Upper Long Bottom Farm Cottage Upper Long Bottom Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Calderdale local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 July 1988. Farmhouse.

Upper Long Bottom Farm Cottage Upper Long Bottom Farmhouse

WRENN ID
dim-paling-jay
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Calderdale
Country
England
Date first listed
19 July 1988
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Upper Long Bottom Farmhouse and Tipper Long Bottom Farm Cottage are a farmhouse, now divided into two dwellings, likely dating from the mid 17th century, with significant alterations in the late 18th century and subdivision in the 19th century. The building is constructed of coursed squared stone with a stone slate roof. It is two storeys high and comprises a main range of three bays and a crosswing to the left.

The east-facing (garden) front of the main range has a 20th-century glazed door within a plain stone surround, set within a 20th-century gabled porch which incorporates a reset lintel dated "1 1641 L". Flanking the door are flat-faced mullion windows with plain stone surrounds: four lights on each floor to the left and five lights to the right. Bay 3 has a four-light double-chamfered mullion window flanked by single lights to the ground floor, and a five-light single-chamfered mullion window above, all with round-arched lights and sunk spandrels. Moulded gutter brackets are present. Stacks are located at the left end and on the ridge between bays 2 and 3. The crosswing projects slightly and has quoins on the left side. A door, converted to a window and featuring a deep lintel and tiestones, is on the right side of the crosswing. A two-light chamfered mullion window is situated centrally on the first floor. Inturned kneelers and moulded coping appear on the gable.

The rear of the main range has a 20th-century gabled porch flanked by four-light flat-faced mullion windows, with a similar five-light and two-light window above. To the left, a doorway with a plain stone surround is accompanied by a window on each floor. A later 19th-century addition projects to the left. Plain gutter brackets are visible. The crosswing presents a two-light chamfered mullion window to the ground floor on the left and a similar window on the first floor, centrally, with an inserted two-light window on the left.

The left return (crosswing) has 19th-century doorways at each end. The ground floor features chamfered mullion windows with mason’s marks of three, two, and three lights; the three-light window has an inserted 19th-century two-light window to the left. On the first floor, there are two square lights.

Inside the crosswing, a stone partition wall is surmounted by a wattle and daub wall within the roof space. Two king-post roof trusses are present, with V-struts; the tiebeam of one is chamfered and the other is cambered.

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