Pilgrim'S House, Pilgrim'S Cottage, Hailes Green Cottage is a Grade II listed building in the Tewkesbury local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 July 1960. Former farmhouse, attached houses. 5 related planning applications.

Pilgrim'S House, Pilgrim'S Cottage, Hailes Green Cottage

WRENN ID
narrow-quartz-thunder
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Tewkesbury
Country
England
Date first listed
4 July 1960
Type
Former farmhouse, attached houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a former farmhouse, now divided into three attached houses. It likely dates to the 18th century, with alterations in the early 19th and 20th centuries, and incorporates reused earlier materials. The main block is constructed of squared stone with a longer range roofed in Welsh slate, and a shorter range roofed in stone slate. The main block has five windows and is two-and-a-half storeys high, while an extension to the right is a three-window, two-storey structure. Both ranges are one room deep. The front of the main block has a stone plinth. A sash window with a hoodmould is on the left. Next to it is a four-panel door with the two upper panels glazed, set beneath a deep stone lintel and hoodmould. A sash window sits beside the door, with ovolo moulding to the upper parts of the jambs and head, as well as a hoodmould. The sill to this window and the window to the left have been lowered. There is a narrow slit window above, followed by a blocked window, and a small window within a blocked doorway, again with a deep stone lintel and hoodmould. A boarded door has a three-pane rectangular light above it, with ovolo moulding to the upper parts of the jambs and head, and a hoodmould, which marks the position of a former window. Above the five windows are five six-pane sashes, all with hoodmoulds, and ovolo moulding to the jambs and heads, except for the centre window. Four gabled dormers are present, each with a single-pane window except for one on the right, which has a two-light casement. Parapet gables cap the ends, with a chimney positioned on the left end on the ridge, and two bays in from the right end. To the right, the lower range features a two-light casement; a boarded door with a deep stone lintel; a shallow two-light mullion window above with a hoodmould; and a three-light casement with a deep stone lintel and hoodmould. Above are two further three-light casements, with a two-light casement between them. A parapet gable is located at the right end, and a ridge chimney sits to the right of the doorway. It is likely that materials were reused from Hailes Abbey, which was demolished in the 18th century. Low wings at each end are not considered to be of particular architectural interest.

Detailed Attributes

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