Survey Data

Reg No

12310026


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Social


Original Use

Presbytery/parochial/curate's house


In Use As

Presbytery/parochial/curate's house


Date

1890 - 1910


Coordinates

262678, 153358


Date Recorded

17/05/2004


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Detached three-bay two-storey parochial house, c.1900, with single-bay single-storey projecting porch to centre ground floor having flanking canted bay windows. Hipped slate roof (hipped to porch) with clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stacks, and cast-iron rainwater goods on rendered stepped eaves. Painted roughcast walls with painted rendered strips to corners. Square-headed window openings (including to canted bay windows) with painted cut-stone sills, and one-over-one timber sash windows. Square-headed door opening with timber panelled door. Interior with timber panelled shutters to window openings. Set back from road in own grounds on an elevated site with landscaped grounds to site having random rubble stone boundary wall to perimeter with squared limestone 'battlemented' coping. (ii) Detached two-bay two-storey outbuilding, c.1900, to north with square-headed carriageway to left ground floor, single-bay single-storey mono-pitched projecting bay to right, and two-bay single-storey mono-pitched wing to left. Part reroofed. Pitched slate roof with clay ridge tiles, red brick Running bond chimney stack, and cast-iron rainwater goods on rendered eaves. Mono-pitched roofs with replacement corrugated-iron, and cast-iron rainwater goods. Unpainted roughcast walls over random rubble stone construction. Square-headed window opening with no sill, and timber casement window. Square-headed door openings (including one to right first floor) with timber boarded doors. Square-headed carriageway to left ground floor with timber boarded double doors.

Appraisal

A well-composed middle-size parochial house forming part of a self-contained group alongside the nearby Catholic church (12310025/KK-20-10-25) with the resulting ensemble presenting an appealing feature in the townscape. Having been reasonably well maintained the original composition attributes remain in place together with substantial quantities of the historic fabric both to the exterior and to the interior, thereby contributing significantly to the character of the site. The survival of a contemporary outbuilding of some rustic quality further enhances the group and setting values of the site in the locality.