Green Dale is a Grade II listed building in the Cornwall local planning authority area, England. First listed on 17 June 1988. Vicarage.

Green Dale

WRENN ID
lesser-banister-gilt
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cornwall
Country
England
Date first listed
17 June 1988
Type
Vicarage
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Green Dale is a vicarage, now a private house, dating to around 1830, with a rear section likely from the late 18th century. The front is constructed of dressed granite, with roughcast to the front and granite ashlar corner pilasters. It has a low-pitched hipped slate roof with deep eaves, and rendered stacks topped with tapered caps.

The house follows a double-depth plan, featuring two main front rooms separated by an entrance hall, which leads to the back staircase. Behind the larger right-hand room is a study, and behind the left-hand room, a pantry, back stairs, and a passage to the kitchen located in the left-hand rear wing. Evidence of a straight masonry joint on the right-hand wall suggests that the two front rooms may be later additions, indicating that the house behind them is earlier than around 1830.

The south front has four windows and a symmetrical appearance, although the doorway is slightly left of centre. The windows are tall 12-pane sashes, likely replacements from the 20th century. The doorway features a reeded doorcase, a 19th-century six-panel partly glazed door, and a 19th-century glazed porch with console brackets to the eaves cornice and double glazed doors. The east side has one first-floor and two ground-floor late 19th-century 12-pane sashes, along with a straight masonry joint visible between the two sections of the house.

The west elevation has a rear wing projecting to the left, presenting an asymmetrical fenestration pattern. This includes early 19th-century 12-pane sashes on the first floor, large early 19th-century 24-pane sashes on the ground floor, and an early 19th-century six-panel door with an eight-pane rectangular overlight. A boarded door is located to the left.

Inside, the larger right-hand front room has a reeded cornice, while the left-hand room has a coved cornice. Both rooms contain 20th-century fireplaces. The kitchen has a large granite fireplace with a dressed granite lintel. The main open-well staircase has a closed string, stick balusters, and turned newels. A straight servants' staircase at the back features a similar balustrade. Much of the original internal joinery remains, including the panelled doors.

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