Number 9 And Attached Garden Wall is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 June 1948. House.
Number 9 And Attached Garden Wall
- WRENN ID
- former-pier-foxglove
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 14 June 1948
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Number 9 is a former public house, now a house, dating to the mid-17th century, with an early 19th-century addition, reportedly rebuilt in 1890. The original structure is built of coursed squared limestone rubble with a Welsh slate roof and a stone stack at the right end. The later addition to the left has a stone slate roof. The building presents two gables to the street.
The 17th-century range is two storeys and an attic, with two windows. It features two three-light stone-mullion windows with ovolo mouldings on the first floor, and two similar two-light windows in the gables above. The ground floor has two matching three-light windows on the right, and a studded plank door within a chamfered stone surround, featuring a Tudor-arched head, in the centre. The 17th-century range incorporates moulded strings above the ground and first floors, and over the windows in the gables, along with relieving arches over the ground and first floor windows. The early 19th-century addition to the left is two storeys high, with one window. It presents one 3/6-pane sash window with a stone cill on the first floor, and a similar 6/6-pane sash window on the ground floor, both in plain reveals.
The interior includes an oak closed well staircase with a moulded oak handrail. The front right ground floor room, formerly a bar, has a large timber chimneypiece with a bolection-moulded surround, a pulvinated frieze, and a moulded timber cornice. A 17th-century food cupboard is located to the right, featuring bobbin-turned posts forming ventilation over a six-panel door. A fixed three-panel partition with incised mouldings is to the left. On the first floor, at the front right, are early/mid-18th-century cupboards with a ventilation panel featuring serpentine splats above, flanking a stone fire surround, likely dating to the 17th century and with a Tudor-arched head. A chamfered beam with eroded ogee stops is found on the first floor rear right. A 20th-century two-storey extension stands to the rear.
Attached to the left is a late 19th-century garden wall; it was probably rebuilt in the late 19th century on the left side. The wall is constructed of coursed squared limestone and has an ashlar pier in the centre left. Cast-iron railings are present to the right. The wall is approximately 3 meters high to the left and contains a reused 17th-century moulded stone doorcase with a Tudor-arched head, a plank door and a 20th-century iron gate in the opening. It has a stone coping. An ashlar pier, approximately 1 meter high with chamfered limestone coping and late 19th-century iron railings with spear tops also approximately 1 meter high, marks the junction between the wall on the left and the wall to the right.
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