History in Structure

Great Pit Farmhouse

A Grade II* Listed Building in Silverton, Devon

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.8198 / 50°49'11"N

Longitude: -3.4889 / 3°29'20"W

OS Eastings: 295213

OS Northings: 103312

OS Grid: SS952033

Mapcode National: GBR LH.XRY0

Mapcode Global: FRA 36LX.SP0

Plus Code: 9C2RRG96+WC

Entry Name: Great Pit Farmhouse

Listing Date: 11 June 1986

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1306664

English Heritage Legacy ID: 95402

ID on this website: 101306664

Location: Silverton, Mid Devon, EX5

County: Devon

District: Mid Devon

Civil Parish: Silverton

Traditional County: Devon

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Devon

Church of England Parish: Silverton St Mary

Church of England Diocese: Exeter

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Silverton

Description


SILVERTON
SS 90 SE
7/216 Great Pit Farmhouse
-
GV
II*
Farmhouse. C15 with later alterations. Cob, stone footings, plastered, under
gabled-end slate roof. Formerly a 3-room, through-passage plan, with continuous rear
outshut under catslide roof, and with a later (C19) left hand extension. Left-hand
external stack with bake-oven bulge (partially engulfed in C19 extension) and right-
hand external stack with 2 off-sets heat service end and parlour respectively; hall
heated by rear lateral stack. All with brick shafts. 2-storeys.
Front: 5-window range, the roof ridge of the left-hand extension lower than that of-
the main house; all windows of 3-light, C19 casements. 4 similar 3-light windows to
ground floor. All windows retain glazing bars. Front door (to passage) under lean-
to slate porch. C19 and C20 windows to rear.
Interior: Plank and muntin screens stand to either side of the through-passage,
chamfered, stopped and with carpenter's mitres, with chamfered brackets supporting
bressumer in parlour. The doors through these screens are late C17 or early C18, one
(to parlour) with large fielded panels. Parlour with 3 axial beams with run out
stops.
Roof: 5 jointed crucks, pegged and morticed at apex; cranked collars; threaded
purlins; diagonal ridge piece; smoke blackened from end to end with some sooted
rafters over the service end. The hall (with through-passage) is of 2 bays, the
trusses to each end formerly closed, the central upright to each sooted.
Note: according to J H Ward (Trans. Devonshire Association, 42 (1910), 283 this house
possessed 'a very interesting plaster ceiling with sporting subjects, possibly of
1610'. The present occupier (March, 1985) believes there to be a fine 'painted'
ceiling above the parlour (right-hand) room chamber: it is possible that the ceiling
noticed by Ward still survives concealed.


Listing NGR: SS9521303312

External Links

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