Broughton Grange is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 October 1990. Residential. 5 related planning applications.

Broughton Grange

WRENN ID
dim-mortar-swallow
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Yorkshire
Country
England
Date first listed
30 October 1990
Type
Residential
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Broughton Grange is a house likely dating to around 1700, located on the west side of High Street in Great and Little Broughton. The building is constructed of unevenly-coursed, differently tooled sandstone, with a pantiled roof featuring a stone ridge, copings, kneelers, and stacks. It is arranged as one and a half storeys and has three wide bays. The layout follows a hearth-passage plan.

The front façade originally had a flattened Tudor-arched lintel over a ledged and boarded passage door, now found in the left bay. The ground floor features four-light casement windows under extended keyed lintels. A window to the left of the door has a lintel dated 1665 bearing the initials "WT", which is likely a repurposed feature. The first floor has modern casements beneath 19th-century gabled half-dormers, each detailed with bargeboards and spike finials. A one-storey extension, set at a right angle, has a hip-ended roof with diagonal kneelers.

The front of the house presents five bays, with a plain boarded passage door and two Yorkshire sash windows and a casement on the ground floor. Above, four pivoted windows are placed beneath similar dormers. The interior includes an original panelled cupboard in the forehouse.

Detailed Attributes

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