Latitude: 53.9564 / 53°57'22"N
Longitude: -1.0899 / 1°5'23"W
OS Eastings: 459815
OS Northings: 451527
OS Grid: SE598515
Mapcode National: GBR NQTP.TH
Mapcode Global: WHFC3.7T7B
Plus Code: 9C5WXW46+H2
Entry Name: The Coach Public House (Number 103)
Listing Date: 1 July 1968
Last Amended: 14 March 1997
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1257294
English Heritage Legacy ID: 464039
Also known as: The Priory, York
The Coach Public House
103 Micklegate
99, 101 and 103 Micklegate
Coach and Horses Public House
ID on this website: 101257294
Location: Clementhorpe, York, North Yorkshire, YO1
County: York
Electoral Ward/Division: Micklegate
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: York
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Micklegate Holy Trinity
Church of England Diocese: York
Tagged with: Pub
YORK
SE5951NE MICKLEGATE
1112-1/15/675 (South side)
01/07/68 Nos.99, 101 AND 103
The Coach Public House (No.103)
(Formerly Listed as:
MICKLEGATE
Nos.99 AND 101)
(Formerly Listed as:
MICKLEGATE
No.103
Coach and Horses Public House)
GV II
Four tenements from row of seven; now public house. Mid C14;
No.101 has C19 rear wing, No.103 C17 rear wing. Refronted in
mid C18 and C20; early C19 and C20 alteration. Remainder of
row demolished in 1961. Originally built for Holy Trinity
Priory.
MATERIALS: timber-framed with wattle and daub infilling partly
replaced by brick; front now rough-cast: C17 wing of
orange-brown brick in random bond; C19 wing of mottled brick
in English garden-wall bond. Steeply pitched roof, slate at
front, concrete pantile at rear, with brick stacks to rear of
No.99 and to wing of No.103.
PLAN: each tenement originally 1 bay wide, 1 bay deep.
EXTERIOR: 2-storey 4-bay jettied front. To left of centre, C20
fluted doorcase contains part glazed double doors beneath
divided overlight. Further left, C20 windows are small paned
with top-hung lights in surrounds similar to doorcase. Between
windows, two jowled posts and lintel survive from blocked
original door. Partly restored wall plate visible above these
openings. To right of centre, C20 6-panel door beneath blocked
divided overlight in early C19 doorcase of grooved pilasters
with damaged flat hood on brackets. Flanking windows are mid
C19 shop windows of 4 large panes with moulded timber sills,
in grooved pilaster frames with plain frieze and moulded
cornice on grooved brackets. On first floor, two left bays
have oriel windows, the left one with early C19 small-pane
sashes, the right one with C20 casements; bays to right have
early C19 16-pane sashes.
INTERIOR: all fireplaces removed but early chimney flues
survive at rear of end left bay and right of centre bay.
Traces of jowled posts and curved braces detectable on first
floor. Roof: 4 crown post trusses with curved raking struts
visible, with fifth truss said to survive, embedded in right
end wall: this is one of the most complete crown post roofs to
survive in York. Walls at attic level are largely of wattle
and daub.
(City of York: RCHME: South-west of the Ouse: HMSO: 1972-:
88-89).
Listing NGR: SE5981551527
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