Yorkshire is a Grade II listed building in the Doncaster local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 June 1968. House. 1 related planning application.
Yorkshire
- WRENN ID
- south-minaret-thyme
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Doncaster
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 5 June 1968
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a late 18th-century house with a later addition, located in Bawtry. The house is constructed of red brick in a Flemish bond pattern, topped with a pantile roof. It has three storeys and originally comprised three bays, with a wing extending to the rear left and a two-storey addition in the rear-right angle. A rendered plinth runs along the base. The central entrance features a six-panel door with an overlight with intersecting tracery glazing bars, set within a wooden doorcase. The doorcase is embellished with fluted Doric pilasters, a fluted frieze with oval paterae, and a dentilled pediment. The outer bays on the front elevation and the first floor windows have projecting stone sills to sash windows with glazing bars, each set beneath a rubbed-brick flat arch. The first-floor windows have flush wooden architraves. The second-floor windows are casements within surrounds that match the style of the first-floor windows. A modillioned eaves runs along the hipped roof, with a chimney stack to the rear. A canted bay window, one storey high, is located on the right return, featuring projecting sills to sashes of 8, 12, and 8 panes, beneath a fluted frieze with rosettes and a dentilled cornice. Inside, a simple staircase has turned balusters to a ramped handrail, with a turned bottom newel. A ground-floor room on the left contains a plain marble fireplace with an iron firebasket.
Detailed Attributes
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