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Latitude: 52.1196 / 52°7'10"N
Longitude: 0.2378 / 0°14'16"E
OS Eastings: 553308
OS Northings: 249176
OS Grid: TL533491
Mapcode National: GBR M9Y.0XY
Mapcode Global: VHHKK.2ZLG
Plus Code: 9F42469Q+V4
Entry Name: Abington Pottery
Listing Date: 22 November 1967
Last Amended: 30 September 1985
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1127657
English Heritage Legacy ID: 52017
ID on this website: 101127657
Location: Little Abington, South Cambridgeshire, CB21
County: Cambridgeshire
District: South Cambridgeshire
Civil Parish: Little Abington
Built-Up Area: Little Abington
Traditional County: Cambridgeshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Cambridgeshire
Church of England Parish: Great and Little Abington
Church of England Diocese: Ely
Tagged with: Architectural structure
TL 5249 LITTLE ABINGTON HIGH STREET
(South-West Side)
9/36 No. 26
22.11.67 (Abington Pottery) (formerly
listed as Nos 33, 35 and
GV II* 37)
House. Late C15 or early C16 with mid to late C16 and late C18 or early C19
alterations. Timber-framed and plastered with plain tiled roofs. Red brick
ridge stack to left hand and external stack to right hand gable. Open hall
with two storey bay to north-west and cross wing to south-east originally
jettied to the street. Boarded door to right hand; four ground floor
casement windows include three with transomed-lights and two-centred wooden
heads, and one similar first floor cross wing window, and one original
six-light moulded mullioned window. Interior: Cross wing of three
timber-framed bays with crown post roof and internal partitions, one original
three-centred arched door head. Cross passage behind inserted hearth with
original external entrances now blocked; open hall of two timber-framed bays
with smoke blackened, wind braced side purlin roof with evidence for an
earlier floor and partition in north-western bay. Inserted stack with hearth
partly sealed and inserted roll-moulded ceiling beams; closed truss to
north-west of hall with no apparent entry to two rooms of end bay. Late C16
or early C17 hearth to north-west ground floor room with staircase in outshut
to rear. Traces of vermilion paint on bricks and some timbers. Two C17
doors, one with bolection moulded panels and one panelled. The house was
converted to three dwellings in c.1830 and was renovated by the Cambridge
Cottage Improvement Society in 1934; it became a pottery in 1964.
R.C.H.M. Report 1951
V.C.H., Vol. VI, p4
Listing NGR: TL5330849176
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