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House, still in use, built in the late 17th century with later alterations. At some time it was in use as a pub with a beer cellar. It is a two-storey and cellar, three-bay, rectangular-plan house with its gable to the harbour. The building is harled with ashlar margins and chamfered arrises, and the grey slate roof has coped gablehead stacks with cans and ashlar-coped skews with moulded skewputts. The south elevation is part-obscured at the ground by communal steps and a pathway rising to the west. There are three small irregularly-disposed windows at the ground and regular fenestration at the first floor with two later catslide dormer windows above. The east gabled elevation has a window to the outer north at each floor. The north entrance elevation has a door on the return to the east of a later, single-storey addition, projecting at the east of the ground floor. Above is a single, central window, possibly a stair window.
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