History in Structure

Newington House

A Grade II* Listed Building in Newington, Oxfordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.6636 / 51°39'49"N

Longitude: -1.1214 / 1°7'17"W

OS Eastings: 460861

OS Northings: 196460

OS Grid: SU608964

Mapcode National: GBR 908.R95

Mapcode Global: VHCY9.HGZ0

Plus Code: 9C3WMV7H+FC

Entry Name: Newington House

Listing Date: 18 July 1963

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1048070

English Heritage Legacy ID: 248278

ID on this website: 101048070

Location: Newington, South Oxfordshire, OX10

County: Oxfordshire

District: South Oxfordshire

Civil Parish: Newington

Traditional County: Oxfordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Oxfordshire

Church of England Parish: Newington

Church of England Diocese: Oxford

Tagged with: House

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Description


NEWINGTON A329
SU6096 (West side)
15/41 Newington House
18/07/63

GV II*

Country house. c.1635 for Walter Dunch, altered c.1680 for Henry Dunch and
re-modelled 1777 for George White. Coursed squared limestone rubble with ashlar
dressings; Welsh-slate roof with stone stacks. Double-pile plan. 3 storeys plus
basement. Symmetrical 7-window front, with rusticated quoins, moulded
first-floor storey band and cornice below the top storey, has a central doorway
with stone bolection doorcase, 8-panel double-leaf doors and a late C18
Corinthian porch. Windows have moulded stone architraves and 12-pane sashes
except basement windows which have a rectangular stone mullion. Garden front is
similar but has no porch and the door architrave is as the windows. Both front
and rear entrances retain evidence for demolished segmental pediments.
Double-span hipped roofs are concealed by plain parapets. To right of the main
range is a single-storey late C18 service wing with 2 large Diocletian windows
at the rear. Lead rainwater heads on the main range are inscribed "GW 1777".
Interior: original features include the basement, with stop-chamfered beams and
the remains of a very large fireplace with chamfered stone jambs, and at ground
floor a timber-framed partition, formerly the wall of a closet, which has studs
flush with the plaster and retains a painted skirting. A built-in doorcase
between stair hall and saloon may also be original. The 3 principal rooms to
rear and the stair hall all have good late C18 marble fireplaces and plaster
cornices; the panelled saloon has fluting and medallions on doorcases and
cornice, matching the porch decoration, and the hall has a deep triglyph frieze
and mutule cornice with a triangular pediment to the saloon doorcase. The
open-well stair has cantilevered oak treads and a ramped and wreathed handrail.
The roof dates from the addition of the second floor in 1777 but retains timbers
Iron the roof of c.1680, the tie beams of which survive insitu. It had a central
platform and replaced the similar original roof for which there is evidence of a
lower pitch. There is an elaborate system of drainage tunnels around the
basement. The spacing of the front windows, in overlapping triplets, and many
details of the plan bear a strong resemblance to Rubens' engravings of the
Pallavicini Palace in his "Palazzi di Genova", published 1622. Dunch was closely
related by marriage to the Pallavicini family.
(Buildings of England: Oxfordshire, p.716; C. Maltin: Newington House, 1985).


Listing NGR: SU6086196460

External Links

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