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Latitude: 53.0555 / 53°3'19"N
Longitude: -2.1088 / 2°6'31"W
OS Eastings: 392807
OS Northings: 350917
OS Grid: SJ928509
Mapcode National: GBR 255.FP4
Mapcode Global: WHBCN.LG1G
Plus Code: 9C5V3V4R+5F
Entry Name: Stafford Arms Public House and St Chad's House
Listing Date: 15 December 1986
Last Amended: 4 December 2002
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1374600
English Heritage Legacy ID: 274495
ID on this website: 101374600
Location: Bagnall, Staffordshire Moorlands, Staffordshire, ST9
County: Staffordshire
District: Staffordshire Moorlands
Civil Parish: Bagnall
Built-Up Area: Bagnall
Traditional County: Staffordshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Staffordshire
Church of England Parish: Bagnall St Chad
Church of England Diocese: Lichfield
Tagged with: Pub
BAGNALL
1798/4/8 THE GREEN
15-DEC-1986 BAGNALL
(West side)
Stafford Arms Public House and St Chad's
House
(Formerly listed as:
BAGNALL
STAFFORD ARMS PUBLIC HOUSE (3 UNITS))
GV II
Group of 3 cottages, now public house and house. C17, altered mid-C19. Coursed
and squared stone; machine tile roofs with verge parapets to each unit; ridge stack to left and end stacks to right. 2-storey frontage. Left-hand unit: of 3 windows; casements, widely-spaced to right, boarded door to left of centre with pent porch; blocked entrance to right, now a window. Centre: 2-window range; C19 three-light chamfered mullioned windows, 2 ground-floor windows are offset to right, C19 single-storey gabled porch offset to left, 3-sided front with single-light windows to diagonal sides and Tudor-arch central entrance and boarded door. The roof has an unusual mock-medieval smoke vent to the left. Right (St Chad's House): slightly taller than the remainder, a 4- and 3-light chamfered mullioned
window to the first floor, the larger left-hand window has a gabled coat-of-arms below the cill, large 3-sided single-storey bay window to the right side of the ground floor, chamfered mullion and transom windows and solid stone-block, ogee-shaped pitched roof; hipped porch on stone brackets (reminiscent of the work of G.E. Street), boarded door. 3-storey side elevation facing the church (q.v.), has C18 plank door in shouldered architrave and adjoining 2-light stone-mullioned window; 2-light round-arched window above with chamfered mullions and transoms. The group forms the focus of the village green.
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