History in Structure

Crown Farmhouse

A Grade II Listed Building in Stowupland, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.1984 / 52°11'54"N

Longitude: 1.027 / 1°1'37"E

OS Eastings: 606963

OS Northings: 259898

OS Grid: TM069598

Mapcode National: GBR TKZ.2H1

Mapcode Global: VHKDP.R09H

Plus Code: 9F4352XG+9Q

Entry Name: Crown Farmhouse

Listing Date: 15 March 1988

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1032653

English Heritage Legacy ID: 280653

ID on this website: 101032653

Location: Stowupland, Mid Suffolk, IP14

County: Suffolk

District: Mid Suffolk

Civil Parish: Stowupland

Built-Up Area: Stowupland

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Stowupland Holy Trinity

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Description


STOWUPLAND CHURCH ROAD
TM 05 NE

7/170 Crown Farmhouse
-

-- II

Former farmhouse. C15 core with late C16 alterations. A central open hall of
one storey with attics; to right a 2-storey parlour cross-wing of late C16, to
left a set-forward service wing also of late C16. Timber-framed and
plastered. Plaintiled roofs: to left is an axial chimney of late C16 buff
brick, to right another with rebuilt shaft of C20 red brick. One gabled
casement dormer in centre range. Mid C20 casements. Early C19 doorway at
lobby entrance position; architrave and pediment, and later half-glazed 4-
panelled door. A complex house with good features of 3 periods. A 2-bay open
hall of perhaps early C15 has a near-complete open truss: cambered tiebeam
with chamfered arch braces, and a large cross-quadrate crownpost with 4-way
braces. Studwork of average spacing with arch windbracing. To left is a
small integral parlour block. The service cell was demolished in late C16 and
a 3-bay parlour cross-wing replaced it; many major components, including the
entire roof are reused from a high-quality late C15 or early C16 house. The
roof is of crownpost type with heavy collar-braces (soulaces), and a chamfered
square crownpost whose braces are not original. Two tie-beams have ogee and
scotia mouldings. The 1st floor structure is plain late C16 work. In the
chamber is a fine early C17 scheme of moulded plaster, with various motifs
including a vinescroll frieze and fleurs-de-lys. A small area of ceiling is
enriched with putti, probably a fragment. The original cross-entry received a
large chimney, with lintelled hall fireplace. The service range to left has
plain framing and a wide lintelled kitchen fireplace all of late C16.


Listing NGR: TM0696359898

External Links

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