Caldwell Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Wychavon local planning authority area, England. First listed on 26 June 1985. House. 8 related planning applications.

Caldwell Hall

WRENN ID
scattered-cupola-linden
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Wychavon
Country
England
Date first listed
26 June 1985
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Caldwell Hall is a house, likely dating from around 1668, with alterations made in the early 19th century and the 1920s. It has a timber-frame structure now clad in brick, covered by a half-hipped tile roof. The building is arranged in a "T" shape, with a large chimney stack at the junction of the wings. This stack has three engaged shafts; two are shaped like six-pointed stars, and the central one is diamond-shaped. An early 19th-century kitchen was added at the foot of the “T” (the north end).

The west front of the house is mainly two stories high, with a single-story section to the left, featuring a 1920s hipped dormer in a catslide roof above a three-light casement window. The window arrangement is irregular, with a four-light casement to the left and two two-light casements to the right, all with segmental heads. The main entrance is located to the left of the centre and is sheltered by a tiled canopy and a glazed door.

Inside, the roof features V-struts above the collar and queen struts below. The hall has a beam with an ovolo moulding, and doors on the upper floors have triangular tops. A graffito on the lintel of a fireplace in the cross-wing reads "AD 1668", and the same date is inscribed on a sandstone jamb.

Detailed Attributes

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