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Latitude: 55.5447 / 55°32'40"N
Longitude: -2.2877 / 2°17'15"W
OS Eastings: 381942
OS Northings: 627921
OS Grid: NT819279
Mapcode National: GBR D4GB.H6
Mapcode Global: WH8Y7.TWSR
Plus Code: 9C7VGPV6+VW
Entry Name: Myrtle Cottage, High Street, Town Yetholm
Listing Name: Main Street and Yew Tree Road, Myrtle Cottage
Listing Date: 11 February 1993
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 353745
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB19408
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Town Yetholm, High Street, Myrtle Cottage
ID on this website: 200353745
Location: Yetholm
County: Scottish Borders
Electoral Ward: Kelso and District
Parish: Yetholm
Traditional County: Roxburghshire
Tagged with: Cottage
Harled random rubble with slightly battered walls, boulder base and broad stone skews. Ground floor bipartite windows are 20th century alterations, with concrete mullions and lintels. Left door has timber lintel.
Single window off-centre in south gable. North gable is surviving mutual gable from demolished adjacent building (some structural damage to Myrtle Cottage at first floor from time of this demolition). Narrower asymmetrically placed windows, and single-storey outshot additions (brick and stone) on rear elevation.
Sash and case glazing with eight lying panes. Vertically boarded doors. Steeply pitched roof and thack-stanes (indicating original thatch) on two gablehead and one central ridge brick chimneystacks.
One of the few vernacular houses to survive on the east side of the Main Street in Town Yetholm.
It is among a relatively small number of traditional buildings with a surviving thatched roof found across Scotland. A Survey of Thatched Buildings in Scotland, published in 2016 by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB), found there were only around 200 buildings of this type remaining, most of which are found in small rural communities. Thatched buildings are often traditionally built, showing distinctive local and regional building methods and materials. Those that survive are important in helping us understand these traditional skills and an earlier way of life.
Listed building record revised in 2019 as part of the Thatched Buildings Listing Review 2017-19.
Not to be confused with Myrtle Cottage, The Crescent at NT 8193 2806 (see separate listing, LB19429).
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.
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