Welltrough Hall Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Cheshire East local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 July 1952. Farmhouse.

Welltrough Hall Farmhouse

WRENN ID
rough-beam-nightshade
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheshire East
Country
England
Date first listed
25 July 1952
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Welltrough Hall Farmhouse is a farmhouse dating from the early to mid-17th century, with 19th-century refacing on the ground floor and various additions and alterations. It is constructed of red English garden wall bond brick with timber framing on the first floor, featuring rendered and whitewashed infill, and has a stone slate roof. The building is two storeys high.

The entrance front includes a stone plinth that runs along the entire structure. To the right, there is a gabled projecting wing with a five-light 19th-century casement window on the ground floor. The first floor features a slight overhang that is consistent throughout the building, with an ovolo moulding along the lower edge. The decorative framing consists of seven by two cells with chevron strutting on the sides, and a three-light casement window in the center with plain panels below. The gable has small framing.

To the left is the main range, which includes a two-storey porch in the re-entrant angle, with its roof continuing from the main range. There is a 20th-century outshut in front of this. The first floor has three panels of chevron strutting, while the ground floor has two and five-light casement windows to the left, and two four-light casements on the first floor set in thirteen by two cells of small framing, with the upper row being plain and the lower one chevron strutted.

The left gable end features a four-light casement window on the ground floor and middle-railed close studding on the first floor with another four-light casement window. The gable overhangs, with a moulded lower edge to the bressumer and close studding on the gable. There is a 19th-century outshut to the right.

On the right side, some close studding is visible on the first floor. The rear has middle-railed close studding on the right of the first floor, while the rest consists of 19th-century brick extensions and simulated close studding. Inside, there are stop-chamfered ceiling beams in one ground-floor room, and a lower half of a roof truss in one first-floor room shows a cambered tie-beam with arched braces.

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