History in Structure

The Pheasant

A Grade II* Listed Building in Worcester, Worcestershire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.1921 / 52°11'31"N

Longitude: -2.2184 / 2°13'6"W

OS Eastings: 385169

OS Northings: 254898

OS Grid: SO851548

Mapcode National: GBR 1G4.HZG

Mapcode Global: VH92T.H5LC

Plus Code: 9C4V5QRJ+RM

Entry Name: The Pheasant

Listing Date: 22 May 1954

Last Amended: 12 June 2001

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1390016

English Heritage Legacy ID: 488967

ID on this website: 101390016

Location: Worcester, Worcestershire, WR1

County: Worcestershire

District: Worcester

Electoral Ward/Division: Cathedral

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Worcester

Traditional County: Worcestershire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Worcestershire

Church of England Parish: Worcester, St Martin's in the Cornmarket with St Swithun and St Paul

Church of England Diocese: Worcester

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description



WORCESTER

SO8554NW NEW STREET
620-1/17/454 (East side)
22/05/54 No.25
The Pheasant
Formerly Listed as:
NEW STREET
(East side)
No.25
Old Pheasant Inn)

GV II*

Large house, now public house (shown as Pheasant Inn on 1886
O.S. map, thought to have first become an inn at end of C18).
Late C16 with subsequent alterations and extensions; major
structural repairs c1984. Possibly built for George Stinton.
Timber frame with rendered infill panels believed to be brick.
Plain clay tile roof.
Rectangular plan of 4 bays but originally L-plan with stair
turret to angle and pedestrian through-passage at left, widened
in C18 as coach entrance.
EXTERIOR: 3 storeys, upper storeys jettied. 4 first-floor
windows. Framing is a mixture of close-studding and square
panels with some herringbone decoration. The partially renewed
bressumer to the second floor has a stepped cyma moulding.
Carved and gilded console brackets to coach entrance. Several
of the posts incorporate slender pilasters with plinth and
capital supporting console brackets [cf 29 New Street (qqv)]. 2
purlins per roof slope. Mainly 6/6 sashes to first-floor, those
to left and right are tripartite with 4/4 flanking sashes; pair
of side-hung casements to left of right-hand window. 3-light
mullion and transom windows to centre and right ground-floor,
renewed square leaded panes, frieze with applied carved and
gilded decoration, cornice. Leaded casements to second-floor.
Left-return which also forms a party-wall to No.26 is mainly
brick. Right-return is horizontal weatherboarding over square
panel framing.
INTERIOR: Ground-floor to front has 4 panels to beamed ceiling,
the beams cribed with drawn-out plaster moulding to borders of
each panel; similar 2 panels to left, the beams intersected by
carriageway partition; similar ceilings to first-floor left and
second-floor. First-floor room to left has stop-chamfered beams
to 6-panel ceiling, traces of black-line decoration to wall
infill panels. Panelling in left-hand room. turned balusters
and moulded handrail to late C16 staircase, a remarkable
survival.
HISTORICAL NOTE: a notable survival of a late C16 town house
with interior features and clear evidence of its original plan
form.
(Buildings of England: Pevsner N: Worcestershire:
Harmondsworth: 1968-1985: 329; Molyneux N, Hughes P, Price S:
Vernacular Architecture Group Spring Conference Worcs 1995:
2.9; Hughes P: Bldgs and the Bldg Trade in Worcester 1540-1650
(PhD Thesis): 1990-: 148-9, 175, 439).


External Links

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