History in Structure

Mains Hall

A Grade II Listed Building in Singleton, Lancashire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.857 / 53°51'25"N

Longitude: -2.959 / 2°57'32"W

OS Eastings: 337019

OS Northings: 440516

OS Grid: SD370405

Mapcode National: GBR 7RSV.53

Mapcode Global: WH853.J95Z

Plus Code: 9C5VV24R+RC

Entry Name: Mains Hall

Listing Date: 9 June 1967

Last Amended: 11 June 1986

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1071996

English Heritage Legacy ID: 183635

ID on this website: 101071996

Location: Fylde, Lancashire, FY6

County: Lancashire

District: Fylde

Civil Parish: Singleton

Traditional County: Lancashire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lancashire

Church of England Parish: Singleton St Anne

Church of England Diocese: Blackburn

Tagged with: Building

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Description


SINGLETON (off) MAINS LANE
SD 34 SE
1/65 Mains Hall
9.6.67 (formerly listed as Mains Hall
(including moat, well, barn
and dovecote))

GV II

Manor house, perhaps originally late C16, remodelled in C17, altered in
C18, and subsequently; now hotel. White-painted rendered brick, slate
roof. Now very irregular plan: 2-room hall range flanked by short
projecting gabled bays, with large rear extension to the centre and various
outshuts and additions. Formerly 3 storeys, reduced to 2 storeys in C18.
Front has doorway in centre, 4 windows at ground floor and 5 above, one
window on each floor of the left gable and 2 on each floor of the right,
all of these windows modern vertical rectangular casements with
diamond-leaded glazing. Rear wall has traces of 3 labels to former brick
mullion windows, and there is a 2-light brick mullion window in the apex of
has two 1/4-round moulded beams with large cyma stops, ex situ panelling in
C17 style; former kitchen (now bar) to rear of hall has stopped
chamfered beams and similar bressumer; staircase with turned balusters,
panelled newel posts, broad handrail; roof of 4 collar trusses with
cambered collars, 2 pairs of purlins windbraced above and below (some
braces missing), 2nd and 4th trusses have wattle and daub infill and
doorways with chamfered jambs (a curiosity of the roof is that the
tie-beams appear to rest on wall plates set about one metre from the walls,
which are clearly re-used, having joist housings on the upper edges).


Listing NGR: SD3701940516

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