Tankerville Arms Public House is a Grade II listed building in the Northumberland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 August 1987. Public house. 5 related planning applications.
Tankerville Arms Public House
- WRENN ID
- weathered-hammer-starling
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Northumberland
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 25 August 1987
- Type
- Public house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Tankerville Arms public house and number 17 form a combined building dating to approximately 1830-40, with elements of earlier 18th-century fabric incorporated. The Tankerville Arms section is constructed of squared stone with tooled dressings, while number 17 is of coursed rubble with tooled-and-margined dressings. Both have Welsh slate roofs.
The front of the Tankerville Arms has four bays, featuring a central porch with a moulded cornice and blocking course, containing a six-panel door with a two-pane overlight. Four-pane sash windows are set within raised surrounds with extended ends to the lintels, sills, and mid blocks. Number 17, to the right, has two wide bays. A six-panel door with a two-pane overlight, now within a 20th-century half-glazed porch, is positioned slightly right of centre, with four-pane sash windows in alternating-block surrounds with slightly-projecting sills. Coped gables and stepped-and-banded end and ridge stacks are present.
The rear elevation reveals an early 19th-century wing on the far right and a lateral stack with an octagonal shaft and flared, moulded cornice to the left.
Modifications to the Tankerville Arms at the east end, including a single-storey section, a timber extension to the rear, and a porch and rear extension to number 17, are not considered to be of special architectural interest.
Detailed Attributes
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