Fuller House is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 November 1962. Farmhouse.
Fuller House
- WRENN ID
- grey-postern-smoke
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 13 November 1962
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Fuller House is a farmhouse that has been converted into a boarding house for Stonar School. It dates from the late 17th century and was extended in the 19th century. The building is constructed from random rubble stone and features a stone slate roof with stone stacks that have moulded cappings and coped verges. It is designed in an L-plan and is two storeys high with an attic, containing four windows across the front.
The entrance is a six-panelled door located in a trellised porch to the left of the centre. To the left of the door is a three-light ovolo-mullioned casement window, while to the right are two 19th-century three-light mullioned casements with arch lights. On the first floor, there are two 2-light ovolo-mullioned casements with hoodmoulds to the left and three 2-light mullioned casements with arched lights to the right; the right-hand bay is part of the 19th-century extension. The gable of the left wing features a 2-light ovolo-mullioned attic casement, and there is a hipped dormer to the right with a 2-light casement.
The left side of the building has a six-panelled door in a trellised porch to the left of the centre, flanked by a three-light ovolo-mullioned casement with hoodmoulds on either side and a 2-light mullioned casement to the right. The first floor has four 2-light mullioned casements, and there are two hipped attic dormers with 2-light casements. The rear of the house features a large gabled stack and a blocked attic window on the right gable.
Inside, the central part of the south range has deep chamfered beams with stepped stops. The former external wall between this area and the west wing suggests that the south range is the earliest part of the building, possibly dating back to the early 17th century.
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