Grey Horse Inn And Attached Outbuilding To Left And Garden Wall And Railings To Front is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 16 November 1978. A C18 Public house. 2 related planning applications.
Grey Horse Inn And Attached Outbuilding To Left And Garden Wall And Railings To Front
- WRENN ID
- quiet-casement-amber
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 16 November 1978
- Type
- Public house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Grey Horse Inn, with an attached former smithy, dates to the early 18th century, with later additions in the 19th century. It is constructed of coursed rubble stone, with a brick outshut to the rear, and has a pantile roof, along with rebuilt brick stacks. Originally designed with a three-room hearth-passage plan, an outshut was added to the rear. The main front has a 1½-storey, three-window appearance, with a single-storey range to the left. A 20th-century half-glazed door is located to the left of centre. All windows are 3-light horizontal sliding sash windows with square leaded lights, and have plain timber lintels. The former smithy features 20th-century casement windows and cartshed doors under a timber lintel to the left. The building has coped gables, kneelers, and two end and one centre stacks. The rear has a catslide roof. Inside the inn, the ground floor retains exposed chamfered main beams. In the room to the left is a locally-made 19th-century barrel oven. A front garden wall, constructed of orange-red brick with ashlar dressings and lyre-pattern cast-iron railings, is attached to the front of the property.
Detailed Attributes
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