Details
This list entry was subject to a Minor Enhancement on 31/03/2017 TA03SE
680-1/4/116 KINGSTON UPON HULL
COTTINGHAM ROAD (North side)
Newland Homes, Stratten Hall and adjoining Board Room Block GV
II
Assembly hall and adjoining block comprising board room, kitchens and staff accommodation, part of the Newland Homes complex by WH Bingley of Hull. Dated 1901 and late C19. MATERIAL: yellow brick with ashlar dressings and gabled and hipped slate roofs with two ridge and two gable stacks.
EXTERIOR: single storey hall, cross plan, has a hipped roof to the main range topped with a square louvred bell turret with leaded ogee dome and finial. Plinth, string courses to gables. Buttressed main range has to north a central double doorway with flanking buttresses and inscribed lintel. On either side, a stone mullioned cross casement, and on either side, Two similar windows. Cross wings have to north two similar windows. Gables have two buttresses rising above the gable and topped with pinnacles. Central three-light cross mullioned window with sill band and label mould. In the west gable peak, a square inscribed panel. Adjoining block, two storeys; nine-window range. Windows are mainly plain sashes. Plinth, incomplete first-floor band. Projecting off-centre gable with elaborate traceried bargeboard with brackets to collar. Two windows and beyond, two smaller windows. Beyond again, on either side, a gabled through-eaves dormer with a single window. To left, a smaller window. To right, a larger gabled through-eaves dormer with two windows. Below, the projection has two windows. To left, a single window, then a carriage opening with wooden lintel. To right, a door under a lean-to hood, then a hipped square bay window with two sashes. To right again, three windows. At the rear, a two-storey wing and a single-storey cross range enclosing a yard.
HISTORY: this complex of orphan homes and ancillary buildings was built 1895-1902 by the Port of Hull Society and endowed by various benefactors whose names are attached to the various buildings. The Port of Hull Society for the Religious Instruction of Seamen was founded in 1821. The society established the Sailors’ Orphans Institution in 1836, but it did not have a permanent home until the Park Street orphanage was built in 1868-9, largely funded by (Sir) Titus Salt of Saltaire. The orphanage in Park Street was sold in 1897, by which time all the children were accommodated in the new complex on Cottingham Road.
Listing NGR: TA0828431694
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
Legacy System number:
387530
Legacy System:
LBS
Sources
Books and journals Mitchell, C, The Long Watch: A History of the Sailor's Children's Society, (1961) Neave, David, Neave, Susan, Pevsner Architectural Guides: Hull, (2010), 159
Legal
This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.
End of official list entry
Print the official list entry