Masonic Hall, 14 Main Street , Lockerbie is a Grade C listed building in the Dumfries and Galloway local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 20 November 2003.

Masonic Hall, 14 Main Street , Lockerbie

WRENN ID
outer-fireplace-sunrise
Grade
C
Local Planning Authority
Dumfries and Galloway
Country
Scotland
Date first listed
20 November 2003
Source
Historic Environment Scotland listing

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Description

This building at 16 Main Street, Lockerbie, is a combination of a Freemasons Hall and a house, probably dating to the mid-19th century, with earlier fabric incorporated and a remodelling in 1926. The building is of group value, recognised for its contribution to the character of the area.

The Main Street elevation presents a two-storey, three-bay Jacobethan style Freemasons Hall, distinguished by a grand, pedimented doorpiece supported by pilasters and a finialled parapet. The adjoining two-bay, two-storey and attic house (number 16) has dormers visible on the south side. The construction is of neatly coursed red sandstone rubble with polished ashlar dressings. The Masonic Hall has a blocked eaves course, cornice, and parapet raised at the centre and corners, while the house does not. Long and short quoins are used, and the windows are transomed and mullioned.

The main entrance, on the west (front) elevation, features a pair of timber panelled doors with a two-light mullioned fanlight set within a roll-moulded, stop-chamfered surround. An elaborate Ionic-pilastered surround frames the doorway, topped with an open scrolled pediment. This tympanum features a festooned roundel displaying Masonic arms and the inscription "LOCKERBIE. QUHYTE WOOLEN. LODGE NO 258". A bipartite window sits above the door, flanked by pilasters, and the parapet is adorned with anthemion finials. The flanking bays have tripartite windows on the ground floor and bipartite windows on the first floor, with ball finials marking the outer corners of the parapet. To the right is the two-bay house, featuring a timber panelled door with a fanlight in a chamfered surround and carved stonework to the dormer pediments.

The south (side) elevation is irregularly fenestrated. A timber boarded door is located at ground level to the right, while a walled-up entrance is visible to the left. A single-storey section extends to the outer right, featuring a two-leaf timber boarded door and a bipartite window.

The north (side) elevation showcases a gable to the right, abutting a brick wall built around 1985. A lower range to the left has three windows on the first floor.

The south (side) and east (rear) elevations of number 16 exhibit a snecked sandstone gable with a single window in the attic and a gablehead stack. A rounded corner is present on the southeast side. The rear elevation is also irregularly fenestrated, with a large staircase window at the centre and a lean-to scullery wing at ground level, featuring a single coped skew.

Around the year 2000, timber-framed, double-glazed windows were installed to the front of the Masonic Hall, designed to imitate the originals. Predominantly uPVC windows are found to the rear and in number 16. A corniced and coped stack with clay cans is a feature of number 16. The roof is covered with graded grey slate, and ashlar-coped skews are present. Cast-iron downpipes incorporate decorative hoppers.

The interior of the Masonic Hall includes two-leaf, half-glazed timber panelled inner doors leading to a lobby. The entrance hall is finished with black and white diamond-pattern tiles. A staircase features timber banisters. A downstairs function room has a beamed ceiling supported on Ionic consoles. The first-floor Temple has a coved, compartmented ceiling with ribs supported by vaguely Doric corbels and a decorative plaster cornice. Timber panelling is used for the dado, and an aediculed frame behind the principal chair at the east end incorporates Doric pilasters and a segmental pediment. Doric pilastered architraves frame the centres of the other walls. A stepped timber dais encircles the room. Carved oak ceremonial furniture, including tables and chairs, is present, alongside timber panelled interior doors and plaster cornicing throughout.

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