52, 54 AND 56, HAGUE STREET is a Grade II listed building in the High Peak local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 January 1978. Public house and houses.

52, 54 AND 56, HAGUE STREET

WRENN ID
winding-lantern-sedge
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
High Peak
Country
England
Date first listed
27 January 1978
Type
Public house and houses
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · EPC · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Nos. 52, 54, and 56 Hague Street is a public house and two houses, now converted into three houses, dating from the mid-18th century with 20th-century alterations and additions. The building is constructed of coursed mill stone grit, which is narrower at No. 52, and features tooled ashlar dressings, stone slate roofs, and three stone stacks with watertabling.

The exterior is two storeys high with a basement at No. 52. No. 52 has a single window front with a two-light flush mullion window on each floor, originally a four-light window, with wooden casements. To the right, there is a 20th-century lean-to porch with a 20th-century door beneath a square-headed lintel. The basement features a three-light mullioned window, which is blocked in the centre. The left return has two parallel gable ends with a blocked window and doorway at ground level. The basement has two central entrances, one with a banded surround and a planked door, and to the left, there is a 16-pane window in a narrow surround.

No. 54 has a single window front with a top-opening cross casement and a 20th-century door in a squared surround to the left. Above, there is a three-light mullion window at eaves level. No. 56 also has a single window front with a 20th-century door in a flush ashlar surround and a top-opening cross casement to the right. Above, there is a two-light mullion window at eaves level, both featuring 20th-century diamond leaded casements. The right return has a single light window with a timber lintel and above it, a two-light mullion window.

The interior has not been inspected. No. 52 was originally known as The Seven Stars Public House.

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