Frensham Beale Manor is a Grade II listed building in the Waverley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 9 March 1960. House.

Frensham Beale Manor

WRENN ID
small-casement-equinox
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Waverley
Country
England
Date first listed
9 March 1960
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Frensham Beale Manor is a house with origins dating back to the 14th century, located in Frensham. It was extended in the 16th and 17th centuries, with further extensions added to the left end in the early 20th century. The structure features sandstone on the right side with brick dressings, while the remainder is timber framed, underbuilt in brick, and has brick infilling above. The left end has brick extensions. The roofs are plain tiled, hipped at the left end, and the building has a T-shaped plan with a parallel gable end range to the right, which was formerly a chapel.

The house is two storeys high on both the right and left, with gable attics to the right of the centre. There are two diagonal brick stacks on the right and four corbelled diagonal stacks at the rear right, along with additional stacks at the rear and left. The windows include leaded casements with one attic window in each large gable. The first floor features a 12-light mullioned and transomed casement to the left of centre, above a 15-light similar window below. There is a 6-light window on each floor of the gable to the right of centre, and a multi-light window on each floor of a projecting square bay at the end of the right-hand gable. Additionally, there is a stone-dressed angle bay window on the right side with arched lights, and a round arched window on the first floor left in the projecting 20th-century brick wing, which has a brick cornice.

The central entrance porch is gabled, with a first-floor casement above a 4-centre arched door on the ground floor. Inside, the entrance hall has a stone floor and is panelled, featuring a 20th-century ashlar fireplace with bolection moulding and strapwork, along with a gadrooned panel on the overmantel. The dining room contains a 4-centre arched chamfered brick fireplace with linenfold panelling above. The library or study is the oldest part of the house, with its roof restored in the 20th century and a stone fireplace set against rubble walls.

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