Latitude: 54.1269 / 54°7'36"N
Longitude: -1.1424 / 1°8'32"W
OS Eastings: 456139
OS Northings: 470458
OS Grid: SE561704
Mapcode National: GBR NNGQ.GC
Mapcode Global: WHD95.FJ6L
Plus Code: 9C6W4VG5+Q2
Entry Name: Tudor Cottage
Listing Date: 27 September 1984
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1151286
English Heritage Legacy ID: 333425
ID on this website: 101151286
Location: Crayke, North Yorkshire, YO61
County: North Yorkshire
District: Hambleton
Civil Parish: Crayke
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Crayke St Cuthbert
Church of England Diocese: York
Tagged with: Cottage
200/7/25
27-SEP-84
CRAYKE
WEST WAY
(East side)
TUDOR COTTAGE
(Formerly listed as:
WESTWAY
OLD TIMBERS)
II
Cottage. Probably mid-late C17. Timber-framed, rear wall rebuilt in brick. Stone plinth. Swept pantile roof with raised rendered verges and end stacks. Two storeys. One small and one large bay. End-lobby-entry plan. Two rooms in depth. Interrupted sills, vertical studding with upward braces with slight convex curve. C19 four-panel door flanked by wood pilasters. C20 casement windows. Interior: heavy ceiling beam resting on bressummer of fireplace. Studded partition dividing the bays. The house is unusual among timber-framed houses of the region in being 2 rooms in depth, the narrow rear rooms are not in an outshot as shown by the full height parts surviving in the rear wall (B Hutton and B Harrison).
Hutton, B., and Harrison, B., Vernacular Houses in North Yorkshire and Cleveland, 1984, p 37, fig 2.2/e and p 124 fig 7.6. North Yorkshire and Cleveland Vernacular Buildings Study Group, Report No 11.
Reasons for Designation
Tudor Cottage, a timber framed building of C17 date, is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* Date: most buildings dating to before 1840 will be listed, and this cottage is thought to date to the mid-late C17
* Rarity: this cottage is two rooms deep, whereas most timber-framed houses in this region are only one room deep, with rear rooms placed in outshots
* Survival: in addition to the timber framing of the front elevation, this building retains timber framing elements internally, including bressumer and ceiling beams and stud partitioning.
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