Stockwell End House And Attached Outbuilding And Wall is a Grade II listed building in the Wolverhampton local planning authority area, England. First listed on 3 February 1977. House.

Stockwell End House And Attached Outbuilding And Wall

WRENN ID
dim-panel-heron
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Wolverhampton
Country
England
Date first listed
3 February 1977
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Stockwell End House, along with its attached outbuilding and wall, is a house that likely dates from the late 16th century, with additions made in the 1890s. The house features roughcast over a timber frame, while the later additions are constructed of brick and roughcast with ashlar dressings and timber framing. The property has a tile roof with brick stacks and stands two storeys high.

The house has a two-window range with a gable on the left side, and a three-window later range on the right that includes a projecting canted bay window with a gable above and an octagonal turret at the end. The earlier section has 19th-century projecting small-paned casements and a leaded casement window in the first-floor gable. The entrance is elliptical-headed with a recessed half-glazed door. The later range features brick cornices on both floors, with a roughcast first floor and brick quoins on the turret. The ground floor includes a 2:6:2-light mullioned and transomed window with leaded glazing and stained glass panels, along with another casement window with leaded glazing. The turret has cusped and transomed windows, all with leaded glazing, and the first floor has additional casement windows and small windows with cornices. The turret is topped with a weathervane.

The left return of the house has small casements and a lateral stack, while the right return features a projecting lateral stack with weathering above the ingle. The rear of the house has a large stair window.

Inside, the property has timber-framed interior walls and large fireplaces, including one on the first floor with flanking panelled cupboards. The later section includes a staircase with turned balusters, a glazed landing screen, and an oriel. The fireplace in the front room features a large opening with twisted timber Ionic columns, which are said to have come from Wrottesley Park.

Additionally, there is a 17th-century outbuilding that has some dressed stone on the front and return, with the stone on the return continuing as a boundary wall for 27 meters along Lothians Road to the corner.

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