The Old Presbytery, Corner Cottage And Rear Walls To The Old Presbytery / St Austell House, The Old Presbytery, Corner Cottage And Manoah

Date:
2 Oct 1999
Location:
The Old Presbytery, Corner Cottage And Rear Walls To The Old Presbytery, Church Street, Minehead, West Somerset, Somerset, TA24 6BL
Show all locations
St Austell House, The Old Presbytery, Corner Cottage And Manoah, Church Street, Minehead, West Somerset, Somerset, TA24 6BL
Reference:
IOE01/00047/19
Type:
Photograph (Digital)
Not what you're looking for? Try a new search

Description

This information is taken from the statutory List as it was in 2001 and may not be up to date.

MINEHEAD

SS9745 CHURCH STREET, Alcombe 900-1/4/131 (East side) 28/10/76 The Old Presbytery, Corner Cottage and rear walls to The Old Presbytery (Formerly Listed as: CHURCH STREET, Alcombe (East side) St Austell House, The Old Presbytery, Corner Cottage and Manoah)

GV II

2 cottages, probably formerly one older house. C18 with early C19 alteration and fenestration. Painted render over rubblestone, crested plain tile roof with exposed rafter ends, hipped with a gablet to the right, brick stacks to gable ends, left front slope and right eaves. Double-depth plan. 2 storeys; 4-window range. Corner Cottage occupies the range to the right with entrances to the front and right return. C20 two-light casement windows. The Presbytery is a virtually symmetrical 3-window range to Church Street with a tiled lean-to porch to the centre. 2-light casement windows to first floor, C19 two-light casement window to left of front door and a C20 window to the right. The rear is 3 storeys with three 3/6-pane sash windows to the second floor, 6/6-pane sashes to the first floor over a C19 tall 3-light window of 4 vertical panes to each leaf below to the right. INTERIOR: a through passage and a studded wall to the left of it (now covered) indicate that this was probably formerly a 3-unit-plan house. The C19 three-light window to the ground floor has panelled shutters; a C18 staircase with fretted ends and traces of former stick balusters remain. SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: attached high rubblestone walls approx 40m long to each side of the tapered rear garden terminate at a rubblestone outhouse approx 3m x 3.5m.

Listing NGR: SS9763545127

Content

This is part of the Series: IOE01/1662 IOE Records taken by R M Rayner; within the Collection: IOE01 Images Of England

Rights

© Mr R.M Rayner. Source: Historic England Archive

This photograph was taken for the Images of England project

People & Organisations

Photographer: Rayner, R.M

Rights Holder: Rayner, R.M

Keywords

Render, Rubble, Tile, Stuart House, Georgian Monument (By Form), Domestic, Dwelling, Wall, Barrier