Bagendon Manor Or Manor Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 June 1952. Manor house. 3 related planning applications.
Bagendon Manor Or Manor Farm
- WRENN ID
- shifting-paling-sepia
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 4 June 1952
- Type
- Manor house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This manor house dates from the early 18th century. It is constructed of limestone rubble, with dressed stone quoins. The roof is stone slate, with limestone rubble stacks, and concrete tile roofing to the outbuildings. The building is arranged in a āUā shape, with a small courtyard at the rear that has been infilled with a single-storey, gabled extension. There are minor outbuildings to the west and a lean-to at the rear of the main body of the house.
The symmetrical front facade has five windows and a central, projecting porch. A dressed stone plinth runs along the base. All windows are stone-mullioned cross windows with square-sectioned mullions and plain dressed stone architraves, with a band delineating the floors. There are two two-light, slate-hung, hipped dormers in the roof. The central entrance has an early plank door within a flat-chamfered surround, set within a gabled porch. The porch has 20th-century double doors with glazing bars and a fanlight, set within a raised round-headed surround with a keystone and impost which continues as a band. Cross-mullioned windows are present to the left-hand return, and two-light stone-mullioned windows to the right-hand return, all with square-sectioned mullions. A cellar window is also present, with two lights and stone mullions. All windows have leaded panes, likely dating from the late 19th century. The roof is hipped with ridge and lateral stacks.
The interior is reported to contain a modern staircase and lacks early features of note. Verey mentions a pair of Georgian arches within the hall, opposite the entrance. The house is reputed to have been 'rebuilt' by Edward Haines in the 19th century.
Detailed Attributes
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