Latitude: 51.3327 / 51°19'57"N
Longitude: -0.2699 / 0°16'11"W
OS Eastings: 520624
OS Northings: 160705
OS Grid: TQ206607
Mapcode National: GBR 93.W1N
Mapcode Global: VHGRP.8RNR
Plus Code: 9C3X8PMJ+32
Entry Name: 149-153, HIGH STREET (See details for further address information)
Listing Date: 10 April 1954
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1213183
English Heritage Legacy ID: 290701
ID on this website: 101213183
Location: Epsom, Epsom and Ewell, Surrey, KT19
County: Surrey
District: Epsom and Ewell
Electoral Ward/Division: Town
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Epsom
Traditional County: Surrey
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Surrey
Church of England Parish: Epsom St Martin
Church of England Diocese: Guildford
Tagged with: Building
TQ 2060 HIGH STREET
(South side)
861/30/53
Numbers 149-153 (Odd)
10.04.1954 II*
Includes: Number 147 HIGH STREET
Assembly Rooms, then shops and tenements, later offices. Probably c1692 for Randolph Ashenhurst and Michael Cope; considerably altered first half C18 and subsequently and with major C20 re-fittings. Small red-brown bricks in Flemish bond with clunch quoins. Hipped plain tile roofs; one surviving brick stack. Front range possibly free-standing originally with other ranges added to it to form rectangular plan with central courtyard; carriage access to courtyard through east and west ranges; courtyard subsequently roofed over. 2 storeys with attic and partial basement. North elevation: 4,3,4 bays with central pedimented break. Plinth. C20 shop fronts to ground floor. Unhorned 12-pane sash windows, those to left of centre in reveals, the rest with exposed boxes and wooden cills, all having orange brick quoins, flat gauged-brick arches, brick aprons, and those at centre and to blind bays 3 and 9 with roll-moulded surrounds. Heavy wooden dentilled eaves cornice. Oeuil-de-boeuf window with radial glazing bars to pediment. 3 flat-roofed attic dormers, two with 6-pane and one with 9-pane sashes. Right return: 2,1,2 bays with centre recessed. Similar to front but with segmental brick arches to windows, brick plat band, and pilaster buttress to rebuilt right corner. Central bay has round-arched former carriage entrance with keystone and imposts and C20 glazing and stucco surround; dormer above. Left return similar, but with central and left-hand bays altered C20. Rear: 10 bays. Some rebuilding of brickwork and right-hand bays covered by late-C20 single-storey addition. 6 dormers. Interior: Some C17 floors and ceilings known to survive, but mostly concealed, with large-scantling beams, some chamfered, and wide floor-boards. Surviving section of moulded wooden ceiling cornice in 1st-floor rear room. Stone flags to front basement. C17 roof timbers, comprising collared principal rafter roof trusses with tie-beams, and coupled common rafters. History: the building originally housed a tavern, a coffee shop, a shop, gambling facilities in the Great Chamber (the ground floor room of the rear range) and dancing facilities in the Long Room (above the Great Chamber). There was a bowling green to the rear.
Important as the earliest known surviving building of this type in England.
Waterloo House, High Street, Epsom, Surrey. RCHM(E) Report, 1998.
.
Listing NGR: TQ2062460705
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings