Kellaways Farmhouse is a Grade II* listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 December 1960. Manor house.
Kellaways Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- night-string-woodpecker
- Grade
- II*
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 20 December 1960
- Type
- Manor house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Kellaways Farmhouse is a 17th-century manor house, dated 1674, constructed from rubble stone with stone slate roofs, featuring coped gables and ashlar diagonal stacks. The building is two storeys high with an attic and has a square plan. The north front is formal with three windows, a large central gable, and an attic three-light window with a date plaque above. On the first floor, there are three-light windows on each side and a two-light window in the center. The ground floor has 20th-century four-light windows on each side of a plank door, which is set in a flush chamfered surround with a small square overlight and a stepped hoodmould.
The west side features a gable with a three-light window to the left, three axial stacks on the ridge to the right, two first-floor two-light windows, and two 20th-century three-light windows and a single light on the ground floor. The east side has a gable with an attic three-light window to the right, two first-floor three-light windows, and two ground floor four-light windows, one of which is original. The rear has two gables with two attic two-light windows, two first-floor three-light windows, and a ground floor lean-to on the left with a three-light window on the right.
At the southwest angle, there is an attached two-storey dairy and cheese room addition, likely from the early 19th century. The interior appears to be of one build, featuring chamfered and stopped beams, a moulded Tudor-arched fireplace in the northeast ground floor room, and back-to-back timber-lintel fireplaces upstairs. The Manor of Kellaways was held by the Kellaways family from the 12th century until around 1424, and then by the Long family of Draycot and South Wraxall from around 1500 to 1844.
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- Flood risk assessment
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