Little Mill House Mill House is a Grade II listed building in the Tunbridge Wells local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 June 1989. House. 2 related planning applications.
Little Mill House Mill House
- WRENN ID
- dark-entrance-cream
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Tunbridge Wells
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 22 June 1989
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Little Mill House and Little Mill House are a house, originally a mill house, dating from the 17th century or earlier, with alterations in the early 19th century and around 1900. The building is timber framed and faced with red brick, with ornamental tile hanging on the first floor and a plain tiled roof. It has a lobby entry plan. The house is two storeys and has an attic, with a half-hipped roof to the right and a gabled roof to the left, featuring stacks in the centre right and at the end left. A barge-boarded gabled dormer sits centrally, and there's a large gabled projection to the centre left, along with a smaller gable to the centre right, both featuring moulded barge-boards. An attic window is present on the left of the main gable, and a hipped two-storey bay extends to the right. A wooden casement window is located on the first floor of the centre right gable. Otherwise, there are three metal four- and five-light casement windows on the first floor, and two on the ground floor, all with Gothic arched leaded glazing bars. A half-glazed door is set into the centre right gabled projection, and a boarded door is situated in a hipped porch on the left return. A parallel range extends to the rear right, also tile hung over a red brick ground floor. A smock and stage mill stood in the grounds to the north from around 1819 to around 1890. A cellar is reportedly still present on site, and the then owner, Mr Haskett-Smith, altered the mill cottages into a single house, which has since been returned to two separate dwellings.
Detailed Attributes
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