Glebe House is a Grade II listed building in the North Northamptonshire local planning authority area, England. Farmhouse. 4 related planning applications.
Glebe House
- WRENN ID
- sombre-footing-laurel
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Northamptonshire
- Country
- England
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Glebe House is an early 18th-century farmhouse, later adapted for residential use, with 20th-century additions. It is built of coursed and squared limestone, with limestone dressings and bands, and has a Welsh slate roof. The corners are emphasised with quoins, and the gables are topped with stone copings. Two chimney stacks, rebuilt in brick, rise from the roof. The symmetrical south front has three bays. A central half-glazed door, with a window above it, is flanked by single, late 19th-century canted bay windows with mullioned and transomed casement windows. Above the canted bays, a central cross-mullioned leaded casement is flanked by single, three-light mullioned and transomed casements, all with keystoned flat arches. Three hipped dormers, each with a two-light casement window, are set into the roof above. On the east side, a rear wing includes remnants of a mullioned cellar window, and a blocked three-light mullioned casement can be seen on the second floor. A three-light mullioned cellar opening is visible on the west gable. Small, 18th-century leaded casement windows are on each gable, illuminating the attics.
Detailed Attributes
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