Wolfhampcote Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Rugby local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 October 1960. House, farmhouse.

Wolfhampcote Hall

WRENN ID
slow-hearth-cedar
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Rugby
Country
England
Date first listed
6 October 1960
Type
House, farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Wolfhampcote Hall is a house that has been converted into a farmhouse. It dates from the 17th century, with alterations and some rebuilding in the 18th century and further changes in the 19th century. The front of the building is made of red brick in Flemish bond with flared headers and features a brick dentil cornice. The rear is constructed from squared coursed sandstone and ironstone, topped with a 19th-century tile roof. The gabled wings have stone coped gable parapets and finials, with the left gable displaying brick tumbling. There are old brick lateral stacks. The building is designed in an H-plan, with two storeys and an attic, and has a three-window range. A conservatory is located between the wings.

Inside, there is a 19th-century half-glazed moulded six-panelled door flanked by painted wood Doric pilasters and an entablature. Sash windows are present throughout the building. The wings feature canted bays with moulded cornices. The first floor has a tripartite sash window on the left and a similar late 20th-century top-hung sash on the right, along with attic sashes and brick segmental arches. A central hipped roof dormer contains a two-light casement with glazing bars. At the rear, there is an entrance in a 20th-century addition to the right, with mostly 20th-century casements. A blocked three-light hollow-chamfered mullioned window is located on the right side of the first floor, and the gables have horizontal sashes. The interior features a hall with an early to mid-19th-century staircase that has iron stick balusters, and the room to the left includes fielded panelling.

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