History in Structure

Smith House West and Smith House

A Grade II Listed Building in Brighouse, Calderdale

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.7184 / 53°43'6"N

Longitude: -1.7854 / 1°47'7"W

OS Eastings: 414261

OS Northings: 424684

OS Grid: SE142246

Mapcode National: GBR HTZF.8S

Mapcode Global: WHC9N.KS1S

Plus Code: 9C5WP697+9V

Entry Name: Smith House West and Smith House

Listing Date: 3 January 1967

Last Amended: 2 December 1983

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1314064

English Heritage Legacy ID: 338900

ID on this website: 101314064

Location: Lightcliffe, Calderdale, West Yorkshire, HX3

County: Calderdale

Electoral Ward/Division: Hipperholme and Lightcliffe

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Brighouse

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Lightcliffe St Matthew

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description


This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 1 December 2021 to update the name and address

SE 12 SW
3/163

BRIGHOUSE
Lightcliffe
SMITH HOUSE LANE
No 121 (Smith House West) and No 123 (Smith House)

(Formerly listed as No 121 (Smith House West) and No 123 (Smith Home), previously listed as BRIGHOUSE SMITH HOUSE LANE No. 121 (Smith House West) and No. 123 (Smith House))

3. 1. 67

G. V.
II

House in two occupations formerly known as Smith House. Dated 1672 with remains of early C16 timber-framed house. Hammer-dressed stone, ashlar dressings, stone slate roof. Hall and cross-wings plan. One and a half storeys hall with two-storey wings. At the rear the central area has been built out to give a further two-storey wing. three room front of three bays with projecting two-storey gabled porch at junction of second and third bays forming a lobby entry. First bay has double chamfered mullioned windows with hoodmoulds of six lights to both floors. Lantern finial to apex under Which is blocked opening. Central hall bay has double chamfered mullioned and transomed window of sixteen lights with king-mullion. Three-course ashlar parapet is surmounted by lantern finials. Over window is hoodmould which continues round porch which has semi-circular arched doorway with moulded imposts and surround. Over is early C20 cross-window breaking into hoodmould. Lantern finial to apex.

Porch protects doorway with cyma recta-moulded surround, straight lintel with a step to centre of moulding over which is date carved in relief. Third bay is gabled and has early C20 cruciform window of twelve lights to ground floor with two cross-windows to first floor. Return wall is long range with a duality of two gables with two-span roof under the junction of which is doorway with decorated lintel. Drip course continues over windows to both floors which retain double chamfered mullioned windows of four and five lights. Rear has broad central gable of early C18, with three bays of cross-windows the right hand of which is tall staircase window. Quoins to the angles. Attached to right hand end is cross-wing which has a double chamfered mullioned window of four lights to first floor and an arched light (solid) to gable which has lantern finial.

Interior: Fireplace to hall has elaborately inlaid oak overmantel of late C17 flanked by fluted pilasters of early C18 and pulvinated frieze probably dating from C18 refitting of the hall range with a new staircase to rear when the door through to the stair hall was given a wooden surround with a half-round head and fluted pilasters. The stair has turned balusters, a swept handrail and an open string set within a panelled hall. The east wing had originally two rooms, a parlour with its own external door and the north room was a kitchen. its cyma-moulded spine beams have scarf joints breaking on the line of an earlier firehood which was replaced by the present large kitchen fireplace. This has a shallow arched lintel inscribed 1726 IHA (Joseph and Ann Holmes) carried on corbelled jambs with a chamfered surround. The kitchen stair of late C17 has open fretwork on splat balusters, a moulded handrail and a closed string, probably re-used.

G. Hepworth, Brighouse, its scenery and antiquities, (Halifax 1885), p.17.

Turner, Transactions of the Halifax Antiquarian Society, (1908) p. 269.

D. Nortcliffe, Buildings of Brighouse (Brighouse, 1978) p.22.

Listing NGR: SE1426124684

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