Rose and Crown Cottage and outbuildings is a Grade II listed building in the Bassetlaw local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 November 1984. Cottage.

Rose and Crown Cottage and outbuildings

WRENN ID
western-turret-laurel
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bassetlaw
Country
England
Date first listed
27 November 1984
Type
Cottage
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Rose and Crown Cottage and its outbuildings are a cottage, formerly a public house, dating to the mid-17th century, with additions from 1790 and 20th-century alterations. The construction is of coursed rubble, with timber frame and brick sections, and a pantile roof featuring two gable stacks and a single ridge stack made of brick.

The south front, representing the original 17th-century construction, is two storeys high with three bays, and is adjoined to the right by a later 18th-century two-bay brick extension. A central doorway has a wooden door and simple surround. Above the doorway is an ashlar plaque inscribed “I. Fox 1790.” Flanking this are single glazing-bar Yorkshire sash windows. All ground-floor openings are topped with brick heads. Above the ground floor are three Yorkshire sash windows, the two on the left having glazing bars. The brick extension features dogtooth eaves and a doorway with a wooden stable door and plain surround, accompanied by a Yorkshire sash window, both set under segmental arches. A single glazing-bar Yorkshire sash window sits above. Two tie plates are visible. Above one ground floor window is a chain and bracket used for lowering barrels to the cellar.

To the right of the cottage is a taller, two-storey barn extension, partially incorporated into the main house. This section has two glazing-bar Yorkshire sashes and a single blocked arched doorway now containing double wooden doors. Above is a single glazing-bar Yorkshire sash window. A further barn extension projects from this, with a single ridge stack and dentillated eaves. It is two storeys high with eight bays, featuring a single arched entrance, a slatted opening with overlight, stone-coped steps, a single doorway, a similar slatted opening, a single blocked arch containing a double door, a single doorway, and a single glazing-bar Yorkshire sash window. Above is a single glazing-bar Yorkshire sash window, with a single doorway and a fixed light to the right. The north front of the cottage is rendered and painted, decorated with mock timber framing. The attached range of outbuildings is also painted.

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