressings, except for ashlar south doorway. Roofless. Romanesque style. Small rectangular building. South wall has doorway with chevron, pellets and zigzag ornaments; upper parts of jamb shafts remain, with scalloped capitals. Round-arched chamfered windows in south, west and north walls; similar paired lights in east gable. Steeply-pitched gables with moulded kneelers and coping partly fallen. Built 1869-70 at a cost of 177.6s.3d. raised by public subscription, as part of a plan to re-open the cemetery on Church Hill (site of the ancient parish church of St. Waleric, the remains of which were destroyed by the 1806 flood). Included for historic interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371146 High Buston Farm Cottage 1371146 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.635614 55.371925,-1.635646 55.371976,-1.635965 55.371914,-1.635933 55.371861,-1.635614 55.371925))) NU 20 NW ALNMOUTH HIGH BUSTON 10/9 High Buston Farm Cottage GV II House, later C18. Roughly-squared stone, rendered on right return; pantile roof with rendered brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays, slightly irregular. Right-of-centre renewed door in old opening, with 8-pane trompe l'oeil window above; end bays have 12-pane sashes on ground floor and 9-pane short sashes above. End stacks. Included for historic interest as the birthplace of John Common (later of Denwick) inventor of the double drill turnip sower (1818) and a reaping machine (1822). Single-storey outbuilding to east is altered and not of special interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371147 Garden Wall To South Of High Buston House 1371147 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.635279 55.372224,-1.635265 55.372229,-1.635267 55.372238,-1.635413 55.372261,-1.635449 55.372287,-1.635492 55.372337,-1.635510 55.372388,-1.635480 55.372532,-1.635451 55.372541,-1.635461 55.372552,-1.635507 55.372546,-1.635542 55.372389,-1.635521 55.372330,-1.635493 55.372294,-1.635433 55.372247,-1.635383 55.372232,-1.635279 55.372224))) NU 20 NW ALMOUTH HIGH BUSTON 10/12 Garden wall to south of High Buston House GV II Garden wall, late C18 or early C19. Squared stone with cut dressings. Wall 1.2 metres high, with low-pitched coping, joins north-west corner of house and runs south to broad gateway between monolithic piers with banded pyramidal caps. Near gate is blocked arch at foot of wall; beyond gate 18-metre length of wall, with coping ramped down, ending against bedrock outcrop. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371148 1-8, Lovaine Terrace 1371148 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.614278 55.388672,-1.614228 55.388676,-1.614242 55.388725,-1.614432 55.388709,-1.614285 55.388250,-1.614155 55.388267,-1.614171 55.388305,-1.614115 55.388310,-1.614129 55.388378,-1.614215 55.388638,-1.614267 55.388634,-1.614278 55.388672))) NU 2410 ALNMOUTH LOVAINE TERRACE 20/16 Nos. 1-8 consecutive GV II Terrace of 8 houses, c.1860 for the Duke of Northumberland. Concrete blockwork construction, rendered and colourwashed; Welsh slate roofs. Each house 2 storeys + attic, 2 bays; the terrace steps downhill from south to north. Nos. 3, 5 and 7 have old 4-panel doors with plain overlights; No. 8 has round-arched passage entrance. Several ground-floor windows enlarged; Nos. 2 and 3 have late C19 oriels and No. 8 a full-height castellated canted bay. Old windows mostly 4-pane sashes. Old openings all have raised surrounds. 5 small gabled roof dormers; 4 ridge stacks. Each house is a different pastel colour. Included for historical interest as an early example of experimental concrete block construction. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371149 Inscribed Stone About 60 Metres South Of Hauxley Hall 1371149 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.562209 55.320554,-1.562219 55.320565,-1.562241 55.320556,-1.562228 55.320547,-1.562209 55.320554))) HAUXLEY HIGH HAUXLEY NU 20 SE 8/140 Inscribed stone c.60 metres south of Hauxley Hall GV II Inscribed stone, early C19. Rectangular sandstone block 0.70 x 0.50 metres and 1.30 metres high. Incised inscription on north face: This Portion of the Hauxley Property was redeemed to its Hereditary Course By the zeal and exertions of the Rev. Joseph Cook of Newton Hall Through the Medium of a Suit In the Court of Chancery y Commenced Jan 1798 Terminated May 1809. Historical note: The stone is in error: this field was not part of the patrimonial estate of the Widdringtons but was purchased by them in 1762 from Kirton's mortgagees (Northumberland County History V p.308). , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371150 Milepost 180 Metres North Of Framlington Gate 1371150 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.814983 55.328000,-1.814989 55.327996,-1.814980 55.327993,-1.814977 55.327996,-1.814983 55.328000))) LONGFRAMLINGTON A 697 NU 10 SW NU 11840378 (East side) 5/142 Milepost 180 metres north of Framlington Gate II Milepost, probably early C20 by Smith Paterson Ltd. of Blaydon. Cast iron, painted white and black. Shield-shaped plaque with legend CORNHILL 31 MORPETH 13 set on circular shaft, partly sunk into grass verge. Present height 0.4 metre. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371151 Quince Cottage 1371151 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.794848 55.303391,-1.794950 55.303435,-1.794987 55.303407,-1.794930 55.303385,-1.794874 55.303349,-1.794836 55.303385,-1.794848 55.303391))) LONGFRAMLINGTON CHURCH STREET NU 10 SW (North side) 5/145 No. 2 (Quince Cottage) GV II Cottage, late C18. Squared stone; Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys, 1 bay. Renewed door with overlight on right, renewed 16-pane sash windows. Hipped roof. Included for group value. C20 pebbledashed extension at rear is not of interest. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371152 4, Church Street 1371152 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.794981 55.303340,-1.795011 55.303402,-1.795193 55.303370,-1.795166 55.303317,-1.795153 55.303308,-1.794981 55.303340))) LONGFRAMLINGTON CHURCH STREET NU 10 SW (North side) 5/147 No. 4 GV II House; c.1770 (information from owner), ground floor windows enlarged in later C19. Horizontally-tooled stone except for claw-tooled sills and lintels of lower windows; Welsh slate roof with stacks rebuilt in brick. 2 storeys, 3 bays, symmetrical. Central renewed door inside C20 porch flanked by C20 casements in older openings; plain sashes above. Coped gables; end stacks. Porch and C20 flat-roofed rear extension are not of interest. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371153 Lishman House 1371153 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.795850 55.304651,-1.795916 55.304758,-1.796000 55.304741,-1.795933 55.304635,-1.795850 55.304651))) LONGFRAMLINGTON FRONT STREET NU 10 SW (West side) Longframlington Village 5/152 Lishman House II House, early C19. Front and left return squared stone, other elevations roughly-squared stone; Welsh slate roof with one stack rebuilt in brick and rendered. 2 storeys, 3 bays, symmetrical. Sill bands. Central flush- panelled door with 4-pane overlight; renewed 12-pane sash windows. Hipped roof with 2 stepped-and-banded ridge stacks, the right rebuilt. Similar bands and fenestration to 1-bay left return. Interior: some fielded-panel doors. Dog-leg open-string stair with ramped moulded handrail, moulded newels and 2 diagonally-set stick balusters per tread. Later outshut to rear is not of special interest. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371154 Pair Of Stones On Cartington Longframlington Parish Boundary 1371154 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.828907 55.319923,-1.828912 55.319918,-1.828901 55.319918,-1.828901 55.319922,-1.828907 55.319923)),((-1.827637 55.319956,-1.827643 55.319952,-1.827634 55.319949,-1.827631 55.319952,-1.827637 55.319956))) LONGFRAMLINGTON MOUNT PLEASANT NU 10 SW NU 10950288 and NU 11050289 5/156 Pair of stones on Cartington/ Longframlington parish boundary II Boundary stones, late C18 or early C19. Cut sandstone. Well-cut rectangular pillars with segmental tops, 0.60 and 0.75 metre high with incised letters 'R' (Rothbury?) on south and 'F' (Framlington ?) on north. A series of further stones running west, shown on O.S. have been destroyed by recent afforestation; beyond the afforested area, further stones on the Cartington/Longframlington and Edlingham/Longframlington boundaries are listed under the former parishes. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371155 Gate Piers Gates And Quadrant Walls To Church Of St Mary 1371155 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.795174 55.302665,-1.795194 55.302674,-1.795292 55.302645,-1.795299 55.302636,-1.795280 55.302628,-1.795181 55.302657,-1.795174 55.302665))) LONGFRAMLINGTON ROTHBURY ROAD NU 10 SW (North side) Longframlington 5/162 Gate piers, gates and quadrant walls to Church of St. Mary GV II Gatepiers, gates and quadrant walls. Mid-C19. Gatepiers tooled-and-margined stone, walls snecked stone, gates wrought iron. Square piers, with band and swept dome caps, hold double gates with plain bars, curly-topped stiles and doubled middle rail. Short swept quadrant walls with gabled coping. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371156 Walled Garden To North West Of Rookwood House 1371156 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.799630 55.302237,-1.800262 55.302143,-1.800153 55.301905,-1.799518 55.301994,-1.799630 55.302237),(-1.800243 55.302136,-1.799637 55.302228,-1.799532 55.302002,-1.800143 55.301916,-1.800243 55.302136))) LONGFRAMLINGTON ROTHBURY ROAD NU 10 SW (North side) Longframlington Village 5/165 Walled garden to north-west of Rookwood House GV II Garden walls, probably early C18. Brick in stretcher bond with squared stone external faces; south wall squared stone. Rectangular garden facing south. Rear and side walls c.4 metres high, with flat stone coping; doorway in east side with C20 wrought-iron gate. Front wall c.1.2 metres high, with 4 steps up to central entrance. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371157 2, Nelson Drive 1371157 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.742171 55.327535,-1.742259 55.327574,-1.742245 55.327586,-1.742297 55.327608,-1.742363 55.327560,-1.742220 55.327498,-1.742171 55.327535))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR NELSON DRIVE NU 10 SE Swarland 6/181 No. 2 GV II Bungalow. 1936 by M.P. Reavell for the Fountains Abbey Settlers Society. Brick, rendered and whitewashed; flat felted roof. L-plan. Single storey, 3 bays. Centre bay has 2 steps up to door of four horizontal panels, the topmost glazed, with window to left. Two small windows in left bay; right bay set forward with window near right end. Flat roof with overhung eaves; left-of-centre and right end stacks. Left return shows doorway inside late C20 glazed porch and window to left. Right return shows projecting chimney breast with tiled offsets; window to left and right. Rear elevation shows large living-room window,with small window to left, in centre bay; end bays have windows set close to ends. All windows late C20 wood-framed casements in original openings; red tile sills. Included for group value with No. 4. Glazed porch is not of interest. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371158 Newton Hall 1371158 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.735942 55.336648,-1.736069 55.336641,-1.736060 55.336583,-1.736031 55.336585,-1.736001 55.336419,-1.736056 55.336416,-1.736045 55.336357,-1.736094 55.336355,-1.736102 55.336399,-1.736127 55.336398,-1.736157 55.336577,-1.736397 55.336563,-1.736390 55.336518,-1.736336 55.336522,-1.736330 55.336484,-1.736453 55.336477,-1.736436 55.336380,-1.736242 55.336390,-1.736228 55.336313,-1.736208 55.336315,-1.736203 55.336289,-1.736279 55.336284,-1.736267 55.336214,-1.736287 55.336213,-1.736280 55.336173,-1.736255 55.336174,-1.736252 55.336157,-1.736206 55.336159,-1.736201 55.336138,-1.736117 55.336143,-1.736115 55.336124,-1.735877 55.336136,-1.735896 55.336250,-1.735805 55.336254,-1.735808 55.336281,-1.735831 55.336280,-1.735854 55.336425,-1.735906 55.336423,-1.735942 55.336648))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR NEWTON HALL NU 10 SE 6/184 Newton Hall 10/1/53 GV II Country house. 1772 for Samuel Cook, possibly incorporating earlier farmhouse in north wing. Enlarged and remodelled 1864 by S.F. Widdrington to his own designs; main block south bay window raised to 2 storeys, conservatory and porch added, north-west wing rebuilt; plasterwork by Giovanni Montirolli. Main block tooled ashlar, north-east wing smooth ashlar, other parts squared stone; north wing with rendering scored to imitate coursed stone. Graduated Lakeland slate roofs except for Welsh slates on north and north-east wings. Irregular plan. South elevation: Main block 2 storeys, 7 narrow bays. Plinth, band broken by ground floor windows, moulded eaves cornice. Bays 2 and 3 project, with balustraded parapet; ground floor right is enclosed by 2-bay conservatory with glazed front wall on stone plinth between square piers with moulded caps and finials. Plain sash windows, taller on ground floor, in architraves with projecting bracketed sills. Hipped roof with 3 stepped-and-corniced ridge stacks. Set back to right is end of north-east wing with 12- and 6-pane sashes in architraves. Set further back to left is 4-bay north-west wing with plain sashes in chamfered surrounds. East (entrance) front: Central 3-bay north-east wing with pent-roofed passage below tall 12-pane and 6-pane sashes,all in architraves. Left end porch with 6-panel door in architrave under carved frieze and modillioned pediment enclosing Widdrington arms and motto. Set back to left is similar 4-bay return of main block. Set back to right is lower north wing of 2 + 1 storeys, with varied fenestration. West elevation: Square ground floor bay window with balustraded parapet; to left a Venetian stair window with radial head. Interior: Conservatory shows Italian niches, panels and fountain set in walls, and floor of marble tesserae. Entrance hall has half-glazed double doors in surround with attached columns and cornice; full-size murals of London Bridge and Venice, by S.F. Widdrington. Drawing Room has C18 carved marble fireplace, enriched cornice and elaborate ceiling in mid-C18 style. Library shows similar ceiling and marble fireplace holding early C19 wrought- iron grate with radial convector hearth. Similar ceiling and fireplace in Dining Room. Stair hall has Venice mural and 1918 Venetian screen to New Hall; C18 open-string stair has turned balusters with square knops and ramped moulded handrail. C18 fielded-panel doors in corniced surrounds throughout. H. Montgomery-Massingberd, 'The Widdringtons' place in history', The Field Oct. 11 1986. , 1953-01-10 1953-01-10
1371159 Healey Cote Farmhouse With Adjacent Outbuilding To East 1371159 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.822862 55.295944,-1.822832 55.295890,-1.822565 55.295937,-1.822596 55.295992,-1.822862 55.295944))) BRINKBURN HEALEY COTE NU 10 SW 5/87 Healey Cote Farmhouse, with adjacent outbuilding to east GV II House and outbuilding. House c.1700 heightened and refenestrated in second quarter of C19; outbuilding early C18, heightened early C19. Squared stone with cut dressings; Welsh slate roofs. House 2 storeys, 2 wide bays. Left- of-centre 6-panel door, part glazed; 2-light mullioned windows holding 2-pane casements. All openings in chamfered surrounds. Traces of smaller original windows in right bay. Coped gables with stepped-and-banded end stacks. Lower 1-bay outbuilding to right shows C20 casement in blocked doorway on left, 6-pane sash window and 4-pane Yorkshire sash to 1st floor; coped right gable with small end stack. Right return of outbuilding shows outline of earlier high-pitched gable. Contemporary outshut at rear of house with renewed glazing and boarded door on left return. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371160 Thistleyhaugh Farmhouse 1371160 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.794638 55.280477,-1.794638 55.280486,-1.794660 55.280486,-1.794660 55.280569,-1.794752 55.280569,-1.794755 55.280484,-1.794825 55.280484,-1.794826 55.280433,-1.794640 55.280433,-1.794638 55.280477))) BRINKBURN THISTLEYHAUGH NZ 19 NW 10/89 Thistleyhaugh Farmhouse II House. Second quarter of C19, perhaps incorporating older fabric; rear wing extended and interior remodelled c.1905. Squared tooled stone with tooled- and-margined quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys, 3 bays. Plinth. Left-of-centre renewed door; 16-pane sash windows with slightly-projecting sills. All openings in chamfered alternating-block surrounds. Stepped-and-corniced end stacks. Right return shows similar ground-floor window; rear wing on right, 2 + 2 bays, with 12- and 16-pane sashes; right part is addition in same style. Heightened rear outshut and single-storey outbuildings to north-west are not of special interest. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371161 Weldon Bridge Over River Coquet And Wall To North West 1371161 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.784137 55.280432,-1.784699 55.280804,-1.784741 55.280837,-1.784749 55.280867,-1.784855 55.280817,-1.784287 55.280448,-1.784277 55.280405,-1.784137 55.280432))) The asset was previously listed twice also under List entry 1370653. This entry was removed from the List on 13 June 2017. This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 8 May 2017. NZ 19 NW 10/92 10/1/53 BRINKBURN WELDON BRIDGE Weldon Bridge, over River Coquet, and wall to north-west I GV Bridge and wall, c.1760. Probably by John Smeaton. Squared stone. 3 segmental arches with slightly-recessed voussoirs and stepped keystones. Large keyed oculus between southern arches; smaller semicircular-headed arches of similar form flank northern arch, with paved inverts well above normal river level. Battered semi-octagonal cutwaters. Dentil cornice. Parapet with shallow pilasters on both faces and gabled coping; to north parapet splays out to circular piers on stepped pilasters; similar south-east parapet end; west parapet re-aligned in C20 at splayed angle, carried on iron girder. Contemporary wall with flat coping running north from north end of east parapet to terminate opposite east end of Angler's Arms Hotel.In appearance very similar to Smeaton's Coldstream Bridge. 1953-01-10 1953-01-10
1371162 Garden Wall To West And South West Of Hall 1371162 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.710530 55.315347,-1.710686 55.315564,-1.710190 55.315621,-1.710198 55.315633,-1.710531 55.315600,-1.710737 55.315571,-1.710480 55.315233,-1.710469 55.315240,-1.710450 55.315234,-1.710298 55.315027,-1.710530 55.315347))) FELTON ACTON NU 10 SE 6/94 Garden wall to west and south- west of Hall GV II Garden wall, C18 with C19 alterations. Inner face brick in irregular largely stretcher bond, outer face roughly-coursed rubble; cut dressings. Wall on north and west of rectangular garden, 3 metres high with flat slab coping. Curved section at east end of north wall joins north-west corner of hall, and contains archway in alternating-block surround with keystone, carved with winged and crowned head, dated 1865. Rounded corner to north-west. West wall contains segmental-headed arch holding C19 wrought-iron gate, with spearhead bars and dogbars, and looped half rail; section north of arch formerly heated, with remains of furnace to rear. Coping ramped down near south end of wall, which joins west end of ha-ha wall (q.v.). , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371163 Stable Block North West Of Acton Hall 1371163 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.710261 55.315852,-1.710809 55.315808,-1.710767 55.315640,-1.710679 55.315646,-1.710706 55.315769,-1.710334 55.315801,-1.710302 55.315686,-1.710225 55.315691,-1.710261 55.315852))) This building has been assessed for de-listing under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended. The building has been removed from The National Heritage List for England as it no longer meets the criteria for listing. Name: Stable block north west of Acton Hall DELISTED 18/7/2013: The stable block at Acton Hall was listed in 1988 for its architectural interest and intactness and for the fact that it had group value with the adjacent Acton Hall (listed Grade II). Planning permission and Listed Building Consent for the conversion of this stable block to two separate dwellings came shortly after they were added to the list in September 1988. The building that exists today, while retaining the same footprint and proportions as the original, has suffered alteration on a significant scale since it was first listed. For example, all elevations have received numerous inserted C20 window and door openings, including the provision of unsympathetic and out of character dormer windows; the few original openings that do remain are fitted with modern frames. This has resulted in the loss of significant original fabric compounded by the fact that the eaves of all elevations have been raised in height by c30cm. For example, the central tower of the main range while retaining its original cupola, sill band and a window, has had its roof raised and re-modelled, leading to the removal of an upper band and circular opening with arched pigeon holes. The original entrance, set in an arched surround, with a dated lintel has been lost through widening and a modern portico added. The remainder of the main range has lost several doors including a stable door and a pitching door as well as slatted windows, all described in the list description. Similarly, the east and west ranges have been significantly altered by the loss of original openings fitted with boarded doors and slatted windows in addition to a stepped and corniced ridge stack and a blacksmith's window; these have largely been replaced with inserted later C20 windows and doors including large segmental arched openings; some areas appear to have totally rebuilt using original masonry. Although the interior of the former stable is not described in the existing list description, the conversion of the building to domestic use means that the interior is today a wholly later C20 domestic insertion that saw the removal of several load bearing cross walls and the replacement of all structural timber. The survival of horse-related features especially stalls and sloped ramps are expected to survive in listed stables, and the lack of any such features here means that the building is further compromised. While still possessing group value with the adjacent Acton Hall, the level of alteration from the original list entry compiled in 1984 means that the building?s architectural interest and original character is severely comprised to the extent that it no longer possesses the special interest that merited its original listing. CONCLUSION After examining all the records and other relevant information and having carefully considered the architectural and historic interest of this case, Acton Hall stables no longer meets the criteria for listing and should be removed from the list. It retains local interest for its association with Acton Hall. REASONS FOR DESIGNATION DECISION Acton Hall Stables of later C18 is recommended for removal from the List for the following principal reasons: * Alteration: the significant level of alteration to the historic fabric of this building has compromised its architectural interest and original character to the extent that it no longer possesses special interest in the national context; * Group value: while still possessing a measure of group value for its association with the adjacent Acton Hall, this is now of local interest only. ********** FELTON ACTON NU 10 SE 6/96 Stable block north-west of Acton Hall GV Grade II Stable block, C18 and early C19. Squared tooled stone; tooled-and-margined quoins and dressings to west range and west part of north range; Welsh slate roofs except for asbestos sheets on tower. Ranges around rectangular yard open to south. North range 2+3 storeys, 2 + 1 + 2 bays. Central tower has boarded door, with lintel dated 1724, in segmental-arched recess under boarded window with slightly-projecting sill. 2nd-floor band under boarded circular opening with arched pigeon holes in raised surround. Pyramidal roof rising to cupola with slatted sides, pyramidal lead cap and weathervane. Right part of range shows stable door under boarded pitching door, and boarded door; left part shows pair of segmental arches, one blocked with later window inserted, and slatted windows above. East range shows 2 boarded doors and 2 sliding doors, with boarded or slatted windows above. Roof hipped to right, with stepped-and-corniced ridge stack. Right return shows blacksmith's window with old stone troughs below; 3-bay rear elevation shows ground floor 16-pane sashes, with blind window between, and 8-pane sashes to lst floor. West range shows 2 stable doors, 2 part-blocked segmental arches, and slatted windows to 1st floor; roof hipped to left. Later range to south of tower is not of interest. , 2013-07-31 1988-09-15 2013-07-31
1371164 Elyhaugh Farmhouse 1371164 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.752021 55.291649,-1.752078 55.291673,-1.752132 55.291630,-1.752028 55.291587,-1.752071 55.291553,-1.751926 55.291493,-1.751828 55.291570,-1.751936 55.291615,-1.752021 55.291649))) FELTON ELYHAUGH NZ 19 NE 11/102 Elyhaugh Farmhouse II House, dated 1732 on door surround, for Thomas and Elizabeth Lisle; rear wing late C18 or early C19, extended and altered late C19 or early C20. Front squared stone, other elevations rubble except for snecked stone extensions; front slope of roof red tiles, other parts Welsh slate; stacks rebuilt in brick. South elevation 2 storeys, 2 + 1 + 2 bays, symmetrical. Chamfered plinth, rusticated quoins, lst-floor sill band. Central part-glazed flush-panelled door in bolection-moulded surround, the moulding arched over a lintel panel with the arms of Lisle impaling Lisle and the date 1732; cornice on moulded brackets. Renewed 12-pane sash windows in moulded surrounds; each opening has a segmental floating pediment. Roof eaves overhang returns; end stacks. Left return: gable end of front block shows band and 3 small chamfered windows, one blocked but retaining old iron bars. Right return shows 2 similar windows, one blocked; set back to right is rear wing with arched stair window. Interior: Ground floor east room has contemporary panelling with fluted pilasters flanking the fireplace and domed cupboard with shell head and shaped shelves; egg-and-dart cornice. Panelled arch with keyblock to rear wing. Dog-leg open-string stair with stick balusters, moulded ramped handrail and moulded newels. Panelled arch on stairhead. Old collar-beam roof trusses. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371165 Outbuilding On West Of Howick Hall West Wing 1371165 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.610609 55.451330,-1.610636 55.451323,-1.610629 55.451299,-1.610614 55.451295,-1.610585 55.451316,-1.610609 55.451330))) NU 2417 LONGHOUGHTON HOWICK HALL 16/118 Outbuilding on west of Howick Hall west wing GV II Ornamental small building of unknown function. Late C18. Tooled squared stone on rubble plinth; Welsh slate roof. Small circular structure. South flush- panelled door with fanlight under 4-centred arch; north-east panelled door with glazed trefoil-arched top in moulded wood frame; north-west quatrefoil window in moulded stone surround. Moulded eaves cornice. Conical roof. Interior: Between openings are apsidal recesses with timber lintels. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371166 Church Of St John The Baptist 1371166 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612246 55.388515,-1.612330 55.388502,-1.612314 55.388472,-1.612540 55.388435,-1.612529 55.388413,-1.612572 55.388406,-1.612550 55.388365,-1.612508 55.388371,-1.612500 55.388355,-1.612275 55.388392,-1.612263 55.388370,-1.612175 55.388385,-1.612187 55.388407,-1.612168 55.388436,-1.612171 55.388456,-1.612230 55.388487,-1.612246 55.388515))) NU 2410 ALNMOUTH NORTHUMBERLAND STREET (East side) 20/19 Church of St. John The Baptist GV II Parish church, 1876 with south chapel added 1880 to accommodate boys from Seabank School. Snecked tooled stone with tooled ashlar quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roofs, blue on nave and purple on eastern parts. Plan: Aisleless 4-bay nave with west tower over porch; chancel with transeptal south chapel, north organ chamber/vestry and canted apse. Simple C13 style. Chamfered plinth; 3-stage tower has stepped diagonal buttresses and chamfered bands. On north and south are diagonally-boarded double doors, with foliate hinges, under moulded arches with jamb shafts and foliage-carved hoodmould stops; 2-light west window. 2nd stage has single lancets. Slatted belfry openings with Y-tracery. Moulded brackets at square base of octagonal stone spire with gabled lucarnes and moulded finial. Side walls of nave have lancets, paired in end bays; stepped buttresses between. Coped east gable on moulded kneelers, with ring-cross finial. South chapel has paired lancets and slit in gable above. Apse has small angle buttresses and lancets with moulded arches on jamb shafts with carved capitals; wrought-iron cross finial. Organ chamber/vestry has diagonal buttresses and 2 lancets under gable with cross finial; west diagonally-boarded door with foliate hinges. Interior; Plastered. Double-chamfered chancel arch on carved corbels; similar arches to south chapel and organ chamber/vestry. Panelled marble dado to apse. Nave has arch-braced collar-beam roof on moulded corbels; chancel has similar but painted roof on carved corbels. Octagonal moulded font. Carved pulpit as memorial to Harold Kenyon Temperley, killed in Flanders 1917. Kempe glass in apse windows; later C2O Evetts glass in nave and west window. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371167 The Aln 1371167 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612143 55.387731,-1.612149 55.387746,-1.612262 55.387729,-1.612220 55.387625,-1.612095 55.387641,-1.612106 55.387664,-1.612062 55.387670,-1.612087 55.387739,-1.612143 55.387731))) NU 2410 ALNMOUTH NORTHUMBERLAND STREET (East side) 20/22 No. 57 (The Aln) GV II Formerly known as Elliot House. House, mid-C18. Front squared stone, other elevations coursed roughly-squared stone. Welsh slate roof with brick stacks. T-plan. Front 2 storeys + attics, 4 windows. Chamfered plinth. Right-of-centre renewed door under gabled stone hood on shaped corbels, between shop fronts with fluted pilasters and dentil cornices. 4-pane sashes to 1st floor; low attic openings with 8-pane short sashes, except for one 8-pane casement. Coped gables; old brick banded right end stack, left end stack rebuilt on older base. Rear wing shows open- pedimented gable and small-paned sash stair window. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371168 The Hindmarsh Hall 1371168 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.611617 55.386700,-1.611649 55.386794,-1.611932 55.386762,-1.611899 55.386668,-1.611617 55.386700))) NU 2410 ALNMOUTH NORTHUMBERLAND STREET (East side) 20/24 The Hindmarsh Hall GV II Village Hall. Originally early C18 granary, altered in mid C19. Street front squared stone of near-ashlar quality; other elevations large rubble; cut dressings. Welsh slate roof. C19 remodelling in plain C13 style. Gable front to street. Central pair of pointed moulded doorways, left with boarded double doors, right with C20 glazing, flanked by small inserted windows. 4 short lancets above, and 2 taller lancets in gable, all with leaded glazing. Coped gable on moulded kneelers has corbelled-out gabled bellcote with pointed arch and moulded finial. Returns each show 2 stepped buttresses, 2- and 3-light late C19 windows (central window on left return set in older blocked arch) and 5 lancets higher in the wall; stepped-and- corniced stack on left return. Rear gable end shows 2 lancets high in wall. Right return and rear gable end also show blocked granary openings to 4 floor levels; those to 1st floor have rough relieving arches above lintels. Historical notes. Probably the earliest of the surviving Alnmouth granaries; there is some evidence that it was converted to a corn exchange before remodelling as an Anglican chapel in 1859; after the parish church was built in 1876 it served as a village hall. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371169 7 And 7a, Northumberland Street 1371169 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612291 55.386976,-1.612191 55.386987,-1.612229 55.387104,-1.612375 55.387088,-1.612344 55.386992,-1.612321 55.386975,-1.612291 55.386976))) NU 2410 ALNMOUTH NORTHUMBERLAND STREET (West side) Nos. 7 and 7A 20/26 GV II House, now 2 dwellings, early C19. Squared stone; Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys, 1 + 3 bays, Plinth. Right part has right-of-centre part-glazed 6-panel door (No. 7) in moulded wood frame under segmental-headed arch with stone gabled hood on cusped corbels. Plain sash windows with slightly- projecting sills, that to left of door with Segmental-arched head. Left bay has boarded double doors (No. 7A) with timber lintel, under joggled flat arch of former carriage entrance, and small window to right; first-floor late C19 hip-roofed oriel, with paired sashes, beneath small gable with slit. Coped left end gable; stepped stacks with chamfered caps to ridge and left end. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371170 Barndale House And Barndale Cottage 1371170 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.613281 55.389027,-1.613289 55.389004,-1.613336 55.389003,-1.613340 55.388952,-1.613254 55.388960,-1.613244 55.388919,-1.613139 55.388926,-1.613143 55.389041,-1.613126 55.389124,-1.613270 55.389127,-1.613281 55.389027))) NU 2410 ALNMOUTH NORTHUMBERLAND STREET (West side) 20/32 No. 30 (Barndale House) and No. 31 (Barndale Cottage) GV II Pair of houses, later C18. Squared stone with cut dressings; Welsh slate roof with brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 + 3 bays. Plinth and sill bands. Each part has central renewed door; and blocked segmental arch, with window inserted, in left bay. Left part (Barndale House) has door with gabled stone hood on cusped brackets, and 12-pane sash windows, the lower renewed. Right part (Barndale Cottage) has C20 casements in older openings. Eaves cornice. Steeply-pitched roof with coped gables on moulded kneelers; banded end and ridge stacks. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371171 Sundial To West Of The Hall 1371171 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.613707 55.389027,-1.613717 55.389037,-1.613739 55.389028,-1.613723 55.389019,-1.613707 55.389027))) NU 2410 ALNMOUTH NORTHUMBERLAND STREET (West side) 20/35 Sundial to west of The Hall GV II Sundial, dated 1834. Cut sandstone with slate dial and iron gnomon. Octagonal base, shaft and top carrying dial signed by Thomas Armstrong, Alnmouth, 1834. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371172 Garden Wall To East Of Craster Tower 1371172 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.603866 55.469478,-1.603860 55.469490,-1.603906 55.469542,-1.603924 55.469546,-1.603933 55.469535,-1.603896 55.469490,-1.604164 55.469430,-1.604173 55.469422,-1.604151 55.469413,-1.603866 55.469478))) NU 21 NE CRASTER CRASTER TOWER 6/40 Garden wall to east of Craster Tower GV II Garden wall, late C18. Mixed whinstone and sandstone rubble, with a little brick; cut sandstone dressings. 4-metre high embattled wall joins south-east corner of east wing of house; near east end a blocked door with keyed supra- lintel. At east end a short return to north with circular opening in raised surround. Included for group value. Lower continuation to north is not of special interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371173 Gatepiers And Attached Wall To North Of Craster Tower 1371173 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.605005 55.470043,-1.604999 55.470052,-1.605021 55.470059,-1.605091 55.470030,-1.605095 55.470022,-1.605076 55.470015,-1.605005 55.470043))) NU 21 NE CRASTER CRASTER TOWER 6/46 Gatepiers and attached wall to north of Craster Tower GV II Gatepiers and attached wall, late C18; cut sandstone piers, squared whinstone wall. Square piers with moulded cornices and ball finials on swept bases. Wall to left 1.5 metres high with low-pitched coping, joins south-west corner of gateway. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371174 Garden Walls To South West Of Christon Bank Farmhouse 1371174 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.669098 55.494008,-1.668996 55.494404,-1.668541 55.494406,-1.668541 55.494347,-1.668520 55.494338,-1.668511 55.494347,-1.668510 55.494419,-1.668525 55.494424,-1.669021 55.494419,-1.669175 55.493833,-1.669167 55.493824,-1.669087 55.493824,-1.669072 55.493834,-1.669086 55.493842,-1.669140 55.493842,-1.669098 55.494008))) NU 22 SW EMBLETON CHRISTON BANK FARM 3/61 Garden walls to south-west of Christon Bank Farmhouse GV II North and west walls of walled garden, C18. Brick in English Garden Wall Bond 1 and 3; external face roughly-squared stone; cut stone dressings. Walls 3.5 metres high with flat coping. Short returns at each end (remnants of demolished south and east walls) have square-headed doorways and ramped-down copings. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371175 Lamp Post 9 Metres South Of Chancel Of Church Of The Holy Trinity 1371175 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.636171 55.495565,-1.636181 55.495575,-1.636202 55.495568,-1.636186 55.495557,-1.636171 55.495565))) NU 2322 EMBLETON EMBLETON VILLAGE 14/65 Lamp post 9 metres south of chancel of Church of the Holy Trinity GV II Lamp post, probably mid-cl9. Cast iron. Circular fluted post with moulded base and two rings below expanded top with leafy pattern. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371176 Garden Wall Summerhouse And Balustrade To South Of Hall 1371176 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.735780 55.336171,-1.735828 55.336170,-1.735838 55.336158,-1.735794 55.336153,-1.735745 55.335891,-1.735751 55.335891,-1.735747 55.335862,-1.735739 55.335862,-1.735736 55.335838,-1.736163 55.335819,-1.736174 55.335813,-1.736173 55.335806,-1.736157 55.335801,-1.735705 55.335825,-1.735706 55.335855,-1.735682 55.335863,-1.735687 55.335895,-1.735715 55.335901,-1.735764 55.336165,-1.735780 55.336171))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR NEWTON HALL NU 10 SE 6/188 Garden wall, summerhouse and 31/12/69 balustrade to south of Hall GV II Garden wall, summerhouse and balustrade. Late C19, probably by S.F Widdrington. Wall and summerhouse tooled-and-margined stone; east wall rock-faced to rear; ashlar dressings and balustrade; summerhouse has Lakeland slate roof with copper finial. Short north wall joins south-east corner of Hall conservatory: one boarded door, moulded cornice and blocking course. Square pier with ball finial at north-east corner. Lower east wall has moulded coping and small panelled piers. Near south end is summer house: moulded plinth and flattened elliptical arch with coloured marble paterae; central sections of arch and of moulded eaves cornice are of timber. Swept pyramidal roof with ornate scrolly finial. Interior lined with C17 panelling said to be from Shilbottle church (rebuilt 1884); small round window on right return. Arched balustrade on south of garden has panelled piers carrying gadrooned vases; piers with taller vases flank steps down to a lower level of garden. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1371177 Boundary Stone 250 Metres South Of Hall 1371177 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.735440 55.334272,-1.735452 55.334283,-1.735471 55.334275,-1.735458 55.334265,-1.735440 55.334272))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR NEWTON HALL NU 10 SE 6/191 Boundary stone 250 metres south of Hall II Boundary stone, C18. Sandstone. Rectangular pillar with roughly-arched top; west face inscribed 'Felton Moor', east face 'Inclosed Land'. Overall height 0.60 metre. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371178 Jubilee Hall With Attached Wall To South West 1371178 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.732584 55.341772,-1.732592 55.341850,-1.732707 55.341846,-1.732689 55.341644,-1.732571 55.341649,-1.732584 55.341772))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR NEWTON VILLAGE NU 10 NE (North side) 2/197 Jubilee Hall, with attached wall to south-west GV II Village hall and attached wall, dated 1887, incorporating part of C18 cottage. Hall snecked stone, with timber belfry with copper dome; wall and cottage squared stone. Pantile roofs except for Welsh slates on outshut at rear of cottage. Gabled front of hall shows boarded door with marble war memorial plaque to right. 3-light transomed window, with moulded wood surround and small-paned casements, under timber lintel with datestone in semicircular relieving arch above. Coped gable on footstones with moulded finials; at apex square bellcote on moulded corbels, with moulded corner shafts carrying swept dome with weathervane. Attached wall runs forward from left end to street front, stepping down in 3 irregular sections with pyramid-topped square piers between; gabled coping. Set back to right is 1-bay part of cottage: boarded door in chamfered surround with paired 6-pane casements on left; corniced ridge stack heightened in brick. Attached building to right is Reading Room (q.v.). 3-bay left return of hall shows 2- and 3-light transomed windows in moulded wood surrounds; similar 3-light window in rear gable-end. Interior: Early C18 panelled round arch with imposts and fluted keyblock reset as entrance to hall from cottage part, almost certainly from removed 1st floor of the house which is now the Reading Room. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371179 Overgrass Old Farmhouse 1371179 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.765215 55.327911,-1.765177 55.327962,-1.765569 55.328050,-1.765604 55.328001,-1.765221 55.327912,-1.765215 55.327911))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR OVERGRASS NU 10 SW 5/201 Overgrass Old Farmhouse GV II House. Late C17 or early C18, heightened later C18. Squared rubble with large roughly-shaped dressings; Welsh slate roof with stack rebuilt in brick. 2 storeys, 3 bays. Doorways in centre and right bays, the latter with boarded door. 12-pane Yorkshire sash window to left; central 1st-floor window blocked, flanked by 4-pane sashes. Raised reverse-stepped coping to right end gable; end stacks, right truncated, left stepped and banded. Rear elevation shows outshut with renewed door, 3 small windows and raised reverse-stepped coping to ends. Metal-roofed addition at east end of outshut is not of interest. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371180 40, Park Road 1371180 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.744178 55.318306,-1.744288 55.318334,-1.744320 55.318294,-1.744357 55.318305,-1.744384 55.318271,-1.744347 55.318261,-1.744380 55.318219,-1.744339 55.318208,-1.744325 55.318227,-1.744289 55.318217,-1.744241 55.318277,-1.744208 55.318268,-1.744178 55.318306))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR PARK ROAD NU 10 SE Swarland 6/206 No. 40 II Bungalow, 1936 by M.P. Reavell for the Fountains Abbey Settlers Society. Brick, rendered and whitewashed; red tile roof. L-plan. 3 bays. Central renewed half-glazed door, with paired 12-pane sashes to left; projecting right bay shows 12-pane sash under gable with plain bargeboards. Ridge stack on each part of roof. Set back at left end is flat-roofed porch with 9-pane shorter sash in former doorway position; door moved to left return. Left return of house shows 9-pane shorter sash and gable with plain bargeboards; right return shows two 12-pane sashes and similar gable. All windows have tile sills. Listed for historical interest as one of the few relatively unaltered houses of the 1930s Swarland settlement. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371181 Garden Walls To North East Of Swarland Old Hall 1371181 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.749483 55.311343,-1.749730 55.311356,-1.749755 55.311248,-1.749733 55.311242,-1.749748 55.311179,-1.749163 55.311124,-1.749146 55.311129,-1.749124 55.311315,-1.749483 55.311343),(-1.749733 55.311196,-1.749704 55.311340,-1.749153 55.311301,-1.749175 55.311143,-1.749733 55.311196))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR SWARLAND NU 10 SE 6/210 Garden walls to north-east of Swarland Old Hall GV II Garden walls, late C17 or C18. Roughly-coursed squared stone; cut dressings. Flat-coped walls enclosing rectangular garden. Gate with small monolith piers in centre of 1.2-metre-high front (south) wall; taller rear wall with triple square-headed bee boles at centre. In poor repair in places. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371182 Old Limekiln In Whittle Quarry 550 Metres South Of Low Whittle 1371182 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.714765 55.348440,-1.714778 55.348433,-1.714772 55.348417,-1.714732 55.348409,-1.714735 55.348433,-1.714765 55.348440))) NEWTON-ON-THE-MOOR WHITTLE NU 10 NE NU 18200608 2/214 Old limekiln in Whittle Quarry, 550 metres south of Low Whittle II Limekiln, probably early C19. Roughly-squared stone with brick-lined eyes. Roughly semicircular in plan; 3 segmental drawing arches with stepped buttresses between; central arch corbelled down to single arched eye, side arches to twin round eyes. To either side of the arches a large raking buttress. Pot largely infilled and overgrown. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371183 Togston House 1371183 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.607049 55.318114,-1.607046 55.318121,-1.607126 55.318136,-1.607152 55.318089,-1.607135 55.318087,-1.607159 55.318046,-1.606669 55.317956,-1.606643 55.318007,-1.606743 55.318025,-1.606732 55.318044,-1.606837 55.318063,-1.606807 55.318118,-1.606950 55.318144,-1.606975 55.318100,-1.607049 55.318114))) TOGSTON NORTH TOGSTON NU 20 SE 8/219 Togston House GV II House; core probably C17 extended in early C18 and C19. Rendered and pebbledashed; purple and blue slate roofs. Irregular plan. South elevation in two parts: Left section 2 storeys, 2 + 3 bays. 3-bay part has central early C20 canted bay with French window; plain sash windows. Coped gables on moulded kneelers; end and ridge stacks. Single-storey 3-bay right section has 4- and 2-pane sashes; arched ashlar panel between bears crest, motto LABOR OMNIA VINCIT and 'James and Jane Dand, Morwick Hall'. Left return shows canted late C19/early C20 oriel and 2 small attic windows; to left is 3-storey late C19 tower with doorway and paired 2-pane casements; built into wall low down on left is plaque 'ZEPPELIN BOMB HANDLE 2-3 APRIL 1916 J.U.M.'; attached handle broken. Rear elevation shows 2 projecting wings with gable coping and kneelers of late C17/early C18 type; various sash and casement windows. Interior not fully seen: Western ground-floor room of front range has early C18-style panelling; open-well closed-string stair with turned balusters and square newels. Historical note: The house was owned by the Cook family in the C17 and C18. The Northmberland County History Vol. V p. 336 records a 1684 datestone (not seen) with the initials of John and Anne Cook. , 1988-09-15 1988-09-15
1371184 Church Of St Michael 1371184 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.608553 55.449852,-1.608602 55.449850,-1.608608 55.449860,-1.608871 55.449851,-1.608859 55.449753,-1.608587 55.449763,-1.608586 55.449754,-1.608486 55.449758,-1.608489 55.449783,-1.608476 55.449784,-1.608483 55.449855,-1.608553 55.449852))) NU 2417 LONGHOUGHTON HOWICK HALL 16/125 Church of St. Michael 31.12.69 GV II Parish Church. 1746, remodelled with extension of nave one bay to east and addition of chancel and vestry 1849 by F.J. Francis. Tooled-and-margined ashlar with smooth ashlar dressings; synthetic stone slate roof. Five-bay aisleless nave with chancel and south vestry. 1746 building Classical, remodelled in Romanesque style. Nave has moulded plinth and sill bands, impost bands on side walls and shafted angle pilasters. West end has central boarded door, with studded margin and ornate C-hinges, under round arch of 4 moulded orders; 3 orders of jamb shafts with carved capitals. World War I memorial tablet on right of door. 2 windows above, with double-shafted jambs, and wheel window under round-arched bellcote with finial cross. Side walls of nave have windows with double- shafted jambs carrying moulded inner orders and C18 pilasters carrrying outer order with zigzag. Eaves cornice on corbels, carved on north but unfinished on south. Coincident joints in plinth and bands mark the 1849 extension. Chancel has chamfered plinth, moulded sill string and shafted angles. East end has three equal-height windows, with double-shafted jambs, and trefoiled round window above. Lower vestry on south shows two-light south window and moulded boiler-room door on east. On north of chancel a moulded priest's door, and window with foliage-carved caps to jamb shafts. Coped gables on moulded kneelers; finial crosses. Interior plastered. Moulded chancel arch on detached shafts with carved bases, shaft rings and foliage-carved caps. All windows have shafted inner jambs with carved caps. Carved cornice in chancel. Nave has collar-beam roof with braces on moulded stone corbels; scissor-brace chancel roof. Ornate C19 Romanesque font. Monuments. Charles, second Earl Grey d.1845, in nave (originally in chancel); white marble table tomb with inlaid brass foliate cross and enamelled shields, designed by John Francis and carved by J. Bedford. On south of sanctuary carved Grey arms in cusped panel are part of former canopy to this monument. C17 Grey ledger stones in sanctuary. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1371185 Medieval Grave Slab 17 Metres South Of Vestry Of Church Of St Michael 1371185 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.608545 55.449602,-1.608555 55.449612,-1.608577 55.449603,-1.608564 55.449594,-1.608545 55.449602))) NU 2417 LONGHOUGHTON HOWICK HALL 16/127 Medieval grave slab 17 metres south of vestry of Church of St. Michael GV II Cross slab grave cover, C13. Sandstone. Tapering slab 1.93 metres long. Worn relief-carved design; cross with broad trefoil terminals rising from base with 2 curved steps; sword on right of shaft. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1371186 Groves Headstone 4 Metres South West Of Vestry Of Church Of St Michael 1371186 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.608606 55.449705,-1.608621 55.449716,-1.608637 55.449708,-1.608627 55.449698,-1.608606 55.449705))) NU 2417 LONGHOUGHTON HOWICK HALL 16/130 Groves headstone 4 metres south- west of vestry of Church of St. Michael GV II Headstone, 1770. Sandstone. Stone with trefoiled top enclosing sunk panel with cherub above large crossed bones; hourglass flanked by flowers beneath inscription to James Groves. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01

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