We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 55.0901 / 55°5'24"N
Longitude: -3.5159 / 3°30'57"W
OS Eastings: 303343
OS Northings: 578343
OS Grid: NY033783
Mapcode National: GBR 39WL.L4
Mapcode Global: WH5WK.YBX6
Plus Code: 9C7R3FRM+2J
Entry Name: Crossway House, Torthorwald
Listing Name: Torthorwald Village Crossway House
Listing Date: 3 August 1971
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 351016
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB17158
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200351016
Location: Torthorwald
County: Dumfries and Galloway
Electoral Ward: Lochar
Parish: Torthorwald
Traditional County: Dumfriesshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
The windows are predominantly timber sash and case windows with a 12-pane glazing pattern. The roof has straight skews, end chimney stacks with clay cans, and a grey slate roof covering. The house is set within a large triangular garden plot. A small section of low boundary wall with castellated coping fronts the A709.
Historical Background
The long-established village of Torthorwald is situated on the main road between Dumfries and Lochmaben. A single storey building on the site of Crossway House was possibly part the parish school in the 18th century. This building was raised a storey during the early to mid- 19th century as lodgings for the adjoining school, known then as 'Torthorwald Classical and Commercial Boarding Academy'. A newspaper article from 1850 describes the boarding school as 'spacious and stately' (Dumfries and Galloway Standard, 1850). The building is shown as a school on the 1st Edition Ordnance Survey map (surveyed 1856) through to the 3rd Edition (revised 1947). When the adjoining schoolroom was demolished, material from the building may have been used to extend the single storey outshot at the rear of Crossway House.
Crossway House, Torthorwald meets the criteria of special architectural or historic interest for the following reasons:
Architectural Interest
Design
The building has interest for its authentic and largely intact early to mid-19th century architectural character. The front elevation of the house is symmetrically proportioned, with the upper windows set hard against the eaves, in the early Scots classical vernacular fashion. The triangular wall-head pediment, also derived from classical architecture, indicates its former institutional use as a school boarding house. The stepped arrangement of windows to the rear elevation reflects the siting of the staircase in the plan form. The multi-pane timber sash and case windows add to the authenticity of the building. The single storey, gabled outshot to the rear, and lack of openings to the northeast gable, are in keeping with the character of the house.
The interior plan form appears to remain largely intact (sales particulars, 2016) with a staircase with moulded timber banister set to the rear of the plan. Some rooms have timber panelled doors and timber recesses. The interior decorative scheme otherwise appears to be largely modernised.
Setting
Crossway House has interest for its prominent location and contribution to its historic setting at the centre of the village of Torthorwald. The house is set within a triangular garden plot on a bend in the A706 road at the village High Road crossway near the 12th to 15th century remains of Torthorwald Castle and associated earthwork mounds (Scheduled Monument, SM713). The house, on the site of the former parish school, contributes to an understanding of the historic settlement pattern at Torthorwald.
Taking account of the loss of the adjoining school building, the immediate setting of the former boarding house has otherwise changed little since the mid-19th century. Torthorwald Mill Cottage (LB17152, Category C) is situated opposite Crossway House. Other historic buildings within the village include a rare thatched building called Cruck Cottage (LB17157, Category A) and Torthorwald Parish Church (LB17153, Category B).
Historic Interest
Age and Rarity
Crossway House is a mid- 19th century house (former school boarding house) with some 18th century fabric. While domestic buildings of 18th-19th century date are not a rare building type in Scotland, the provenance of Crossway House as an early rural boarding school, adds some interest under this heading. The number of former school boarding houses converted to private residences is relatively small.
Social Historical Interest
The well-known Scottish missionary John Gibson Paton (1824–1907) lived in Torthorwald and attended the school here in the 1830s. He writes in his autobiography that it was a school where pupils 'were prepared in Latin, Mathematics and Greek to go straight from their village class to the university bench'. He also claims that a classical tutor called Dr Smith was responsible for adding the boarding house to the school (Paton, 1889).
Listed building record revised in 2021.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings