Details |
House, still in use, built in the late 18th century with later additions. It is a traditional two-storey, harled house, with painted ashlar margins and deep-set windows. The west (principal) elevation has bays grouped to left. The ground floor has a central panelled timber door, with windows in flanking bays. There are two first floor windows (that to right off-set) breaking the eaves into dormerheads. A high curved wall with two pall stones abuts at the north, with a further lower wall beyond. The north elevation is a blank gable, obscured at the ground by a later addition. The replacement timber sash and case windows have a four-pane glazing pattern. The roof is of graded grey slates, and there are red brick gablehead stacks with cans, and deep ashlar-coped skews with remains of scroll skewputt to the north.
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