History in Structure

North Wonson Farmhouse

A Grade II Listed Building in Throwleigh, Devon

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.6919 / 50°41'30"N

Longitude: -3.8792 / 3°52'45"W

OS Eastings: 267362

OS Northings: 89709

OS Grid: SX673897

Mapcode National: GBR Q8.JR8R

Mapcode Global: FRA 27R7.Y9M

Plus Code: 9C2RM4RC+P8

Entry Name: North Wonson Farmhouse

Listing Date: 22 February 1967

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1106115

English Heritage Legacy ID: 94783

ID on this website: 101106115

Location: Wonson, West Devon, EX20

County: Devon

District: West Devon

Civil Parish: Throwleigh

Traditional County: Devon

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Devon

Church of England Parish: Throwleigh St Mary the Virgin

Church of England Diocese: Exeter

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Description


THROWLEIGH WONSON
SX 68 NE
3/251 North Wonson Farmhouse
22.2.67

GV II


Farmhouse. Early or mid C16 with major late C16 and C17 improvements, modernised in
late C19, lower end reduced in size when rebuilt after a collapse circa 1930.
Granite stone rubble with large roughly-shaped quoins, plastered front; granite
stacks, one still with its original granite ashlar chimney shaft; slate roof
(formerly thatch).
Plan: L-shaped building. The main block faces south-east and has a 3-room-and-
through-passage plan and is built down a hillslope. Unheated inner room dairy at
left (uphill) end is terraced into the hillslope. The hall has an axial stack
backing onto the passage. 1-room plan parlour wing projects forward at right angles
from the left end (in front of inner room dairy and overlapping the hall). It has a
projecting gable end stack and a curving newel stair turret projecting from outer
(uphill) side. The main block was the original farmhouse. Undoubtedly this was
some form of open hall house but no evidence of this can be seen since the roof was
completely replaced in the late C17-early C18. The hall fireplace was inserted
in the mid C17 and the mid C17. The parlour wing was added in mid C17. At the same
time the hall relegated to kitchen use. It might then have been a Dartmoor
longhouse but no evidence survives since the service end room was rebuilt and
shortened circa 1930. House is now 2 storeys.
Exterior: Main front has an irregular 2-window front of C19 casements with glazing
bars and there is one more each floor on inner side of parlour wing. Most seem to
occupy original window embrasures and the parlour window has a C17 granite hoodmould
with the initial A carved on both labels. The passage front doorway is original; it
is a granite arch with a depressed 2-centred (almost segmental pointed) head and a
hollow-chamfered surround. It contains a 19 plank door. Roofs are gable-ended.
Dairy includes a C17 2-light granite-mullioned window.
Interior: The service end room is a rebuild of circa 1930 and the lower passage
screen has been removed. The large hall fireplace is granite with a soffit-chamfered
and step-stopped oak lintel. A secondary oven to rear, its housing projects into
site of former passage. The 2 hall crossbeams have deep soffit chamfers with step
stops. At the upper end of the hall the stone rubble crosswall may be an original
low partition. It contains an early of mid C16 round-headed oak doorframe. Large
dairy crossbeam has plain soffit chamfers. Parlour was modernised in late C19 and no
carpentry detail is exposed here. The parlour fireplace is blocked. In a cupboard
under the C19 stair in the parlour are the blocked remains of the newel stair. It
has a late C17-early C18 plank door on H-L hinges. Roof throughout is probably late
C17-early C18, a series of A-frame trusses with pegged and spiked lap-jointed
collars.


Listing NGR: SX6736289709

External Links

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