We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 52.2083 / 52°12'29"N
Longitude: 1.094 / 1°5'38"E
OS Eastings: 611491
OS Northings: 261189
OS Grid: TM114611
Mapcode National: GBR TKW.FDT
Mapcode Global: VHL9Z.XR6G
Plus Code: 9F43635V+8H
Entry Name: Clock House
Listing Date: 9 December 1955
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1284270
English Heritage Legacy ID: 279382
ID on this website: 101284270
Location: Mid Suffolk, IP14
County: Suffolk
District: Mid Suffolk
Civil Parish: Stonham Parva
Traditional County: Suffolk
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk
Church of England Parish: Earl Stonham St Mary
Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich
Tagged with: House
LITTLE STONHAM CLOCKHOUSE LANE
TM 16 SW
2/131 Clock House
9.12.55
- II*
Former farmhouse. Mid or late C15 with major alterations of c.1600. An open-
hall house with service cross-wing to right; the parlour cell remodelled and
extended in cross-wing form in c.1600. 2 storeys. Timber-framed and
plastered. Plaintiled roofs; at both gables the C19 bargeboards have spike
finials. Various windows: late C18 or early C19 small-pane sashes; in the
right-hand wing early C20 small-pane casements. A chamber window of c.1600
has ovolo-mullions with old diamond leaded glazing. Early C19 6-panelled
entrance door; reeded architrave with paterae, and simple cornice. Plaintiled
roofs; a fine chimney of c.1600, the square plinth of random yellow and red
bricks. Four shafts with moulded octagonal bases of yellow brick; 3 are
circular with moulded terracotta panels impressed with roses or fleurs-de-lys,
the 4th octagonal (and perhaps rebuilt) in red brick. All shafts have
oversailing octagonal caps. The 2-bay open hall has high-quality carpentry:
an open truss has a cambered arch-braced tie beam with ogee-and-cavetto
moulding, the octagonal crownpost has a moulded capital and base and 4-way
knee-braces. The roof is fully exposed. Good close-studding. The cross-wing
is in 3 bays, originally having twin service rooms. The chamber above (later
subdivided) has open trusses with cross-quadrate type crownposts with 2-way
bracing. The original parlour-cell had an in-line roof, hipped or half-
hipped. The central chimney of c.1600 has back-to-back fireplaces with ovolo-
moulded plastered arched heads. The chamber over the parlour has a fine early
C17 coved plaster ceiling, with ribbed geometrical panels, friezes, and
central pendants and other motifs all in high relief; despite being incomplete
this is one of the richest examples of its type in Suffolk. A good
contemporary plastered overmantel in the adjacent room. Other early C17
features include wainscotting in the cross-passage, a 2-storey bay-window with
ovolo-moulded mullions and a moulded gable tie-beam, and painted leaf designs
in a 1st floor corridor. Suffolk Houses: Sandon: 1977.
Listing NGR: TM1149161189
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