Latitude: 53.7952 / 53°47'42"N
Longitude: -1.5453 / 1°32'43"W
OS Eastings: 430048
OS Northings: 433310
OS Grid: SE300333
Mapcode National: GBR BJM.M9
Mapcode Global: WHC9D.7VDW
Plus Code: 9C5WQFW3+3V
Entry Name: 9 and 10, Mill Hill
Listing Date: 5 August 1976
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1375191
English Heritage Legacy ID: 466073
ID on this website: 101375191
Location: Granary Wharf, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS1
County: Leeds
Electoral Ward/Division: City and Hunslet
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Leeds
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Leeds City
Church of England Diocese: Leeds
Tagged with: Building
LEEDS
SE3033SW MILL HILL
714-1/78/256 (East side)
05/08/76 Nos.9 AND 10
GV II
House, warehouse and workshops, now shop and offices. Early
C18 with C19 and 20 alterations. Brick, rendered and lined in
imitation of ashlar; slate roof, larger eaves courses. Brick
stacks: far left (very tall) and to ridge between windows 5
and 6.
3 storeys, 6 windows wide. Tall narrow sashes to first floor,
segmental arches, sills, flush frames, traces of wedge
lintels. 5 square windows to 2nd floor, sash far left, no
window to right, but sill projects. Ground floor: main
entrance (No.9) below window 3: moulded surround, overlight;
plain entrance (No.10) far right; C20 projecting shop fronts.
INTERIOR: main room lit by windows 3, 4, has an C18 fireplace
against the left wall: fluted pilasters, dentilled cornice,
decorated frieze; fielded-panel shutters to windows. Remains
of 2 sets of original stairs: to rear left on upper floors 2
flights, reset, slender column balusters; the right door opens
into stairway, the top flight having fine knopped column and
vase balusters. Roof structure; at least one truss comprises a
king post with braces rising from base to underside of
principal rafter.
The house built in the first half of the C18, possibly for a
merchant clothier and a rare survival in the oldest part of
the city.
HISTORICAL NOTE: the building was divided up by 1826, probably
a horizontal division, No.10 reached from the stairs to right.
The premises were then used by a cabinet maker and upholsterer
and a boot and shoe maker. By 1839 a tailor and draper was at
No.9 and Daniel Backhouse, overlooker (ie in charge of workers
in a textile mill) lived at No.10. The tailor and draper
remained until at least 1861 but by 1851 an eating house had
been established at No.10; maps show that the house then
backed onto Princes Court.
(Directories of Leeds for 1839, 1851, 1861, 1870: Haigh;
White; Ordnance Survey Map of Leeds, surveyed 1847).
Listing NGR: SE3004833310
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