History in Structure

Brooklyn and Anfield Cottage Garden Wall and Outhouse Adjoining to Rear

A Grade II Listed Building in Appleby, North Lincolnshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.6235 / 53°37'24"N

Longitude: -0.5591 / 0°33'32"W

OS Eastings: 495396

OS Northings: 415069

OS Grid: SE953150

Mapcode National: GBR SVJJ.RT

Mapcode Global: WHGG7.C6Z0

Plus Code: 9C5XJCFR+99

Entry Name: Brooklyn and Anfield Cottage Garden Wall and Outhouse Adjoining to Rear

Listing Date: 6 January 1987

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1346489

English Heritage Legacy ID: 165960

ID on this website: 101346489

Location: Appleby, North Lincolnshire, DN15

County: North Lincolnshire

Civil Parish: Appleby

Built-Up Area: Appleby

Traditional County: Lincolnshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lincolnshire

Church of England Parish: Appleby St Bartholomew

Church of England Diocese: Lincoln

Tagged with: Cottage

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Description


TWENTY-SIXTH LIST OF BUILDINGS OF SPECIAL ARCHITECTURAL OR HISTORICAL
INTEREST COMPILED UNDER SECTION 54 OF THE TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING ACT 1971

HUMBERSIDE
GLANFORD
5264

SE 9515 APPLEBY CARR LANE
(north side)

15/1 No 3 (Brooklyn) and No 5
(Anfield Cottage), garden
wall and outhouse
adjoining to rear

GV II

Pair of houses with garden wall and outhouse to rear. 1870s for Winn
Estate. House and outhouse of dressed limestone with red brick dressings
and stack, and yellow brick details; pantile roofs. Garden wall of red
brick. T-shaped on plan: each house with parlour to front, entrance porch
and stairs to side, kitchen and pantry to rear. Projecting 2-storey, 2-bay
twin-gabled wing to front with flanking porches to side elevations.
Chamfered plinth, raised quoins. Two 3-light ground-floor casements. 3-
course first-floor band with central cogged yellow brick course. Similar,
smaller first-floor windows. All windows with wooden mullions and glazing
bars in raised brick surrounds with painted sills and rubbed-brick cambered
arches. Short sections of 3-course stepped and cogged brick cornice to
centre and sides, continued as raking cornices, forming broken pediments to
twin half-hipped gables with overhanging eaves and plain bargeboards. Large
central stack with brick band, stepped and cogged yellow brick cornice and 8
square-section corniced pots. Side elevations: lean-to porches with
overhanging roofs carried on corbelled timber brackets; board doors with 3
vertical battens beneath 2-pane overlights in chamfered wooden reveals and
brick surrounds. Single 2-light ground-floor windows; 3-course stepped and
cogged brick first-floor bands, 3-light first-floor windows. Windows,
cogged eaves cornice, broken pediment and bargeboards to half-hipped roofs
similar to front. Brick-coped wall separating the gardens to the rear
connects with single-storey outhouse with plinth, quoins, board doors and
cogged brick eaves and raking cornices to half-hipped gables similar to
house. Included as an example of the series of houses built in the village
for Rowland Winn of Nostell, later Lord St Oswald, from plans published by
the Salopian Society. Included for group value. N J Lyons, Small Houses
since 1750 in North-West Lincolnshire, 1985, xiii, pl 14.


Listing NGR: SE9539615069

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