Latitude: 51.8843 / 51°53'3"N
Longitude: -2.4597 / 2°27'34"W
OS Eastings: 368456
OS Northings: 220738
OS Grid: SO684207
Mapcode National: GBR FX.RJGQ
Mapcode Global: VH86L.BW0W
Plus Code: 9C3VVGMR+P4
Entry Name: Mutlow Cottage
Listing Date: 12 May 2008
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1392582
English Heritage Legacy ID: 505129
ID on this website: 101392582
Location: Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, GL17
County: Gloucestershire
District: Forest of Dean
Civil Parish: Longhope
Traditional County: Gloucestershire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Gloucestershire
Church of England Parish: Longhope All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Gloucester
Tagged with: Cottage
502/0/10025
LONGHOPE
BARREL LANE
Mutlow Cottage
12-MAY-08
II
A farm worker's cottage, dating from the mid-late C18, probably originally two dwellings.
MATERIALS: The building is constructed from limewashed local sandstone brought to course, with brick stacks, set under a plain clay tile roof.
PLAN: The cottage is oriented north-south, and is built into a bank, and on ground which rises to the south. The cottage is a single depth plan, in two ranges, with an outshut to the rear of the northern range housing a scullery. Each range has a single room, with a stair in the southern range; to the first floor, a single room to the south and two to the north.
EXTERIOR: The house is of three bays, and the front elevation is of two storeys; to the rear, the building is set into the bank, and so the first floor appears at ground level. The northern range is of two bays, with a central entrance door flanked by segmental headed window openings to the ground floor, and rectangular windows to the first floor. The southern range has an entrance door to the left, with similar windows to those in the northern range. Both doors are plain plank doors; the windows are oak-framed casements with leaded glass and iron fittings, that to the ground floor of the southern section of three lights, with similar two-light windows above; the northern range has two-light windows throughout. There is a small timber canopy porch to the door in the southern range. To the rear, there is a catslide roof over the outshut; this elevation has no fenestration apart from a small window at the head of the stair, similar to those in the front elevation. To the north, a flight of stone steps runs along the side of the building to give access to a door at first floor level. The north gable end has a shuttered opening above the entrance door giving access to the loft.
INTERIOR: The ground floor has flagged stone floors; the southern room retains a late C19 fire surround with a slightly earlier fire grate, and an early C19 cupboard in the alcove to the right of the chimney breast. The northern room has a large C19 range set an angle into the chimney breast which is shared with the bread oven in the scullery to its rear. The scullery also has a built in copper for heating water. The northern ground floor room has a very large-section exposed chamfered ceiling beam, hand-hewn, with exposed ceiling joists, all of which is whitewashed; the ceiling beams in the southern room are lighter in section but also chamfered and whitewashed. A C20 partition has been inserted in the ground floor room to the north to create a bathroom. The straight elm stair has moulded treads and a closed string with plain stick balusters. The first floor retains a C19 fireplace in the southern room, which also has wide elm floorboards. All the doors throughout the interior are early C19 plank and batten doors.
SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: There is a small stone-built privy to the north of the cottages.
HISTORY: The building appears from its fabric to date from the mid-late C18. It appears to have originated as two farm workers' cottages associated with the nearby Old Farm. The cottages appear very little unaltered since at least the mid-C19; the plan form remains constant in the Ordnance Survey map series covering the period 1883-1923. They are believed to have been made into a single dwelling in 1915.
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION DECISION:
Mutlow Cottage is listed at Grade II, for the following principal reasons:
* This farm worker's cottage dates from the C18, and retains its plan form and fabric largely unaltered since this date
* Its special interest is enhanced by the survival of good details from the C19 which help to demonstrate its evolution
* The construction is of good quality and is representative of the vernacular tradition of the area
* Very few of these relatively humble and once common cottages now remain unaltered where they remain at all, making Mutlow Cottage an increasingly rare survival
Mutlow Cottage is listed Grade II, for the following principal reasons:
* This farm worker's cottage dates from the C18, and retains its plan form and fabric largely unaltered since this date
* Its special interest is enhanced by the survival of good details from the C19 which help to demonstrate its evolution
* The construction is of good quality and is representative of the vernacular tradition of the area
* Very few of these relatively humble and once common cottages now remain unaltered where they remain at all, making Mutlow Cottage an increasingly rare survival
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