The Hale is a Grade II* listed building in the Buckinghamshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 October 1951. A Early Modern House.

The Hale

WRENN ID
watchful-gutter-cedar
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Buckinghamshire
Country
England
Date first listed
25 October 1951
Type
House
Period
Early Modern
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The Hale is a house with an 18th-century front that incorporates a 17th-century building, which has been altered. It features a date of 1748 on two rainwater heads. The exterior is finished in painted roughcast with chamfered quoins and has an old tile roof. The central block has a parapet above a moulded cornice and is topped with two tall brick chimneys. The house is two storeys high, with the central block displaying six bays of unevenly spaced sash windows. The entrance consists of a six-panel door located in the third bay from the left, surrounded by panelled pilasters with double scroll brackets and a dentil cornice hood. To the left, there is a linking bay with a 20th-century doorway, and a former barn that has been refronted in the early 20th century with stucco, featuring an old tile roof and parapet, along with three bays of tall sash windows. On the right side, there is a low two-storey wing, also in 20th-century stucco with an old tile roof and a brick chimney, which includes a door to the left and one bay of sash windows with a two-light casement above.

Inside, the dining room is completely panelled, likely from 1748, and features a Greek key chair rail and scrolled surrounds to the panels. There is a stone chimneypiece with a fluted keyblock, a cupboard with a semi-circular back and shaped shelves, and panelled window shutters. A 17th-century ceiling beam with ovolo moulding is also present. The sitting room has a moulded cornice enriched with an egg and dart pattern, and an 18th-century wooden chimneypiece with a fluted frieze and moulded cornice. The first floor reveals exposed 17th-century timber framing and a section of 17th-century oak panelling, which has likely been relocated. There is an 18th-century closet or wig room above the front door, featuring 18th-century panelling, a fitted seat, a small fireplace, and a moulded cornice.

The Hale has long associations with the Colet family, including Dean Colet, the founder of St. Paul's School, whose father, Sir Henry Colet, was born here around 1435.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 1995
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  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Hale Farmhouse Grade II 15 m
  2. Barn to North East of Hale Farmhouse Grade II 17 m
  3. Buckland Grange Grade II 1.6 km
  4. Kings Ash Farmhouse Grade II 1.7 km
  5. Church of St Leonard Grade II* 1.7 km
  6. Cooling Pond Grade II 1.9 km
  7. Engine house, pump rooms, watchman's lodge, boundary wall and gate piers at Dancers End Pumping Station Grade II 1.9 km
  8. The Gate Public House Grade II 2.0 km
  9. Building No 28 (Henderson Mess) Groves and Henderson Barracks Grade II 2.3 km
  10. Rabbs Corner Grade II 2.4 km