Haugh House is a Grade II listed building in the Vale of White Horse local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 January 1986. Farmhouse. 14 related planning applications.
Haugh House
- WRENN ID
- distant-barrel-hyssop
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Vale of White Horse
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 15 January 1986
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Haugh House is a farmhouse, now a house, dating from approximately 1770 to 1780. It is constructed of coursed limestone rubble with brick quoins, dressings, and a string course. The roof is covered in stone slate, and there are brick stacks. The original design comprised three units, with a three-window front. The main entrance features a three-panelled double door set within a moulded wooden architrave with a flat hood, above a flat brick arch and brick quoins. The windows are tripartite sashes, also with flat brick arches and brick quoins. A brick storey band and dentilled eaves run along the front. Dormers were inserted around 1980. The roof is gabled, with gable end stacks. The rear elevation has segmental brick arches with four-pane sashes. A later, two-storey, three-window range extension was added to the rear right in the late 18th century, incorporating similar materials and a hipped roof. This extension features segmental arches of contrasting red and flared brick over a central 20th-century French window and an 18th-century three-light casement to the left. There is also a remodelled 18th-century outshut and a 20th-century extension to the rear right. Inside, there are stone flag floors and six-panelled doors within moulded architraves. Early 19th-century fireplaces are found in the front range.
Detailed Attributes
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