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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
1237391 Pigsty 10 Metres West Of Beanley House 1237391 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.792772 55.116946, -1.792796 55.116968, -1.792864 55.116947, -1.792825 55.116907, -1.792756 55.116932, -1.792772 55.116946), (-1.792806 55.116934, -1.792775 55.116945, -1.792759 55.116932, -1.792793 55.116921, -1.792806 55.116934), (-1.792796 55.11692, -1.792825 55.11691, -1.792838 55.116924, -1.792808 55.116934, -1.792796 55.11692))) WHALTON NZ 18 SW NZ 133803 3/140 Pigsty 10 metres west of Beanley House 6.8.86 GV II Pigsty with poultry loft over, early C19. Squared rubble with cut quoins and dressings; pantile roof. Square-headed openings to twin exercise yards with flat-coped walls; above right hand opening small hen hole with projecting sill slab. Gabled right return shows boarded loft door. , 2013-01-29 1986-08-06
1237392 Milepost On North Side Of Shiningpool Bridge 1237392 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.822805 55.099105, -1.822833 55.099096, -1.822837 55.099087, -1.82283 55.099075, -1.8228 55.099069, -1.822778 55.099078, -1.822778 55.099096, -1.822805 55.099105))) WHALTON A 696 NZ 17 NW (West side) 6/142 Milepost on north side of Shiningpool Bridge II Milepost, early C20, probably by Smith Paterson of Blaydon. Cast iron, painted black on white. Shield-shaped plate with NEWCASTLE 13 BELSAY ?, on circular shaft with lower raised rectangular plate 'PONTELAND 5'. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237446 Milepost 30 Metres West Of Camp House 1237446 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.782973 55.132837, -1.782947 55.132851, -1.782954 55.132866, -1.782983 55.132872, -1.783008 55.132861, -1.783002 55.132843, -1.782973 55.132837))) WHALTON B 6524 NZ 18 SW (South side) 3/144 Milepost 30 metres west of Camp House GV II Milepost, probably late C19, probably by Smith Paterson of Blaydon. Cast iron, painted red and later white with black figures. Original height 0.60 metre, now partly sunk. Facetted twin-faced oval top on fluted shaft; raised legend MORPETH / BELSAY 5? 4 MILES MILES Slightly damaged by, and under threat from, mechanised verge trimmers. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237447 Milepost 100 Metres East Of Whiteside North 1237447 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.802396 55.126247, -1.802423 55.126238, -1.802426 55.126223, -1.802402 55.126211, -1.802372 55.126217, -1.802365 55.126226, -1.802369 55.126238, -1.802396 55.126247))) WHALTON B 6524 NZ 1281 NZ 12708133 (South side) Whalton 11/146 Milepost 100 metres east of Whiteside North II Milepost, probably late C19, probably by Smith Paterson of Blaydon. Cast iron, painted white with black figures. Height 0.50 metres. Facetted twin-faced oval top on fluted shaft; raised legend MORPETH / BELSAY 6? / 3 MILES / MILES , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237448 4 Boundary Stones On West Side Of Road 400 Metres North Of Cock Hill Farm 1237448 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.746398 55.128897, -1.746128 55.128951, -1.746122 55.128958, -1.746133 55.128963, -1.746395 55.128908, -1.746398 55.128897))) WHALTON COCK HILL NZ 18 SE NZ 16258160 4/148 4 boundary stones on west side of road 400 metres north of Cock Hill Farm II Probable boundary stones, perhaps late C18. Sandstone. 10 metres long row of 4 stones; each is flat-topped pillar c.0.65 metre high, with stepped sides and an incised B on the west face. The upper part of each side is grooved as if to take a wooden partition. Adjacent ruins, not of special interest, are of the old Cock Hill Farm. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237449 Kiplaw Farmhouse 1237449 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.814773 55.124907, -1.814833 55.124912, -1.814834 55.124903, -1.814941 55.12491, -1.814942 55.124902, -1.814966 55.124904, -1.814971 55.124881, -1.814994 55.124882, -1.815004 55.124837, -1.814656 55.124813, -1.814645 55.12487, -1.81478 55.12488, -1.814773 55.124907))) WHALTON KIPLAW NZ 18 SW 3/149 Kiplaw Farmhouse GV II M House dated 1752 with initials J.I on door lintel; east block second quarter of C19 incorporating earlier fabric. Squared stone front, other walls rubble; east block coursed rubble with cut dressings. C20 grey tile roof with rendered brick stacks; Welsh slate roof on east block and porch. Original house 2 storeys, 5 bays, symmetrical. Chamfered plinth. Late C19 pent wooden porch,with half-glazed door and margined casements on returns, encloses doorway with chamfered surround and dated lintel. Renewed 8-pane sash windows in old openings. Gables with raised reversed-stepped coping on moulded kneelers; rebuilt end stacks. Left return shows boarded attic window. East block, to right, 2 storeys, 3 bays, symmetrical. Central stable door flanked by 16-pane sash windows with 12-pane shortened sashes above; all openings in alternating-block surrounds, the windows with slightly-projecting sills. Coped right gable with moulded kneeler; stepped-and-banded end stack. Rear elevation of original house has contemporary outshut with boarded door under timber lintel flanked by small casement windows; rear elevation of east block shows two 12- pane sashes with 9-pane sashes above. Interior: Contemporary dog-leg open-string stair with urn-on-vase balusters; moulded and wreathed handrail. Large internal stack in east block probably survives from an earlier house. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237450 Corner Cottage 1237450 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.786397 55.104329, -1.7864 55.10434, -1.78657 55.104325, -1.786555 55.104265, -1.786385 55.104279, -1.786397 55.104329))) WHALTON OGLE NZ 17 NW 6/155 Corner Cottage II Cottage, C18. Rubble with stone slate roof and brick stacks. South elevation single storey, 3 bays,irregular. Two 12-pane sash windows with 9-pane sash to right, all renewed. Right end shows raised reverse-stepped gable coping. Rebuilt end stacks. Rear elevation has boarded door flanked by 3-pane casements, with two paired casements to right, one in former doorway. C20 extension to north-east, and altered adjacent cottage on west, are not of special interest. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237493 Garden Wall With Gatepiers And Privy, To South And West Of Kiplaw Farmhouse 1237493 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.814998 55.124864, -1.8151 55.12487, -1.815104 55.12485, -1.815118 55.124845, -1.815193 55.12456, -1.814809 55.124538, -1.81478 55.124651, -1.814806 55.124648, -1.814828 55.124551, -1.815169 55.12457, -1.815094 55.124842, -1.815004 55.124837, -1.814998 55.124864))) WHALTON KIPLAW NZ 18 SW 3/150 Garden wall with gatepiers and privy, to south and west of Kiplaw Farmhouse GV II Garden walls and gatepiers, mid C18. Squared rubble with cut quoins and dressings; privy roof Welsh slate. Tall wall with gabled coping on north and west; north wall joins south-west corner of Kiplaw Farmhouse (q.v.) and holds boarded door; pent privy in north-west corner of garden. Lower wall on south has coping stepped and sloped up at west end, and central pair of gatepiers with chamfered plinths, moulded caps and pyramidal-topped finials. Short east wall his coping stepped up slope. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237495 Garden Wall Attached To South West Corner Of Ogle Castle 1237495 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.781482 55.105847, -1.781463 55.105759, -1.781434 55.105718, -1.781419 55.105712, -1.781045 55.105739, -1.781417 55.105716, -1.781431 55.10572, -1.781459 55.10576, -1.781482 55.105847))) WHALTON OGLE NZ 17 NW 6/152 Garden wall attached to south-west corner of Ogle Castle GV II Garden wall, probably late C18. Squared stone. Tall wall with 3 raking buttresses on external face and flat coping, ramped down at rounded south-west corner: lower front wall with slightly-raised coping, joining barn (q.v.). Included for group value. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237496 Garage To South East Of Ogle Castle 1237496 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.78095 55.10569, -1.780996 55.105891, -1.781078 55.105885, -1.781033 55.105685, -1.78095 55.10569))) WHALTON OGLE NZ 17 NW 6/153 Garage to south- east of Ogle Castle 28.4.69 (formerly listed as Barn at Ogle Castle) G.V. II Barn, now garage. Late C18, as part of planned foldyard farm. South end squared stone, west wall brick in English Garden Wall Bond 1 and 5, east wall roughly-squared stone; pantile roof with stone slates to eaves. South end shows boarded double doors under segmental arch, with Ogle arms above and coped gable; boarded door on left return, 2 small windows on right. , 2013-01-29 1969-04-28
1237518 Shilvington Bridge 1237518 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.767985 55.112685, -1.767915 55.112687, -1.767931 55.112739, -1.767932 55.112769, -1.767906 55.112994, -1.767972 55.112995, -1.767986 55.112785, -1.767985 55.112685))) WHALTON SHILVINGTON NZ 17 NW 6/156 Shilvington Bridge 28.4.69 II Bridge, probably C18. Squared stone. 3-centred arch with arch ring and keystone; segmental flood arch, with arch ring, to north. Curved projection with refuge on west between arches. Parapets splaying out at ends, with square coping of blocks linked by iron clamps. In poor structural condition at time of survey, with several inserted iron ties. Listing amended 09-AUG-2010 [not a SAM] 2013-01-29 1969-04-28
1237519 Garden Wall To South Of Thorneyford Farmhouse 1237519 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.757994 55.090712, -1.757787 55.090711, -1.757787 55.090769, -1.757793 55.090715, -1.757991 55.090716, -1.757996 55.090769, -1.757994 55.090712))) WHALTON THORNEYFORD NZ 17 NE 7/158 Garden wall to south of Thorneyford Farmhouse GV II Garden wall, early C19. Squared stone. Low wall with flat coping, sloped up at left end. Gate with monolithic jambs. Similar right return. Included for group value with farmhouse. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237520 Twizell Farmhouse 1237520 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.753472 55.103098, -1.753589 55.103111, -1.753597 55.103096, -1.753672 55.103101, -1.753699 55.10303, -1.753505 55.103007, -1.753472 55.103098))) WHALTON TWIZELL NZ 17 NE 7/159 Twizell Farmhouse GV II House. Mid-C18 altered late C19. Squared stone with raised quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roof with brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays, symmetrical. Central renewed door with 2-pane overlight in alternating-block surround with triple keystones; 4-pane sash windows in stone surrounds, the upper beneath gablets with moulded bargeboards. Roof with overhanging eaves and end stacks rebuilt on old bases. Contemporary wing to rear with 12-pane Yorkshire sash in stone surround, on right return. Included for group value with early planned foldyard buildings (q.v.). , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237521 Farmbuildings To North East Of Twizell Farmhouse 1237521 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.753277 55.103272, -1.753273 55.103285, -1.753475 55.103312, -1.753496 55.103258, -1.753383 55.103245, -1.753443 55.103063, -1.753416 55.103059, -1.753436 55.102998, -1.753374 55.10299, -1.753293 55.103226, -1.753258 55.103222, -1.753242 55.103268, -1.753277 55.103272))) WHALTON TWIZELL NZ 17 NE 7/161 Farmbuildings to north-east of Twizell Farmhouse GV II Shelter sheds, stable and store. Mid-C18. Squared stone; pantile roof on main part of east range with Welsh slates to eaves, and on other buildings. L-plan. Main range on east side of yard has shelter shed to left with 3 elliptical arches, and stable to right with blocked door and stone-surround windows. Lower part to far right with 2 stable doors. Coped gables. Storehouse on north of yard has C20 cart entrance, boarded door on left return and coped gables. Rear elevation of east range shows stable door and slit vents. Part of early planned foldyard group. Storehouse included for group value. , 2015-10-21 1987-04-29
1237522 Manor House With Attached Courtyard Wall At Rear 1237522 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.793803 55.127507, -1.793894 55.127508, -1.793903 55.127385, -1.793947 55.127386, -1.793951 55.127301, -1.793997 55.127301, -1.793996 55.127285, -1.794036 55.127284, -1.794053 55.127299, -1.794102 55.127299, -1.794115 55.127286, -1.79419 55.127286, -1.794199 55.127311, -1.794264 55.127311, -1.794295 55.127294, -1.794439 55.127294, -1.794439 55.127305, -1.794493 55.127305, -1.794493 55.127289, -1.794499 55.127289, -1.79449 55.127214, -1.79425 55.127217, -1.794209 55.127213, -1.794209 55.1272, -1.793944 55.127198, -1.79361 55.127169, -1.793607 55.127217, -1.793574 55.127217, -1.793571 55.127257, -1.793604 55.127259, -1.793602 55.127274, -1.793688 55.127278, -1.79369 55.127262, -1.793814 55.127272, -1.793803 55.127507))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/163 Manor House with attached courtyard 28.4.69 wall at rear (formerly listed as Whalton Manor House) G.V. II - House formed from Old Whalton Manor, C17-C18, and 3 attached cottages remodelled and extended by Lorrimer in late C19, Whalton Mansion 1729, now a separate residence known as West Manor House (q.v.) and a linking range of 1908-9, with further internal remodelling, by Sir Edwin Lutyens for Mrs. Eustace Smith. Squared stone except for 1908-9 part, ashlar with some rock-faced stone to rear and original Manor, rubble with cut dressings; stone slate roofs. Plan: long range fronting the road with rear wing near the east end. South elevation 2 storeys, in 4 sections. 5-bay left end part is now West Manor House (q.v.). Lutyens' link block 3 wide bays: plinth. Right bay has panelled double doors under elliptical arch, flanked by half-glazed double doors under raised lintels with stepped keystones; raised impost band. Three 18-pane sash windows above with similar lintels, shaped aprons, raised blocks between and sunk panels above. Bays to left each have tripartite window, with metal-framed casments, beneath heavy canted oriels with moulded bases, small-paned sash windows, moulded cornices and broader weather-boarded panels, above. Large panelled and ornamented ridge and right end stacks. Lower 6-bay part to right, former cottages, has 3 central French windows with fluted heads to doorframes, and 12-pane sash windows. 5-bay part, original Manor, to far right has central doorway in architrave with metope frieze and dentilled pedimented hood on consoles; 12-pane sashes. Coped gables with moulded kneelers; stepped-and- corniced ridge and right end stacks. Rear elevation: entrance bay, with similar detail to front, flanked by quadrant- shaped stair projections, rock-faced except for ashlar above a chamfered set- back near eaves level. Semi-conical roofs; the whole reminiscent of an Edwardian castle gatehouse. The projections are linked by a wall with a heavy square coping and 2 gateways having piers with moulded caps, enclosing an oval courtyard with stone setts laid in concentric fashion. To left, rear wing of 10 irregular bays with 12-pane sash windows. Interior: 3-bay aisled groin-vaulted carriage entrance. Stone-walled baroque entrance hall with Gibbs surrounds to doorways and large moulded fireplace, from which a stone winder stair, with ribbed barrel vault, leads to a landing and an added long gallery overlooking courtyard. On first floor anteroom has deeply-coved matt black ceiling and windmap; circular bedroom (former dining room) has high domed ceiling and is said to be a model for the Viceroy's throne room at New Delhi. High-quality baroque-style woodwork throughout the Lutyens section, and 2 bathrooms with impressive contemporary fittings. Further east the Oak Room (former library) has Lorrimer frieze, and panelling said to be from Benton Church. , 2013-01-29 1969-04-28
1237523 Garden Walls And Gate Piers To South Of Manor House And West Of Manor House 1237523 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.793432 55.127086, -1.794235 55.127104, -1.79424 55.127213, -1.794251 55.127213, -1.794247 55.127096, -1.793432 55.127079, -1.793432 55.127086)), ((-1.794384 55.127092, -1.794371 55.127215, -1.794383 55.127215, -1.794394 55.127101, -1.794801 55.127097, -1.794801 55.127091, -1.794384 55.127092))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/165 Garden walls and gate piers to south of Manor House and west of Manor House GV II Garden wall and gatepiers, 1908-9 by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Squared stone, snecked stone, coursed rubble, with cut dressings; ashlar gatepiers. Tall gate piers flanking Manor House entrance have plinth, moulded capitals and decorated urn finials; attached wrought-iron box-section jambs are remnants of ornate gates removed c.1940. Approach walls link piers to house; that to left snecked stone, to right coursed rubble; heavy flat coping, each wall with vertical-panelled door in 4-centred frame under stepped keyed lintel. To left of entrance squared stone wall with pilasters and slightly-raised coping; left return holds gate with pyramid-capped piers, and links to south-west corner of West Manor House (q.v.). To right of entrance coursed rubble wall with flat coping broken by section with railings, at time of survey obscured by holly hedge, between 2 pyramid-capped piers. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237524 Garden Walls And Attached Summerhouse To East And North East Of Manor House 1237524 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.793777 55.12774, -1.794001 55.127756, -1.794001 55.127748, -1.793646 55.127716, -1.79365 55.127707, -1.793548 55.127692, -1.793541 55.127707, -1.793352 55.127684, -1.79344 55.12709, -1.79343 55.12709, -1.793342 55.12769, -1.793538 55.127714, -1.793532 55.127729, -1.793632 55.127744, -1.793642 55.127724, -1.793777 55.12774))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/166 Garden walls and attached summerhouse to east and north- east of Manor House GV II Garden walls and attached summerhouse, 1908-9 by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Squared stone with cut dressings; summerhouse brick-lined. L-plan wall with summerhouse at centre of north part. East wall has flat coping, stepped up slope; ornamental bronze tap in elliptical-arched recess near south end; boarded double doors at north. North wall has coping ramped down, to lower part with 4 tapering flat- topped finials, on either side of Tuscan summerhouse, tetrastyle in antis, with round window at rear. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237525 Garden Wall Around Northernmost Lawn, With Attached Summerhouse At Whalton Manor House 1237525 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.793993 55.127762, -1.793992 55.127874, -1.794631 55.127885, -1.794631 55.127763, -1.794625 55.127881, -1.793999 55.12787, -1.794001 55.127758, -1.793993 55.127762))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/168 Garden wall around northernmost lawn, with attached summerhouse at Whalton Manor House GV II Garden wall and attached summerhouse, 1908-9 by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Brick in irregular bond with rubble internal face and cut dressings; pantiles on summerhouse roof and adjacent canopy. Wall on 3 sides of rectangular lawn; north wall 6 bays and side walls 3 bays, divided by brick piers with tapering flat-topped finials. Hexagonal summerhouse at north-west corner has open front on 2 rustic wooden posts, paired 12-pane casements and round window to rear, and steep pyramidal roof with similar finial. In adjacent part of west wall, doorway under pent canopy. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1237596 North Chapel At Alnwick Cemetery 1237596 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.692343 55.4039, -1.692344 55.403924, -1.692476 55.403922, -1.692475 55.403906, -1.692513 55.403906, -1.692509 55.403837, -1.692381 55.40384, -1.69238 55.403823, -1.69232 55.403824, -1.692321 55.403841, -1.692307 55.403842, -1.692309 55.403887, -1.69233 55.403887, -1.692331 55.4039, -1.692343 55.4039))) The following building shall be added:- SOUTH ROAD NU 11 SE 905-/8/10001 (East side) North Chapel at Alnwick Cemetery GV II Cemetery chapel. 1856. Designed by FR Wilson, and built by Armstrong and Hudspeth. Rubble stone with ashlar dressings and slate roof with coped gables and finials. Chamfered plinth, angle buttresses quoins and a moulded band. South front has, to the right a projecting gabled porch with pointed arch doorway, and at the corner an octagonal stair turret with reduced stone spire. To the left 2 pairs of small pointed arch windows with buttresses between, and beyond a single similar window with hood mould. The west gable front has 3 lancets and above 4 small circular windows. The east gable front has a projecting single storey narthex with 4 small pointed arch windows and a stone roof. Above a tall pointed arch window of 3-lights with unusual plate tracery and a hood mould. , 2013-01-29 1994-01-14
1238457 Pill Box At Nz 126 982 1238457 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.803739 55.278036, -1.803769 55.278029, -1.803778 55.278014, -1.803764 55.277997, -1.803736 55.277991, -1.803709 55.277997, -1.803697 55.278014, -1.803709 55.278031, -1.803739 55.278036))) The following item shall be added: BRINKBURN NZ 19 NW 10/226 Pill Box at NZ 126 982 II Pill Box. 1940. Concrete. Elongated hexagonal plan. Flat roof. Single storey, partly below ground level. Elongated front has 3 rifle embrasures with a single machine gun embrasure to each chamfered side front. Rear front has 2 rifle embrasures and a protected door. This pill box was constructed as part of the Coquet Line of defense against German invasion during the 2nd World War. , 2013-01-29 1991-05-31
1238464 Pill Box At Nz 099 994 1238464 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.844312 55.288324, -1.844348 55.288315, -1.844349 55.28829, -1.844315 55.288276, -1.844277 55.288287, -1.844272 55.28831, -1.844312 55.288324))) The following item shall be added: BRINKBURN NZ 19 NW 10/224 Pill Box at NZ 099 994 II Pill Box. 1940. Concrete. Elongated hexagonal plan. Flat roof. Single storey, partly below ground level. Elongated front has 3 rifle embrasures with a single machine gun embrasure to each chamfered side front. Rear front has 2 rifle embrasures and a protected door. This pill box was constructed as part of the Coquet Line of defense against German invasion during the 2nd World War. , 2013-01-29 1991-05-31
1238519 Gate Piers, Gates And Paddock Walls To North Of The Vicarage 1238519 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.583336 55.333296, -1.583356 55.3333, -1.583557 55.333227, -1.583561 55.333218, -1.583462 55.333124, -1.583448 55.333125, -1.583457 55.333133, -1.583273 55.333199, -1.583262 55.333192, -1.583251 55.333221, -1.583336 55.333296), (-1.583524 55.333217, -1.583354 55.333279, -1.583282 55.333215, -1.583287 55.333205, -1.583448 55.333147, -1.583524 55.333217))) AMBLE CHURCH STREET NU 2604 (South side) 13/48 Gate piers, gates and paddock walls to north of The Vicarage GV II Gate piers, gates and paddock walls, 1876 but re-using early C18 gate piers. Walls snecked stone with cut dressings, piers cut stone; gates wrought iron. Rectangular paddock has walls c.1.5 metre high with gabled coping; gateway on east has rusticated piers with flat-topped moulded caps. Similar but smaller piers flank main gate adjacent to north-east corner of paddock and hold double gates with S C (St. Cuthbert) in scrolly ironwork; similar pedestrian gate between west pier and paddock wall. C20 bus-shelter backing on to west end of north wall is not of interest. Included for group value with Vicarage and St. Cuthbert's Church. , 2013-08-19 1988-09-15
1238551 Ruined Walls To East Of Roman Catholic Church Of Sacred Heart And St Cuthbert 1238551 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.588298 55.332881, -1.588246 55.332837, -1.588222 55.332843, -1.588272 55.332892, -1.588293 55.332894, -1.5883 55.33289, -1.588298 55.332881))) AMBLE HIGH STREET NU 2604 (North side) Ruined walls to east of 13/49 Roman Catholic Church of Sacred Heart and St Cuthbert 1.6.49 (formerly listed as Hall Bank (remains) II Fragment of former Manor House, C15. Squared stone with cut dressings. 4-metres-long and 2-metres-high length of wall, 1 metre thick, containing a window of two trefoil-headed lights with uncusped panels above. The Manor belonged to Tynemouth Priory and may have functioned as a monastic cell. From foundations exposed when the previous Catholic Chapel was built in 1897 it would seem that the remaining wall formed part of a service wing adjoining a hall to the west. T.L. McAndrews, 'Amble and District' (1912) plate facing p.30. , 2013-08-19 1949-06-01
1240558 Shotley Bridge 1240558 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.86017 54.869346, -1.859932 54.869373, -1.859955 54.869425, -1.860305 54.86939, -1.860281 54.869334, -1.86017 54.869346))) The asset was previously Listed twice also under 1370290. This entry was removed from the List on 22 June 2023. NZ 05 SE CONSETT RIVER DERWENT 5/76 (inset) Shotley Bridge 6/6/51 II Bridge. Late C18, widened c1820. Squared stone, lower parts of jambs and north-east approach wall rock-faced stone. Elliptical arch. Earlier south face shows recessed voussoirs and band below parapet; abutments splayed more broadly than approach walls. North face of arch shows flush voussoirs and arch ring. Parapets with chamfered coping; north-west wing wall runs to pier with low pyramidal cap. Part of this bridge is in the County of Northumberland. Listing NGR: NZ 09081 52744. 2023-06-23 1951-06-06
1240685 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 04984973 1240685 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.92399 54.842387, -1.924017 54.842378, -1.92402 54.842363, -1.923996 54.842351, -1.923966 54.842357, -1.923959 54.842369, -1.923963 54.842378, -1.92399 54.842387))) NZ 04 NW NZ 04984973 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 10/107 Boundary stone at above NGR. II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Flat-topped slab 0.50 metre high. DC on north, B on south. Listing NGR: NZ0499149730 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240686 Boundary Stone Alongside Fence At Nz 04924972 1240686 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.924925 54.842298, -1.924952 54.842289, -1.924954 54.842273, -1.92493 54.842262, -1.924901 54.842268, -1.924894 54.842276, -1.924898 54.842289, -1.924925 54.842298))) NZ 04 NW NZ 04924972 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 10/108 Boundary stone alongside fence at above NGR. II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Flat-topped slab 0.50 metre high. DC on north, B on south. Listing NGR: NZ0492749724 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240687 Boundary Stone At Nz 04874970 1240687 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.925704 54.842118, -1.925728 54.842112, -1.925735 54.8421, -1.925731 54.842091, -1.925704 54.842082, -1.925674 54.842094, -1.92568 54.842112, -1.925704 54.842118))) NZ 04 NW NZ 04874970 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 10/109 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Flat-topped slab 0.40 metre high, DC on north, B on south. 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240688 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 04844956 1240688 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.926173 54.84086, -1.926197 54.840854, -1.926202 54.840836, -1.926173 54.840824, -1.926149 54.840831, -1.926144 54.840849, -1.926173 54.84086))) NZ 04 NW NZ 04984973 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 10/107 Boundary stone at above NGR. II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Flat-topped slab 0.50 metre high. DC on north, B on south. Listing NGR: NZ0499149730 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240689 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 04914951 1240689 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.925084 54.84041, -1.925111 54.840402, -1.925113 54.840386, -1.925089 54.840375, -1.92506 54.840381, -1.925055 54.840399, -1.925084 54.84041))) NZ 04 NW NZ 04844956 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 10/110 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Roughly-shaped slab 0.70 metre high. DC on west, B on east. Listing NGR: NZ0484049562 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240690 Boundary Stone At Above Ngr Nz 04944950 1240690 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.924617 54.84032, -1.924641 54.840314, -1.924648 54.840305, -1.924644 54.840293, -1.924617 54.840284, -1.92459 54.840293, -1.924586 54.840305, -1.924593 54.840314, -1.924617 54.84032))) NZ 04 NW NZ 04944950 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 10/112 Boundary stone at above NGR. II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Roughly-shaped slab 0.35 metre high. DC on west, B on east. Listing NGR: NZ0494049499 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240692 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 05244958 1240692 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.919944 54.841036, -1.919968 54.84103, -1.919974 54.841012, -1.919944 54.841, -1.919917 54.841009, -1.919915 54.841025, -1.919944 54.841036))) NZ 04 NE NZ 05244958 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 11/114 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Rectangular slab, recumbent at time of survey, 1.10 metre long. DC on exposed face. Listing NGR: NZ0524249571 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240693 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 05304958 1240693 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.91901 54.841036, -1.919037 54.841027, -1.91904 54.841012, -1.919016 54.841, -1.918986 54.841006, -1.918979 54.841018, -1.918983 54.841027, -1.91901 54.841036))) NZ 04 NE NZ 05304958 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 11/115 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Rectangular slab 0.60 metre high. DC on south, B on north. Listing NGR: NZ0530249572 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240694 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 05364945 1240694 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.918078 54.839867, -1.918102 54.839861, -1.918108 54.839843, -1.918084 54.839831, -1.918054 54.839837, -1.918047 54.839849, -1.918051 54.839858, -1.918078 54.839867))) NZ 04 NE NZ 05364945 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 11/119 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Rectangular slab 0.50 metre high. DC on west, B on east. Listing NGR: NZ0535649445 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240719 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 05344957 1240719 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.918387 54.840945, -1.918411 54.840939, -1.918417 54.840921, -1.918377 54.84091, -1.918358 54.840921, -1.918364 54.840939, -1.918387 54.840945))) NZ 04 NE NZ 05344957 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 11/116 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Rectangular slab 0.50 metre high. DC on west, B on east. Listing NGR: NZ0533249563 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240720 Boundary Stone At Ngr Nz 05364947 1240720 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.918078 54.840047, -1.918105 54.840038, -1.918105 54.84002, -1.918083 54.840011, -1.918054 54.840017, -1.918047 54.840026, -1.918051 54.840038, -1.918078 54.840047))) NZ 04 NE NZ 05364947 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 11/118 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Rectangular slab 0.50 metre high. DC on west, B on east. Listing NGR: NZ0535849467 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1240722 Boundary Stone At Ngr 05234930 1240722 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.920105 54.83852, -1.920129 54.838514, -1.920136 54.838505, -1.920132 54.838493, -1.920105 54.838484, -1.920078 54.838493, -1.920074 54.838505, -1.920081 54.838514, -1.920105 54.83852))) NZ 04 NE NZ 05234930 MUGGLESWICK RIVER DERWENT (West bank) 11/121 Boundary stone at above NGR II Boundary stone, probably late C18. Sandstone. Rectangular slab 0.45 metre high. DC on west, B on east. Listing NGR: NZ0522749302 2013-01-29 1987-01-21
1241813 Former Stable At Barnhill Farm 1241813 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.944828 55.120787, -1.944838 55.120898, -1.944949 55.120892, -1.94494 55.120784, -1.944828 55.120787))) CAPHEATON BARNHILL NZ 08 SW 3/84 Former stable at Barnhill Farm II Former stable now corn store. Dated 1722 and 1736. Dressed stone with Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys, 2 bays. To right a boarded door in Gibbs surround dated 1736 on panelled keystone. To left a small 12-pane Yorkshire sash. On the 1st floor 2 small slatted windows. Steeply-pitched roof with small stone brackets beneath the eaves and reverse-stepped gables. Blocked dated doorway with chamfered surround, to rear. , 2013-01-29 1986-08-22
1242923 Pair Of Smokehouses 1242923 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.995912 55.760036, -1.995966 55.760087, -1.99625 55.759961, -1.996185 55.759914, -1.995912 55.760036))) Pair of Smokehouses, Sandstell Road. Grade II. A pair of smokehouses, likely to have been constructed as herring stores in the early C19 and converted shortly after 1843. MATERIALS: The external walls are of coursed rubble sandstone construction with quoins, while the internal wall is of brick. The gabled roof is of pantiles to the north face, corrugated sheeting to the south. PLAN: These buildings form part of a complex bounded to the south west by Dock Road, Sandstell Road to the south east and tracks to the north and north east. They are rectangular in plan with their principal elevation facing into the yard, accessed from the north. They are abutted by a single-storey structure to the east and a later, identical height former smokehouse to the west. EXTERIOR: These two smokehouses are of one build and quoined at either end. Together they form four bays, three of which are related to the eastern smokehouse which has three entrances with wooden doors and lintels; the outer two have quoined windows with sandstone lintels above. The western of the two smokehouses has one door and window matching those to the east. The two right hand entrances are quoined; the other two are unclear as the stonework has either been painted over or obscured by vegetation. The doors are likely to be of early C20 date and will have acted as intenal doors to the former shed which stood on this side of the range before the 1980s. The openings themselves appear to be original except for possibly the central opening to the eastern smokehouse; this does not appear to match the others in height, dressings or relationship to a window. There is also evidence of three window lintels at eaves height, matching the alignment of those to the south-facing elevation. A line of truncated corrugated iron set into the wall indicates the line of the former shed roof. The south facing Sandstell Road elevation is rendered; the only visible openings here are three blocked eaves windows. The north east gable end is visible above the single storey attached structure; this is blind, unrendered and retains its quoins. INTERIOR: The two smokehouses are divided by a brick wall, while a modern breezeblock wall has been inserted to divide the eastern smokehouse in two. The east section of this was inaccessible due to vegetation, although the level of survival is believed to match the remainder of the buildings. These retain their wooden frames with the majority of their side rails for resting the tenter sticks (where the fish were hung). There are two voids to the western smoekhouse and two to the west section of the eastern smokehouse; that adjacent to the breezeblock wall may have been related to the first void in the blocked off section. The blocked windows to the south wall appear to retain their louvers to at least the accessible section of the eastern smokehouse. HISTORY: By the C18 and early C19 Britain had possibly the world's largest fishing industry around its coast. It became a major form of commerce in the north east as cities such as Newcastle and South Shields developed, with markets and small communities thriving as important centres for fishing and fish processing. The low cost of herring made it a staple source of food for the poor and the scale of operations to support this demand was large; during the C19 and early C20 herring yards were found in practically every town and village along the north east coast. In the Berwick area a small proportion of fresh fish was sold to local buyers in the daily fish markets while the remainder were pickled, or from the mid-C19 smoked, and transported to markets elsewhere. The curing of herring was already undertaken on a large scale in Tweedmouth by the end of the C18, but during the C19 Spittal became the main centre of production. Parson and White's Directory of 1827 states that there were six herring houses in Spittal for curing red and white herrings, whereas none are mentioned for Tweedmouth. It therefore appears the majority of the herring curing trade had migrated prior to this date. During the C19 many of the inhabitants of Spittal were employed in fish-curing yards preparing, pickling and smoking herring or as coopers for the export trade to Europe. The Berwick Pier Railway map of 1824 shows the whole of the present site built up, situated about 20m or so from Spittal's former quay and jetty, and in the ownership or occupancy of Mr Boag. This is likely to be the Mr Boag of George Boag & Co, herring curers of Spittal as listed in the Pigot & Co directory of 1822. George Boag continues to be listed as a herring curer and/or cooper in the Trade Directory entries for Spittal up until 1855, at which point he is replaced by Robert Boston, previously unmentioned, who appears to have taken over Mr Boag's interests between 1847 and 1855. It is likely these buildings were converted into smokehouses around the time Robert Boston took over the business, after the successful introduction of kippering to the herring curing market in 1843. Robert Boston's (known as Boston Borthers by the early C20) went on to become the largest fish processing establishment in Spittal, employing up to 100 workers at its peak. There was a sharp decline of the herring business along the eas coast in the 1920s and 30s, causing the bankruptcy of many firmes during this period. This included the Boston Brothers firm which fragmented and led to the three brothers continuing with their own individual companies; one of these, R Boston & Sons, retained ownership of these buildings. The properties were rented to the Berwick Shellfish Company until the 1980s, after which point they were left empty and used for storage purposes only. SOURCES: >The Berwick Directory (1806) 154, held at Berwick-upon-Tweed Record Office >Cowe, F M, Berwick-upon-Tweed: a short historical guide (1984) 54-6 >Good's Directory (1806) >Hay, G D, Stell, G P, Monuments of Industry: an illustrated historical record (1986) 26-9 >Kelly's Directory of Northumberland (1914), accessed 27-Jan-2010 via www.historicaldirectories.org >Menuge, A, Dewar, C, Berwick-upon-Tweed: three places, two nations, one town (2009) 58 >Menuge, A and Withey, M, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Tweedmouth and Spittal Rapid Character Assessment, Architectural Investigation division Report Series B/013/2005, unpublished (2005) English Heritage, 61, 66-8 >Parson's and White's directory (1827) 345 and 494, held at Berwick-upon-Tweed Record Office >Pigot and Co's National Commercial Directory (1822) 575, held at Berwick-upon-Tweed Record Office >Pigot and Co's National Commercial Directory (1834) 572, held at Berwick-upon-Tweed Record Office >Pigot and Co's National Commercial Directory for 1828-9, accessed 27-Jan via www.historicaldirectories.org >Robson's Directory (1841) 40, held at Berwick-upon-Tweed Record Office >Slater's Royal National Commercial Directory of the Northern Counties Vol 1 Durham, Northumberland and Yorkshire, accessed 27-Jan-2010 via www.historicaldirectories.org >Tyne and Wear Museums, The Fishing Industry and Fishing Communities of the North East, retrieved on 22-Sep-2009 from http://www.twmuseums.org.uk/fishtales/index.html >Universal British Directory (1792) 285, held at Berwick-upon-Tweed Record Office >White's Directory (1847) 725, held at Berwick-upon-Tweed Record Office >White, W, Eastern England from the thames to the Humber, volume 1 (1865) 144-7 REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: This pair of smokehouses are designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons: * Date: these buildings were constructed in the early C19 and through their early conversion to kipper smokehouses are good representations of influential mif C19 developments in the fish curing trade * Intactness: they retain their internal timber framework and the majority of their original openings, which for smokehouses of this early date especially is increasingly rare on a national basis * Historic: the commercial scale of these smokehouses acts as a reminder of the once predominant herring yards of the north east coast, the surviving remnants of which indicate the commercial0001 2015-11-04 2011-03-17
1244721 Gateway And Guard House, Berwick Barracks Museum 1244721 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.999855 55.771426, -2.000429 55.77135, -2.000409 55.771305, -2.000377 55.771309, -2.00037 55.77129, -2.000155 55.771317, -2.000164 55.771338, -2.000159 55.77134, -2.000098 55.771348, -2.000093 55.771336, -1.999835 55.77137, -1.999855 55.771426))) NUO053 BERWICK ON TWEED PARADE (South side) 622/11/10006 Gateway and guard house, Berwick Barracks Museum 26.05.1971 GV I Barracks entrance gateway, guard house and offices now museum and mess. 1719-21, probably by Nicholas Hawksmoor, for the Board of Ordnance. Sandstone ashlar with ashlar left-hand lateral and single right-hand ridge stacks, and hipped slate roof. Vernacular Baroque style. Single-depth plinth blocks flank central gateway. EXTERIOR: single storey; 3-section range. The street front has heavy pilaster strips either side of a semi-circular archway with key and impost blocks, wrought-iron double gates, and a raised parapet above containing a gilded and painted coat of arms cartouche of George I; right-hand former guard house has 3 small flat-arched windows under the eaves, and the mess to the left has a parapet, stepped down to the left, with a single segmental-arched plate-glass sash. The parade ground elevation is similar with raised parapet to tl1e gateway, 6-window guard house with a mid C19 cast-iron glazed verandah, and 5-bay mess with 8/8-pane sashes and central inserted C20 half-glazed door. Closes the N end of the parade ground. INTERIOR: without special features. HISTORY: part of the earliest planned barrack complex in England, pre-dating most other English barracks by nearly 80 years, because of the need for a permanent garrison on the Scottish border. One of a number of Ordnance buildings at this time associated with Hawksmoor and Vanbrugh. (MacIvor I: The Fortifications of Berwick on Tweed: London: 1972-: 8, 29; Barker N in Chaney and Bold (eds): English Architecture Public and Private: London: 1993-: 199-230; Map of Berwick-on-Tweed: 1788-: PRO, WO78/1172). , 2013-08-19 1971-05-26
1244722 West Barrack And Attached Perimeter Wall, Berwick Barrack Museum 1244722 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.000429 55.77135, -2.000431 55.771355, -2.000789 55.771307, -2.000546 55.770733, -2.000388 55.770665, -2.000298 55.770652, -2.000215 55.770663, -2.000215 55.770669, -2.00027 55.770661, -2.00035 55.770663, -2.000475 55.770706, -2.000536 55.770739, -2.000772 55.771301, -2.000648 55.771317, -2.000601 55.771207, -2.000633 55.771202, -2.000621 55.771174, -2.000576 55.771181, -2.000496 55.770992, -2.000551 55.770984, -2.00053 55.770935, -2.000476 55.770941, -2.000439 55.770852, -2.000494 55.770845, -2.000472 55.770792, -2.000417 55.7708, -2.000396 55.770748, -2.000201 55.770774, -2.000394 55.771231, -2.000379 55.771233, -2.000429 55.77135))) NUO053 BERWICK ON TWEED PARADE (South side) 622/11/10005 West barrack and attached perimeter wall, Berwick Barracks Museum 26.05.1971 GV I Barrack and officers' block. 1719-21, probably by Nicholas Hawksmoor, for the Board of Ordnance. Sandstone ashlar, rendered to the front, with brick axial stacks, and slate valley roof Vernacular Baroque style. Double-depth plan with N officers' section. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys and attic; 16:4-window range. A near Symmetrical range, with right-hand end section set forward, blocked quoins to stepped gables, the single bar to the left of the end range defined by a blocked pilaster strip, entrance bays to the centre and 3 from each end of the main range broken forward, with a thin cornice and parapet. Segmental-arched doorways with imposts and tall keys, small-paned fanlights and double boarded doors; ashlar Surrounds to, ground- and second-floor flat-arched 8/8-pane sashes, and first-floor round-arched sashes with key and imposts; the 5 accentuated right-hand bays have segmental-arched first-floor windows, as do those to the rear elevation, which has 3 C20 service blocks attached. Right-hand gable onto the Parade has segmental-archedg1-ound-floor horned 2/2-pane sashes, and single first-floor round-arched and second-floor segmental-arched 8/8-panesashes, with boarded oculi in the stepped gables. INTERIOR: heated back-to-back barrack rooms, divided by a spine wall, with stair flights from the entrances with Uncut string and 2 rails; officers' rooms in the end are separated by an axial corridor with stair with column newels and stick balusters. SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: attached parallel rear rubble wall with interval piers encloses rear yard, and extends approximately 80m from the NW corner S to meet the officers' mess (qv), HISTORY: part of the earliest planned barrack complex in England, pre-dating most other English barracks by nearly 80 years, because of the need for a permanent garrison near the Scottish border. This plan is typical of the C17 and early C18. One of a group of Ordnance buildings from this period associated with Hawksmoor and Vanbrugh. , 2013-08-19 1971-05-26
1244772 Clock House Building, Berwick Barracks Museum 1244772 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.999631 55.770745, -1.999673 55.770846, -2.000251 55.770768, -2.000208 55.770667, -1.999631 55.770745))) NU O0 53 BERWICK ON TWEED PARADE (South side) 622/11/10004 Clock House building, Barracks 26.05.1971 Barracks Museum GV I Barracks store, later barracks and officers' mess, now museum. 1739-41, for the Ordnance Board. Sandstone ashlar with gable and axial stacks, and slate double pile roof vernacular Baroque style. PLAN: single-depth plan closing S side of parade ground quadrangle. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and attic; 9:1-window range. A symmetrical front, with a right-hand corner block, has clasping pilasters, central 3-window section set forward to a raised pediment with flanking steps, thin cornice and parapet, and paired, stepped end gables. Round-arched central doorway with key and imposts, studded double doors and a first-floor clock set within a full-height round-arched recess; round-arched ground-floor small-paned windows, a boarded door 2 bays from the right, and segmental-arched first-floor windows with 8/8-pane casements. Left-hand return has a central round-arched doorway with large fanlight, margin lights and panelled door, a single segmental-arched first-floor casement, and 2 attic casements in the gables. Rear has irregular ground-floor late C19 inserted 6/6-pane sashes, possibly originally windowless, 6 first-floor casements as the front in 3 pairs, and a tall central round-arched cross window beneath a smaller casement to the stairs. The right-hand block is perpendicular to the main range and partly obscured by the W barrack block (qv), with a flattened gable and connecting parapet, left-hand segmental-arched doorway with fanlight and boarded door and a segmental-arched 8/8-pane sash above to the rear a coped gable with altered ground-floor door and 2 windows, 2 first-floor and a central attic window. INTERIOR: has double panelled inner doors to a central dogleg stair with uncut string, splat balusters, square newels and moulded rail, and axial timber posts on the ground floor. HISTORY: originally built as a storehouse in the same manner as the earlier barracks, shown as such on 1788 map, and later converted to an officers' mess. Part of the earliest planned barrack complex in England, predating most English barracks by nearly 80 years because of the need for a permanent garrison on the Scottish border. , 2013-08-19 1971-05-26
1244854 The Powder House North East Of Seahouses Point 1244854 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.644739 55.582741, -1.644761 55.582753, -1.644785 55.582737, -1.644765 55.582725, -1.644739 55.582741))) NU23SW NORTH SUNDERLAND PACE HILL Seahouses 1404/9/10002 The Powder House North- east of Seahouses Point II Explosives store. 1886. Sandstone. Rectangular plan. Straight walls with barrel vaulted roof. Single doorway to south-west front with timber lintel. Built for the storage of gunpowder used in blasting for the construction of the Long Pier and the New Harbour. , 2013-01-29 1997-10-30
1245574 K6 Telephone Kiosk, Old Bridge, Riverside 1245574 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.710095 55.296627, -1.710108 55.296624, -1.710112 55.296614, -1.71009 55.296608, -1.710079 55.296614, -1.710082 55.296624, -1.710095 55.296627))) SU1800 FELTON 1398/12/10001 RIVERSIDE Old Bridge K6 GV II Telephone kiosk. Type K6. Designed 1935 by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott. Made by various contractors. Cast iron. Square kiosk with domed roof. Unperforated crowns to top panels and margin glazing to windows and doors. , 2014-06-12 1999-02-09
1247667 Manor Cottage 1247667 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.795083 55.127208, -1.794894 55.12721, -1.794896 55.127262, -1.794955 55.127262, -1.794957 55.127277, -1.795084 55.127276, -1.795083 55.127208))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/170 Manor Cottage GV II House, early C18. Coursed rubble with cut quoins and dressings; stone slate roof. 2 storeys, 3 bays, symmetrical. Central door with 3 glazed panels flanked by 12-pane sash windows in chamfered surrounds, with 16-pane Yorkshire sashes above. Raised reverse-stepped gable coping; stepped-and-banded end stacks. Renewed 12-pane sash window on left return, later C18 outshut to rear. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1247668 Laundry Cottage And Attached Garage 1247668 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.795404 55.127184, -1.795404 55.127204, -1.795239 55.127202, -1.795237 55.127266, -1.795394 55.127268, -1.795394 55.127308, -1.795502 55.12731, -1.795504 55.127248, -1.795486 55.127248, -1.795488 55.127184, -1.795404 55.127184))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/172 Laundry Cottage and attached garage GV II Cottage and attached outbuildings, probably 1908-9 by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Roughly-squared rubble with tooled quoins and dressings; stone slate roof. T-plan. South elevation 2 storeys, in 2 parts. To left projecting gabled bay with small 4-pane 1st floor-casement; half-glazed door on right return under small casement in open-pedimented dormer. 2-bay part to right has external stair to boarded door set directly beneath eaves, flanked by 10-pane Yorkshire sashes, the upper in gabled dormers: boarded door to far left. Ridge and right end stacks. Similar sash on right return. Left return shows gabled dormer, projection to left with catslide roof and slatted wooden box vent alongside ridge stack. To rear, triple garage doors with hipped roof dormer above. Picturesque C20 building hinting at Cotswold vernacular tradition. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1247669 Garden Walls To South Of Laundry Cottage 1247669 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.795182 55.127155, -1.795191 55.127126, -1.795226 55.127107, -1.795233 55.127093, -1.795524 55.127087, -1.795231 55.127089, -1.795215 55.12711, -1.79519 55.127122, -1.795177 55.127149, -1.795184 55.127162, -1.795219 55.127173, -1.795182 55.127155))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/173 Garden walls to south of Laundry Cottage GV II Garden walls, probably 1908-9 by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Squared stone with cut dressings. Low wall with flat coping enclosing garden; exedra on east where wall incorporates monolithic pier of entrance to stable yard. Included for group value. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1247670 Wellhead 3 Metres East Of Rear Wing Of Whalton House 1247670 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.800037 55.127699, -1.800064 55.12769, -1.800068 55.127681, -1.800061 55.127669, -1.800031 55.127663, -1.800007 55.127674, -1.800009 55.12769, -1.800037 55.127699))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1281 (North side) 11/177 Wellhead 3 metres east of rear wing 28.4.69 of Whalton House (formerly listed as Well near back door of Whalton House) G.V. II Wellhead, probably C18. Rubble with cut dressings. Circular flat-coped wall 0.6 metre high, now holding flowerbed. Included for historic interest. , 2013-01-29 1969-04-28
1247671 West House Farmhouse And Adjacent Outbuildings 1247671 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.802178 55.127756, -1.802165 55.127817, -1.802248 55.127823, -1.802299 55.127551, -1.802144 55.127542, -1.802136 55.12758, -1.802199 55.127585, -1.802191 55.127697, -1.801684 55.127669, -1.801668 55.127764, -1.801856 55.127774, -1.801859 55.127757, -1.801955 55.127761, -1.801958 55.127743, -1.802178 55.127756))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1281 (North side) 11/181 West House Farmhouse and adjacent 28.4.69 outbuildings GV II House and outbuildings, late C18 with late C19 alterations. Squared tooled stone with cut dressings; Welsh slate roofs. South elevation 2 storeys, in 3 sections. Original house to right 3 bays, symmetrical. Plinth, rusticated quoins. Central French windows, with 2-pane overlight,and 12-pane sashes, renewed on 1st floor; all openings in raised stone surrounds. Coped gables; stepped-and-corniced end stacks. 2 similar windows on right return. Central single bay and lower 3-bay part to left originally single-storeyed, raised when converted to domestic use in C19. Openings in raised stone surrounds; stepped- and-corniced end stacks. At far left projecting barn range with blocked openings in alternating-block surrounds and pent stable addition. To rear of original house a stair window with paired 4-pane sashes and flat-arched lintel. , 2013-01-29 1969-04-28
1247672 Garden Walls To South East Of West House Farmhouse 1247672 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.80181 55.127444, -1.801797 55.127445, -1.80174 55.127558, -1.801686 55.127562, -1.801677 55.12767, -1.801685 55.12767, -1.801699 55.127565, -1.801746 55.127563, -1.80181 55.127444))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1281 (North side) 11/182 Garden walls to south-east of West House Farmhouse GV II Garden wall, late C18 altered early C20. Squared stone. Wall with flat coping and projecting centre part, curved on left. Renewed door under round arch near right end where wall links to farmhouse (q.v.). Included for group value and important corner site at west end of village. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29
1247795 The Terrace 1247795 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.795915 55.127194, -1.795582 55.1272, -1.795587 55.127276, -1.79606 55.127267, -1.796058 55.127192, -1.795915 55.127194))) WHALTON WHALTON VILLAGE NZ 1381 (North side) 12/174 The Terrace, (Nos. 1 - 3 consecutive) GV II Terrace of houses, originally four in number. Early C19 altered early C20. Square tooled stone with cut quoins and dressings; Lakeland slate roof with yellow brick stacks. 2 storeys, 9 bays, irregular. No. 1 has half-glazed door, Nos. 2 and 3 4-panel doors, all in alternating-block surrounds. Single and paired 12-pane sash windows, all renewed, in stone surrounds. Coped gables; end and 2 ridge stacks. Contemporary outshut to rear. Included for group value. , 2013-01-29 1987-04-29

Showing rows 3501 to 3550 of 5397