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Latitude: 52.6295 / 52°37'46"N
Longitude: -2.7447 / 2°44'40"W
OS Eastings: 349692
OS Northings: 303791
OS Grid: SJ496037
Mapcode National: GBR BJ.7JYS
Mapcode Global: WH8C6.T56G
Plus Code: 9C4VJ7H4+R4
Entry Name: Wheat Hall
Listing Date: 10 March 1986
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1366664
English Heritage Legacy ID: 259424
ID on this website: 101366664
Location: Little Ryton, Shropshire, SY5
County: Shropshire
Civil Parish: Condover
Traditional County: Shropshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Shropshire
Church of England Parish: Condover
Church of England Diocese: Hereford
Tagged with: House
SJ 40 SE CONDOVER C.P. WHEATHALL
9/122 Wheat Hall
-
GV II
Farmhouse. Late C14 or early C15, re-modelled 1721 (datestone)
with later additions and alterations. Red brick concealing timber frame,
partly of cruck construction to rear, plain tile roof and raised verges.
Original plan a 2-bay open hall with service bay or bays at west end
and a 2-bay solar cross-wing slightly projecting at upper end; 3-bay
brick range added to front 1721 and the cross-wing extended to north,
forming present U-plan. 2 storeys and gable-lit attic to C18 range,
floor bands and toothed eaves cornice; 3-window front, glazing bar
sashes, replacing 5 infilled windows to first floor and 4 to ground
floor; central entrance, early C19 pilastered doorcase with 4-panel
door and rectangular overlight; integral corner end stack to right and
external stack to back wall on left, ridge stack to former open-hall
range. Datestone "W.D.(William Daker)/1721" over central first-floor
window. Interior: inspection not possible at time of re-survey
(February 1985) but central truss of hall range known to survive,
arch-braced cruck (destroyed on ground floor) with cambered collar and
v-struts, Alcock apex-type L2; first floor of cross-wing has close-studding with
short straight tension braces exposed to side walls and former northern
end wall but framing destroyed on ground floor; single-purlin roof
with curved windbraces and central and northern trusses surviving,
cambered collars supported by 3 vertical struts from tie beam (central
one now missing on central truss), jowled wall posts with slightly
arched braces to tie beam. An unusual feature is a pointed-arched
recess with moulded stone lintel at south end of east side wall; this
relates to a brick projection on the outside wall but its function is
not known. V.C.H. VIII (1968) p. 36; Alcock (1981) p. 143; Salop
County Sites and Monuments Record PRN 13259 (unpublished report
by Madge Moran).
Listing NGR: SJ4969203791
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