107-113, MAIN STREET is a Grade II listed building in the Rotherham local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 August 1985. House.

107-113, MAIN STREET

WRENN ID
rooted-oriel-curlew
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Rotherham
Country
England
Date first listed
21 August 1985
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Nos 107-113 on Main Street is a group of houses with a shop, dating partly from the 17th and 18th centuries, with extensive alterations and additions from the early 19th century. The buildings are roughcast with ashlar sandstone dressings and have stone slate roofs. They form an irregular L-shaped group and are two storeys high, featuring six first-floor windows on the roadside front.

The taller 19th-century block on the front left has a panelled door in a square-faced surround to the right of a large inserted shop window. Above the door is a weathered plaque inscribed '------- / BOOT-SHOE / MAKER'. To the right of the door is a small window, and beyond that is a sash window with glazing bars. The first floor has three unequally-hung 9-pane sashes, all in square-faced surrounds. The lower two-storey section to the right has two windows on each floor beneath a gable, with all windows being sashes with glazing bars in square-faced surrounds. To the right, there are remains of a mullioned window surround that now has a casement, with another casement above it.

The 19th-century part features a hipped roof with a rendered end stack to the left, a brick end stack on the adjoining front gable, and additional stacks set back between. The rear of the 19th-century section has all openings in square-faced surrounds, including a corniced doorway to the left that is now a window, and another doorway to the right within a rustic wood porch. There is a large sash window with glazing bars to the right of each door. The first floor has four windows: three are unequally-hung 9-pane sashes, with one replaced by a casement. The adjoining return of the wing has chamfered quoins to the left, a panelled door with an overlight in an added stone porch, and sashes in the outer bays with thick glazing bars. The first floor has a blind, narrow window over the door, a window to the left matching the ground floor, and windows to the right with lowered sills, featuring sashes with thinner glazing bars. The left end stack has a ridge stack to the right of the door.

Inside, the building is irregularly subdivided. The early 19th-century part has some reeded architraves and a contemporary staircase now used by the house at the rear. The first-floor room behind the roadside gable has 18th-century panelled shutters, with matching wall panelling that is said to be covered over. Previous descriptions mention the name 'PARKINSON' on the plaque above the door.

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