Barnells Including Terrace To North-West is a Grade II listed building in the East Devon local planning authority area, England. First listed on 7 December 1962. House.

Barnells Including Terrace To North-West

WRENN ID
weathered-corridor-jay
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
East Devon
Country
England
Date first listed
7 December 1962
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

This is a large house, built in 1825 and significantly altered in the 19th and 20th centuries. It was originally built by Captain Yule, then enlarged in 1851 when purchased by the Tucker family, with further work undertaken around 1860 that was left unfinished. A thorough refurbishment occurred in 1934. The house is constructed from plastered stone rubble with brick dressings, stone rubble stacks with plastered brick chimneyshafts, and has a slate roof.

The building is set across a steep valley slope, facing south-west, with a double-depth plan placing the principal rooms to the front and service rooms to the rear, incorporating a large entrance hall and staircase. There is an irregular arrangement of axial and gable-end stacks providing heating. Little of the original 1825 "Trafalgar Cottage," described as a cottage ornee by Captain Yule, remains, as it was substantially enlarged and rebuilt in 1851 by the Tucker family, whose house included a lace factory. The 1860 work was incomplete, and in 1934 Margaret Tomlinson oversaw a refurbishment that included the demolition of the lace factory section and its conversion into a terrace.

The house is two storeys with attics, featuring a regular, though not symmetrical, 5-window front with 19th-century 20-pane sash windows. Ground floor windows are full height and have low segmental arches with stucco keystones and external shutters. A 19th-century stucco doorcase with voussoirs frames a 20th-century French window centrally positioned on the front facade. Most windows on the remaining sides and those on the rear staircase date from around 1934, mimicking the style of the mid-19th-century house. The north-west end wall, a complete 1934 construction, has 16-, 12- and 6-pane sashes, along with a 6-panel door and fanlight. The roof is gable-ended.

The interior contains some 19th-century joinery but most dates from the 1934 refurbishment, although in 19th-century style, including the staircase. A standing wall from the demolished 1851 extension on the left end of the front has been incorporated as a feature of the terrace. Three segmental-arched window embrasures within this wall are now open.

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