History in Structure

Tornewton House

A Grade II Listed Building in Denbury and Torbryan, Devon

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.4986 / 50°29'54"N

Longitude: -3.6712 / 3°40'16"W

OS Eastings: 281569

OS Northings: 67865

OS Grid: SX815678

Mapcode National: GBR QM.P4HG

Mapcode Global: FRA 376R.1KV

Plus Code: 9C2RF8XH+CG

Entry Name: Tornewton House

Listing Date: 15 October 1984

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1170152

English Heritage Legacy ID: 84311

ID on this website: 101170152

Location: Teignbridge, Devon, TQ12

County: Devon

District: Teignbridge

Civil Parish: Denbury and Torbryan

Traditional County: Devon

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Devon

Church of England Parish: Denbury St Mary the Virgin

Church of England Diocese: Exeter

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Description


SX 86 NW TORBRYAN

4/33 Tornewton House
-

- II

House, formerly the mansion house of the Peter family from at least C14 to C17.
Present house mainly early C19 with Victorian alterations; possibly some C16 work
at the back. Rendered stone, with a little brick. Slate roofs. A very complex
building, but three main parts can be distinguished. The present main range,
clearly built on to an earlier structure and possibly itself incorporating a pre-
C19 building. Three storeys. Symmetrical 5-window front, the centre 3 second-
storey windows grouped together. Centre doorway has projecting rectangular stone
porch probably mid C19 now glazed on plinth. Doorway to porch and windows in each
side-wall round-arched, with moulded archivolts continued as a string course at
springing-level. Deeply projecting cornice and blocking course above. At either
side in ground storey a pair of 4 light French windows with glazing bars and barred
side lights having fringed blind-cases with long scroll-brackets at either side.
Second-storey windows have similar blind-cases and (except for the middle window)
bow-fronted guard-rails of trellised ironwork. Windows here are C19 4-panel timber
sashes, with a high proportion of old glass surviving. Pilasters at either end of
front with double incised instication. Over second storey a heavy wood cornice on
big brackets, emulating a C18 eaves cornice. Third, attic, storey set back a
little (probably a later addition) with three 2-light wood casement windows and
flanking pilasters. The right hand gable over fenestrated with frames of various
dates and patterns. Secondly a rear wing running off the main house at an angle,
possibly the remains of an earlier house. Two storeys. Two rooms deep, the rear
rooms being the older. 6-paned barred sash in each storey, ground-storey window
having a round-headed window at either side. Rear wall has round-arched doorway
with granite voussoirs, now converted to a window. Thirdly, an exterior stone and timber
staircase, probably C19, with brick pillar having a moulded cap, supporting a
timber canopy at the second half-landing and formerly ending under a pent roof now
cemented in and serving a large addition at garrett level. Sir William Peter,
Secretary of State to Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth was born here.
Seat of the Wolston family in the C18 and C19, John Wolston Esquire being the
occupant in 1793. Interior not inspected.


Listing NGR: SX8156967865

External Links

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