Gringley Vicarage And Boundary Wall is a Grade II listed building in the Bassetlaw local planning authority area, England. First listed on 23 November 1984. Vicarage. 1 related planning application.
Gringley Vicarage And Boundary Wall
- WRENN ID
- haunted-rood-meadow
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bassetlaw
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 23 November 1984
- Type
- Vicarage
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Gringley Vicarage is a house dating back to approximately 1837, built for the Reverend H. N. Beaver. It is constructed of gault brick with details in red brick, stone, and stucco, and has a hipped slate roof with two chimney stacks. The building is two storeys high and has a square plan with three bays. A central moulded doorcase, featuring an entablature and moulded hood, contains a 19th-century half-glazed door with margin lights. Flanking this are single brick bays, added around 1915 and with slate roofs, each containing five glazing bar sashes. Above, three glazing bar sashes are set within rendered lintels. A 19th-century brick extension is located on the left side, one storey high and one bay wide, with a slate roof and glazing bar sashes on both floors. A 20th-century four-light casement window is on the right side, with a glazing bar sash above. The rear of the house features irregular 19th-century window placement. A boundary wall, constructed of gault brick with red brick patterning and cross-shaped openings, surrounds the property. It is topped with a terra-cotta coping and includes three square piers with square stone caps, and a pair of square gate piers with recessed panels and pyramidal stone caps. A section approximately 20 metres long, situated to the north of the gateway, is similar but rendered.
Detailed Attributes
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