61,63 AND 65, HIGH STREET is a Grade II listed building in the South Kesteven local planning authority area, England. House, altered houses. 22 related planning applications.

61,63 AND 65, HIGH STREET

WRENN ID
fallow-copper-wagtail
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
South Kesteven
Country
England
Type
House, altered houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Three houses, dating from about 1700, were altered in the 18th century and remodelled in the 1830s, with later 20th-century alterations. The houses are built of brick with ashlar dressings and have a pantile roof. They feature external brick gable stacks and a ridge stack, with octagonal brick flues on moulded stone bases. A rendered plinth, dentillated eaves, and coped gables with kneelers are also present. The houses are of single-storey plus attic design, with a three-window front. Ground floor windows are fitted with leaded glazing. There are three gabled through-eaves dormers, rendered and with glazing from the mid-19th century and 20th century. To the right of the façade are two chamfered Tudor-arched doorways, one with a wooden door, flanked to the left by a three-light stone mullioned window, all set under a common cornice. Further to the right is a matching window, and to the left, a two-light window, both with cornices. Each gable has a single attic window, that to the left being set within a stone surround. The building is thought to be one of those altered between 1790 and 1820 by George de Ligne Gregory and remodelled in a picturesque style between 1820 and 1840 by Gregory Gregory, successive Lords of the Manor of Harlaxton. The houses have stop-chamfered spine beams with run-out stops.

Detailed Attributes

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