Hill House (Including Doctor'S Surgery To Rear) is a Grade II listed building in the Mid Suffolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 April 1988. House, doctor's surgery. 2 related planning applications.
Hill House (Including Doctor'S Surgery To Rear)
- WRENN ID
- worn-quoin-hawk
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Mid Suffolk
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 14 April 1988
- Type
- House, doctor's surgery
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Hill House is a mid-17th century house that was altered in the 18th and 19th centuries when it served as a schoolmaster's house. The original timber frame is entirely covered in 18th and 19th century red brick. The roof is pantiled to the front and plaintiled to the rear, with the left end being hipped. It features an ogee-moulded eaves cornice. The house has two storeys and a three-cell, lobby entrance plan. It has three windows, which contain 19th century three-light casements beneath segmental arches. A mid-20th century lean-to porch has a six-panelled door with the upper four panels glazed. A further door to the right has four glazed panels. There is an internal stack and a smaller gable stack to the right.
Attached to the rear is a former village school, now a doctor's surgery, constructed around 1740 with land and money from Thomas Maynard of Hoxne Hall. It is of red brick with a hipped plaintiled roof. The front has a central semi-circular headed doorway with a gauged brick arch, stone springers, and key, leading to a half-glazed four-panel door surmounted by a two-light semi-circular fanlight. The interior of the house was not fully inspected, but much of the original structure is said to be concealed.
Detailed Attributes
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