Listed buildings in Shifnal
timber framed or have timber-framed cores. The other listed buildings in the town include a church, items in the churchyard, a former workhouse, and a bank. Outside the town are four country houses, which are listed together with associated structures, and the other listed buildings include farmhouses and farm buildings, houses and cottages, two bridges, a sewer ventilation pipe, and a former watermill
and associated buildings.
Key
Grade | Criteria[1] |
---|---|
I | Buildings of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important |
II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest |
II | Buildings of national importance and special interest |
Buildings
Name and location | Photograph | Date | Notes | Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|
St Andrew's Church 52°39′52″N 2°22′33″W / 52.66454°N 2.37576°W |
12th century | The church was altered and extended during the following centuries, embattled parapet, and a pyramidal roof with a finial. Inside the nave is a double hammerbeam roof.[2][3]
|
I | |
Barn, Manor Farm 52°39′19″N 2°23′11″W / 52.65523°N 2.38640°W |
—
|
Mid 16th century | Originally a domestic building, later converted into a barn, it is in red brick with | II |
16 Bradford Street and The Cottage 52°40′01″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66704°N 2.37270°W |
Mid 16th century | A house at right angles to the road, it was extended to the rear in the 17th century. The house is jettied with scrolled brackets, and in the gable end are a small name shield, a doorway, and two casement windows.[5]
|
II | |
The Old Malthouse 52°40′09″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66913°N 2.37310°W |
16th century | A | II | |
Gazebo, walls and steps, The Manor House 52°39′17″N 2°23′04″W / 52.65459°N 2.38444°W |
—
|
Mid to late 16th century | The terrace retaining walls surround a rectangular area to the south and west of the house about 25 metres (82 ft) by 35 metres (115 ft), with a projection to the west. They are in sandstone with red brick coping. There is a gateway to the west with a wrought iron gate leading to a dog-leg staircase. In the centre of the south wall is a gazebo in sandstone and brick that has a tiled ogee roof with a lead finial. It has two storeys and an octagonal plan. In the ground floor is a chamfered square window, the upper floor contains three mullioned windows, and there is a doorway in each floor.[7][8] | II |
8, 8A and 10 Market Place 52°39′56″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66563°N 2.37304°W |
Late 16th century | A house, later used for other purposes, it is | II | |
Coppice Green House 52°40′40″N 2°21′25″W / 52.67789°N 2.35697°W |
—
|
Late 16th century | The house was considerably extended in the 18th century. The original part is | II |
Old Idsall House 52°39′53″N 2°22′29″W / 52.66477°N 2.37482°W |
Late 16th century | The house was altered and extended in the 18th century. The older part is timber framed with rendered infill panels, the later parts are in brick, and the roof is tiled. There are two storeys, a central range with one bay, a two-bay projecting wing to the left, later extended, and a later gabled wing to the right. Some of the windows are casements and others are sashes.[12]
|
II | |
13A and 15 Market Place 52°39′55″N 2°22′21″W / 52.66540°N 2.37262°W |
c. 1600 | A pair of houses, later shops and flats, they are | II | |
1 and 1A Park Street 52°39′55″N 2°22′21″W / 52.66530°N 2.37260°W |
c. 1600 | Two houses, later used for other purposes, the building is bressumer on three scrolled brackets, and above are four jettied gables with a continuous moulded bressumer. In the top floor are three casement windows, and in each lower floor are two oriel windows, those in the ground floor flanking a pair of doors.[9][14]
|
II | |
14 Market Place 52°39′56″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66547°N 2.37300°W |
Early to mid 17th century | A house, later used for other purposes, it is | II | |
77 Aston Street 52°40′03″N 2°22′07″W / 52.66744°N 2.36863°W |
17th century | The house was partially refaced in the 19th century. The early part is | II | |
14 Bradford Street and shop 52°40′01″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66693°N 2.37267°W |
17th century | A house with a shop added to the left in the 19th century. The house is in rendered timber framing, the shop is in brick, and the roof is tiled. They form an L-shaped plan, the house with two storeys and a gable end facing the street. The gable has bargeboards and a finial, and below are mullioned windows and a doorway. The shop has a single storey, and contains two canted bay windows flanked by doorways, that on the left with a segmental head.[17] | II | |
24 Broadway 52°40′06″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66827°N 2.37281°W |
17th century | Originally a house, with a shop added to the right in the 18th century. The house is hipped roof, a doorway to the right, and a sash window above. The shop has a 19th-century shop front and three casement windows above. Railings enclose the area to the front of the house.[18]
|
II | |
4 Church Street 52°39′56″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66547°N 2.37316°W |
—
|
17th century | A house, later used for other purposes, it is | II |
6 Market Place 52°39′56″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66569°N 2.37300°W |
17th century | A house, later a shop and a flat, it was originally moulded stone coping, and a tile roof. There are three storeys and three bays, the right bay slightly recessed and containing a passageway. In the ground floor of the other bays is a shop front consisting of two small-paned bow windows with flanking pilasters, between which is a doorway with pilasters. In the upper floors are sash windows with projecting keystones.[20]
|
II | |
12 Market Place 52°39′56″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66554°N 2.37309°W |
17th century | A house, later a shop, it is | II | |
13 Market Place 52°39′56″N 2°22′21″W / 52.66551°N 2.37262°W |
17th century | A house, later a house and shop, it was extended at the front in the 18th century. The early part is moulded eaves cornice, and the roof is tiled and hipped at the front. There is an L-shaped plan, the front range has three storeys and three bays, and the rear wing has two storeys and one bay. In the ground floor is a multi-paned shop window on the left and a doorway to the right with an architrave, a radial fanlight, and a flat hood. In the middle floor is a canted bay window, and the other windows are sashes.[22]
|
II | |
26 Broadway 52°40′06″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66836°N 2.37282°W |
17th century | Formerly the Plough Inn, later a restaurant, it is timber framed, and has a rendered front with applied timber, and a tile roof with parapeted gable ends. There are two storeys, two bays, and a rear wing. In the ground floor are two canted bay windows, and above are casement windows.[23]
|
II | |
2 Church Street 52°39′57″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66587°N 2.37307°W |
17th century | A house, later a shop, it was refaced in the 19th century. The shop is timber framed with brick infill, and has painted brick at the front with a dentilled eaves cornice, and a tile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. In the ground floor is a shop front, and a doorway with a segmental head to the right, in the upper floor are sash windows, and above is a flat-topped dormer.[24]
|
II | |
Farm buildings, Aston Hall 52°40′13″N 2°21′45″W / 52.67015°N 2.36250°W |
—
|
17th century | The farm buildings consist of barns, a byre, a hayloft and a coach house, some of which were added during the following centuries, forming an L-shaped plan. The earlier parts are | II |
Haughton Grange 52°40′30″N 2°22′53″W / 52.67512°N 2.38137°W |
17th century | The house was refaced and extended in the 19th century. It is | II | |
Stanton Cottages 52°39′56″N 2°20′24″W / 52.66566°N 2.34011°W |
—
|
17th century | A pair of | II |
The Wheatsheaf Public House 52°40′11″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66960°N 2.37306°W |
17th century | The public house is plinth, with refacing and extensions in brick, and a tile roof. There is one storey and an attic, three bays, and a single-bay rear wing. In the ground floor are three canted bay windows and a bow window, and above are three gabled eaves dormers. The doorway has a bracketed segmental hood.[28]
|
II | |
The former Unicorn Public House 52°39′55″N 2°22′21″W / 52.66522°N 2.37257°W |
17th century | The inn was refaced on the front in about 1800. It is timber framed, partly rendered, and has a tile roof. There are three storeys, an L-shaped plan, and a front of three bays. The doorway has a panelled architrave, a frieze and a cornice, and to the left is a vehicular entrance. The windows in the top floor are casements, in the middle bay they are blind, and the other windows are sashes.[29]
|
II | |
The White Harte Inn 52°40′15″N 2°22′20″W / 52.67084°N 2.37219°W |
17th century | The public house was later extended. It is | II | |
The Idsall Rooms 52°39′50″N 2°22′19″W / 52.66397°N 2.37199°W |
1699 | The house, later part of a hotel, is in red brick on a | II | |
Jerningham Arms Hotel 52°39′54″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66497°N 2.37272°W |
1705 | The hotel was refaced and extended in about 1800, and later converted into flats. It is moulded eaves cornice, and a tile roof with parapeted gable ends. The original part has five bays, the left two bays with two storeys and the others with three, and the extension recessed to the right has three storeys and four bays. In the ground floor of the original part are three canted bay windows, a vehicular entrance in the first bay, and in the fourth bay is a doorway with a moulded architrave, half-Tuscan pilasters, and a flat hood on fluted brackets. The other windows in the lower two floors are sashes, in the top floor they are top-hung casements, and in the extension are two plain doorways.[7][32]
|
II | |
Haughton Hall 52°40′21″N 2°23′02″W / 52.67245°N 2.38384°W |
1718 | A | II* | |
Aston Hall 52°40′10″N 2°21′44″W / 52.66957°N 2.36220°W |
c. 1710 | A moulded eaves cornice, a blocking course, and a two-span slate roof. There are three storeys, a front of seven bays, and a single-storey extension to the left. In the centre is a porch with Doric columns and pilasters carrying a half-architrave, a frieze, a cornice, and a blocking course. The windows are sashes with moulded architraves.[33][35]
|
II* | |
32 Church Street 52°39′53″N 2°22′28″W / 52.66484°N 2.37450°W |
—
|
Early 18th century | The house, which was later refaced, is in red brick on a red plinth, with dentilled eaves, and a tile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, a front of two bays, a long rear wing on the left, and a rear outshut on the right. The doorway has panelled jambs and a flat hood on corbelled blocks. The windows on the front are sashes, and in the left return the attic window is a horizontally-sliding sash.[36]
|
II |
22 Market Place 52°39′55″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66525°N 2.37290°W |
Early to mid 18th century | A house, later a shop, it is in red brick with a moulded eaves cornice, and a tile roof with parapeted gable ends. There is an L-shaped plan with a front block of two storeys and an attic and two bays, and a two-bay rear wing with two storeys. On the ground floor are two shop fronts, the windows are sashes, and there are two gabled eaves dormers.[37]
|
II | |
Grange Farmhouse 52°38′11″N 2°21′26″W / 52.63628°N 2.35709°W |
—
|
Mid 18th century | The farmhouse is in red brick with a bracketed | II |
Innage House 52°39′52″N 2°22′36″W / 52.66431°N 2.37674°W |
—
|
Mid 18th century | A red brick house on a moulded eaves cornice, and a hippedslate roof with globe finials at the ends. There are three storeys, and an L-shaped plan with a front of three bays. The doorway has Tuscan half-columns, a broken entablature, an open triangular pediment, an architrave, and a semicircular fanlight with Gothic tracery. The windows are sashes.[9][39]
|
II |
Rookery Farmhouse 52°38′23″N 2°20′08″W / 52.63985°N 2.33545°W |
—
|
18th century | The farmhouse is in red brick on a stone plinth, with bands, a dentilled eaves cornice, and a tile roof with parapeted gable ends. There are two storeys and attics, and an L-shaped plan with a front of three bays. The central doorway has panelled pilasters, a fanlight, a frieze, and a cornice. In the ground floor is a canted bay window, and the other windows are sashes with rendered architraves.[40]
|
II |
The Manor House 52°39′18″N 2°23′04″W / 52.65510°N 2.38453°W |
—
|
Mid 18th century | The house is in | II |
Hatton Grange, wall, gate and gatepiers 52°38′09″N 2°20′57″W / 52.63585°N 2.34921°W |
—
|
1764–68 | A country house designed by Thomas Farnolls Pritchard, and extended in 1897–98, it is in red brick with stone dressings, and has a hipped slate roof. The house consists of a main block with three storeys, fronts of seven and three bays, and quadrant walls linking to single-storey pavilions. The doorway has three-quarter Doric columns, a semicircular fanlight, a triglyph frieze, and an open triangular pediment. Most of the windows are sashes, there are two-storey canted bay windows, and in the pavilions are Venetian windows and lunettes. Attached to the house is a quadrant garden wall with wrought iron gates at the end, gate piers with globe finials, and an elaborate overthrow.[42][43] | II* |
25 and 27 Broadway 52°40′06″N 2°22′24″W / 52.66834°N 2.37324°W |
—
|
Mid to late 18th century | A pair of red brick houses with end | II |
43 Broadway 52°40′08″N 2°22′24″W / 52.66887°N 2.37326°W |
—
|
Mid to late 18th century | A red brick house with end moulded eaves cornice, and a tile roof with parapeted gable ends. There are three storeys, and an L-shaped plan with a front of two bays. The doorway has panelled pilasters, a frieze, and a triangular pediment, and to the left is a blocked doorway with a round head and a keystone. The windows are sashes with projecting keystones.[45]
|
II |
The Vicarage 52°39′51″N 2°22′33″W / 52.66415°N 2.37592°W |
Mid to late 18th century | The former vicarage, which is in moulded eaves cornice, and a hipped tile roof. There are three storeys and five bays, the middle bay projecting with rendered sill bands and a triangular pediment. The central doorcase has fluted three-quarter Doric columns, a broken entablature with a triglyph frieze, and an open triangular pediment, and the doorway has an architrave and a semicircular fanlight with Gothic tracery. This is flanked by round-headed side lights, and the other windows are sashes.[9][46]
|
II | |
No. 2 Manor Cottages and Wall 52°39′18″N 2°23′05″W / 52.65501°N 2.38478°W |
—
|
Late 18th century | A red brick house that has a tile roof with parapeted gable ends. There are two storeys and three bays. In the upper floor are three sash windows, and the ground floor contains a lean-to porch, a doorway and a mullioned and transomed window, both with segmental heads, and a casement window. The wall to the north is in sandstone and red brick with chamfered stone coping; it is about 25 metres (82 ft) long and about 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) high.[47] | II |
No. 3 Manor Cottages 52°39′19″N 2°23′04″W / 52.65524°N 2.38458°W |
—
|
Late 18th century | A red brick house with a dentilled eaves cornice and a tile roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows in the upper floor are sashes, and in the ground floor they are mullioned and transomed, and all have segmental heads.[48] | II |
2 Market Place 52°39′57″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66587°N 2.37299°W |
Late 18th century | A house, later a shop, in red brick with a | II | |
2A Market Place 52°39′57″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66595°N 2.37304°W |
Late 18th century | A house, later a shop, in red brick with a tile roof. There are two storeys and two | II | |
4 Market Place 52°39′57″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66578°N 2.37296°W |
Late 18th century | A house, later a shop, in moulded eaves cornice and a tile roof. There are three storeys and three bays. The right two bays contain shop windows in the ground floor and sash windows above. In the left bay is a large two-storey canted bay window. In the ground floor are Doric pilasters and an entablature. Between the pilasters is a central doorway and flanking windows, all with round heads, moulded architraves, imposts, and scrolled keystones.[51]
|
II | |
16, 18A and 18B Market Place 52°39′55″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66540°N 2.37289°W |
Late 18th century | Originally two houses, later three shops and a flat, the building is in red brick with a dentilled eaves cornice and a tile roof. There are three storeys and three bays. In the ground floor are three 20th-century shop fronts, and above are sash windows.[52] | II | |
Chest tomb 52°39′52″N 2°22′32″W / 52.66443°N 2.37561°W |
—
|
Late 18th century | The chest tomb is in the churchyard of St Andrew's Church. It is in stone, and has a | II |
Drayton Lodge Farmhouse and Former Coach House 52°41′03″N 2°21′36″W / 52.68412°N 2.36006°W |
—
|
Late 18th century | The farmhouse is in red brick on a stone moulded eaves cornice and a hipped slate roof. There are three storeys and three bays. In the centre is a former half-octagonal porch, and the windows are sashes. The former coach houses, recessed to the left, is in red brick with a hipped tile roof, two storeys, and a recessed blind round arch containing a semicicular window.[54]
|
II |
Hem Manor Farmhouse and Screen Wall 52°38′55″N 2°24′24″W / 52.64870°N 2.40673°W |
—
|
Late 18th century | The farmhouse is in red brick, rendered at the right end, with a dentilled eaves cornice and a tile roof. There is an L-shaped plan, the main block with three storeys and three bays, a two-storey rear wing, and a single-storey lean-to on the left. The windows are sashes, and the gabled porch has a double-chamfered round arch. To the right is a screen wall containing a blocked segmental arch, and a blocked gateway with a triangular pediment, flanked by square piers with globe finials.[55] | II |
Cosford Bridge 52°38′19″N 2°19′33″W / 52.63861°N 2.32585°W |
c.1780 | The bridge carries a road over the | II | |
Former Coach House and Stable Block North of Manor Cottages 52°39′19″N 2°23′06″W / 52.65534°N 2.38492°W |
—
|
c. 1800 | The former coach house and stable block are in red brick with a hipped tile roof. There are two storeys and six bays. Along the front is a blind arcade with an impost band and smaller recessed arches in the tympana. There are various doorways and a segmental-headed window in the front, and in the left end is a sash window and a loft window.[57] | II |
28 and 30 Church Street 52°39′54″N 2°22′27″W / 52.66489°N 2.37426°W |
—
|
Late 18th or early 19th century | A pair of red brick cottages with dentilled eaves and a tile roof. There are two storeys and each cottage has two bays. In each cottage is a central doorway with reeded pilasters and a flat hood, and between the cottages is a passageway with a segmental arch. The windows are sashes.[58] | II |
Decker Hill and Courtyard 52°41′04″N 2°22′08″W / 52.68433°N 2.36901°W |
c. 1810 | A country house, later a golf clubhouse, it is stuccoed with a floor band, a frieze, an eaves cornice on paired brackets, and a hipped slate roof. There are two storeys, an entrance front at the east of five bays, a south front of six bays, and a north front of three bays. The middle bay of the east front is recessed and has a pair of giant Ionic columns in Grinshill sandstone, and a doorway with a reeded architrave and a radial segmental fanlight. Flanking the outer bays are reeded pilaster strips. In the north front is a three-storey bow window and a two-storey canted bay window, and the other windows are sashes. To the east is an entrance courtyard that has low stone walls with urns, and gate piers with cornices.[33][59] | II | |
North Lodge, Decker Hill 52°41′14″N 2°21′46″W / 52.68729°N 2.36264°W |
c. 1810 | The lodge is in painted | II | |
Gate, gatepiers and railings, Decker Hill 52°41′14″N 2°21′46″W / 52.68717°N 2.36264°W |
c. 1810 | The gates, gate piers and railings at the entrance to the drive are in wrought iron. The piers contain latticework, and have cast iron caps and globe finials. There is a single gate, and the flanking railings have a curved plan.[61] | II | |
South Lodge, Decker Hill 52°40′52″N 2°22′02″W / 52.68116°N 2.36728°W |
c. 1810 | The lodge is in | II | |
Temple, Decker Hill 52°41′06″N 2°22′33″W / 52.68502°N 2.37583°W |
—
|
c. 1810 | The temple on the grounds of the house is in sandstone, it has a circular plan, and is in Neoclassical style. On the southeast side is a colonnade with three unfluted Doric columns carrying an entablature, and it has a domed roof.[63][64] | II |
Former Workhouse 52°39′44″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66210°N 2.37272°W |
1817 | The former | II | |
Brook House 52°39′57″N 2°22′23″W / 52.66586°N 2.37316°W |
Early 19th century | A brick house with a Welsh | II | |
Drayton Lodge 52°41′03″N 2°21′35″W / 52.68410°N 2.35983°W |
—
|
Early 19th century | A red brick house with a | II |
Evelith Manor 52°38′30″N 2°22′17″W / 52.64159°N 2.37137°W |
—
|
Early 19th century | A plinth, with a band, a cornice, a blocking course, and a hipped slate roof. In the centre is a projecting portico with paired Greek Doric columns, and an entablature. The windows are sashes with architraves, and at the southwest corner is an Italianate belvedere.[68]
|
II |
Evelith Millhouse 52°38′34″N 2°22′51″W / 52.64285°N 2.38079°W |
Early 19th century | A red brick house with giant end lintels.[69]
|
II | |
Oldforge Bridge 52°37′40″N 2°21′58″W / 52.62780°N 2.36620°W |
Early 19th century | A | II | |
Gate, gate piers and railings, The Manor House 52°39′18″N 2°23′05″W / 52.65503°N 2.38469°W |
—
|
Early 19th century | The gate, gate piers and railings are in wrought iron. In the centre is the gate, which is flanked by openwork gate piers with a square section and surmounted by urn finials, and outside these are plain railings.[71] | II |
Former Mill and Ancillary Buildings, Hem Farm 52°39′00″N 2°24′01″W / 52.65005°N 2.40027°W |
—
|
c. 1829 | The former | II |
7 and 9 Victoria Road 52°39′59″N 2°22′26″W / 52.66629°N 2.37381°W |
—
|
c. 1830 | A pair of houses, later offices, in red brick with end lintels, and the basement areas are enclosed by railings.[73]
|
II |
7 Shrewsbury Road 52°40′03″N 2°22′28″W / 52.66752°N 2.37435°W |
—
|
1830 | A red brick house with a dentilled eaves cornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys, and an L-shaped plan with a two-bay front and a rear wing. Steps lead up to a central doorway with pilaster strips and a triangular pediment, and the windows are sashes.[74] | II |
The Terrace, water tower and wall 52°39′14″N 2°22′07″W / 52.65393°N 2.36858°W |
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|
c. 1835 | The house and water tower are in red brick with | II |
Lloyd's Bank 52°39′54″N 2°22′21″W / 52.66490°N 2.37239°W |
c. 1840 | The bank, which is in string course, a first-floor cornice, a bracketed eaves cornice, and twin triangular pedimented gable ends. There are two storeys, and an entrance front of five bays, the middle bay projecting, with rounded corners and pilasters containing wreaths and lion masks. In the centre is a round-headed doorway with a keystone, and above and in the outer parts are round-headed windows, those in the upper floor blind. The outer bays contain sash windows with channelled voussoirs and projecting keystones.[7][76]
|
II | |
North View 52°40′03″N 2°22′22″W / 52.66758°N 2.37274°W |
—
|
c. 1840 | A house, later flats, in red brick on a | II |
Park House Hotel 52°39′49″N 2°22′20″W / 52.66353°N 2.37228°W |
c. 1840 | A house in | II | |
The Uplands 52°39′31″N 2°22′11″W / 52.65872°N 2.36964°W |
—
|
c. 1840 | A stuccoed house in Tudor style with scalloped eaves boards and a hipped slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays, the right bay projecting with canted sides. The windows are cross-windows with mullions and transoms, four-centred arched lights, and hood moulds. In the centre is a canted porch with a cornice, a coped parapet, and a four-centred arched head.[79] | II |
Victoria House 52°39′59″N 2°22′25″W / 52.66626°N 2.37363°W |
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|
c. 1840 | A red brick house with a | II |
Evelith Mill 52°38′34″N 2°22′51″W / 52.64283°N 2.38078°W |
Mid 19th century | A former watermill, it is in brown brick with a dentilled eaves cornice and a tile roof. There are two storeys, a basement and an attic, a main block with three bays, a single storey block with a basement, and a cart shed to the left, and to the right is a linking block to Evelith Mill House. The windows have round-arched heads, there is a gabled half-dormer hoist, a loft door in the middle floor, and five steps lead up to a doorway on the left.[81] | II | |
Evelith Manor Lodge and gatepiers 52°38′36″N 2°22′01″W / 52.64334°N 2.36681°W |
Mid 19th century | The entrance lodge is quoins, a frieze, and a hipped slate roof. There is one storey and three bays. In the centre is a porch with Tuscan columns and pilasters, a frieze, and a doorway with an architrave. The windows are mullioned. The stone gate piers have a square plan, and each has arched panels, a cornice, tiled copings, and globe finials.[82]
|
II | |
Sewer ventilation pipe 52°39′59″N 2°22′31″W / 52.66645°N 2.37524°W |
19th century | The ventilation pipe is in | II | |
Water Tower north of Aston Hall 52°40′12″N 2°21′45″W / 52.66993°N 2.36246°W |
—
|
Mid 19th century | The water tower is in brown brick on a | II |
Wall and Dovecote, Hatton Grange 52°38′09″N 2°20′56″W / 52.63584°N 2.34881°W |
—
|
Late 19th century | The wall is in red brick with ramped stone coping and four buttresses, and is about 20 metres (66 ft) long. The dovecote is in Gothic style, built in red brick, and has a pyramidal tile roof. There is a square plan, two storeys, a dentilled eaves cornice, a cupola, and a pyramidal lead cap. It contains a doorway, and arched windows in the upper floor.[85] | II |
Timlet Lodge, walls and gate 52°40′00″N 2°19′48″W / 52.66659°N 2.32997°W |
c. 1904 | The entrance lodge to Ruckley Grange, designed by balustraded wall, and to the south is an oak garden gate.[86]
|
II |
References
Citations
- ^ Historic England
- ^ Newman & Pevsner (2006), pp. 502–505
- ^ Historic England & 1367657
- ^ Historic England & 1053660
- ^ Historic England & 1053661
- ^ Historic England & 1367655
- ^ a b c d e f g Newman & Pevsner (2006), p. 506
- ^ Historic England & 1367633
- ^ a b c d Newman & Pevsner (2006), p. 505
- ^ Historic England & 1053633
- ^ Historic England & 1367658
- ^ Historic England & 1053623
- ^ Historic England & 1176324
- ^ Historic England & 1176363
- ^ Historic England & 1053634
- ^ Historic England & 1053654
- ^ Historic England & 1307988
- ^ Historic England & 1367634
- ^ Historic England & 1367656
- ^ Historic England & 1176337
- ^ Historic England & 1307939
- ^ Historic England & 1053630
- ^ Historic England & 1053619
- ^ Historic England & 1053622
- ^ Historic England & 1176103
- ^ Historic England & 1367619
- ^ Historic England & 1367623
- ^ Historic England & 1053621
- ^ Historic England & 1367621
- ^ Historic England & 1053627
- ^ Historic England & 1053637
- ^ Historic England & 1176378
- ^ a b c Newman & Pevsner (2006), p. 507
- ^ Historic England & 1176282
- ^ Historic England & 1308059
- ^ Historic England & 1278002
- ^ Historic England & 1053635
- ^ Historic England & 1176085
- ^ Historic England & 1053625
- ^ Historic England & 1307926
- ^ Historic England & 1176147
- ^ Newman & Pevsner (2006), pp. 284–285
- ^ Historic England & 1053650
- ^ Historic England & 1367654
- ^ Historic England & 1053620
- ^ Historic England & 1176273
- ^ Historic England & 1053659
- ^ Historic England & 1176158
- ^ Historic England & 1176333
- ^ Historic England & 1053631
- ^ Historic England & 1053632
- ^ Historic England & 1307942
- ^ Historic England & 1053624
- ^ Historic England & 1308004
- ^ Historic England & 1053652
- ^ Historic England & 1053663
- ^ Historic England & 1176174
- ^ Historic England & 1278027
- ^ Historic England & 1176128
- ^ Historic England & 1053655
- ^ Historic England & 1053656
- ^ Historic England & 1308033
- ^ Newman & Pevsner (2006), p. 508
- ^ Historic England & 1053657
- ^ Historic England & 1367622
- ^ Historic England & 1248197
- ^ Historic England & 1053658
- ^ Historic England & 1367620
- ^ Historic England & 1053626
- ^ Historic England & 1176312
- ^ Historic England & 1367632
- ^ Historic England & 1176076
- ^ Historic England & 1053639
- ^ Historic England & 1053638
- ^ Historic England & 1053636
- ^ Historic England & 1176372
- ^ Historic England & 1307993
- ^ Historic England & 1307918
- ^ Historic England & 1053628
- ^ Historic England & 1176412
- ^ Historic England & 1307947
- ^ Historic England & 1176309
- ^ Historic England & 1484878
- ^ Historic England & 1053653
- ^ Historic England & 1053651
- ^ Historic England & 1307916
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- Newman, John; ISBN 0-300-12083-4