History in Structure

Earl's Garden, The Hall, Uyea

A Category C Listed Building in North Isles, Shetland Islands

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Coordinates

Latitude: 60.6655 / 60°39'55"N

Longitude: -0.8931 / 0°53'35"W

OS Eastings: 460597

OS Northings: 1198535

OS Grid: HU605985

Mapcode National: GBR S04K.3CY

Mapcode Global: XHF7Q.S6Y0

Plus Code: 9CGXM484+5Q

Entry Name: Earl's Garden, The Hall, Uyea

Listing Name: Uyea, Uyea Haa, Including Terrace Wall, Outbuilding, Walled Garden, and Earl's Garden

Listing Date: 30 March 1998

Category: C

Source: Historic Scotland

Source ID: 392155

Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB45298

Building Class: Cultural

ID on this website: 200392155

Location: Unst

County: Shetland Islands

Electoral Ward: North Isles

Parish: Unst

Traditional County: Shetland

Tagged with: Walled garden

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Description

Dated 1818, with later 19th century alterations. Single storey and attic 4-bay (grouped 2-2) symmetrical former laird's house with lower single storey and attic service wing to rear forming approximate T-plan. Harl-pointed rubble walls with droved sandstone ashlar dressings. Block finials to gableheads.

SW (PRINCIPAL) ELEVATION: symmetrical, 5-pane fanlight to entrance door at centre of elevation; regular fenestration at ground and 1st floors in flanking and outer bays; dormers breaking eaves at 1st floor with bracketted skewputts to gabled stone dormerheads.

SE GABLE: blank.

NE (REAR) ELEVATION: window at ground, and dormer matching principal elevation at 1st floor, to right of centre. Service wing advanced at left comprising 2 windows in NW side, blank gable to NE, gabled stone porch centred in SE side with block finial to gablehead and door in N re-entrant angle.

NW GABLE: blank.

Purple-grey slate roof with droved sandstone ashlar skew copes to principal range, pegged stone slab slates with red ridge tiles harl-pointed rubble skew copes to rear wing and porch, latter with bottle-glass-paned skylight. Cast-iron gutters and downpipes with hoppers between bays of principal elevation. Harl-pointed rubble ridge stacks with droved sandstone ashlar dressings flanking centre of principal range and tall harled ridge stack to rear wing, all stone-coped with circular cans.

INTERIOR: few original fitting surviving in predominantly ruinous interior. Timber stair in apsidal plaster well, and stone fireplace lintel inscribed Thomas Leisk 1818, at centre of principal range.

OUTBUILDING: 2-chamber building with door in each end gable and rubble-walled run to NE side; harl-pointed rubble walls and purple-grey slate roof with ventilators.

TERRACE WALL: low concrete-coped harl-pointed rubble wall of semicircular plan, swept up to meet corners of principal elevation.

WALLED GARDEN: to SE of house; rectangular plan with stone-slab-lintelled gateway in NW wall, fronted internally by drystone-walled terrace.

EARL'S GARDEN: to SE of house; simple rectangular drystone-walled enclosure.

Statement of Interest

Currently derelict (1997). The date of 1818 slightly pre-dates that of the new frontage added to the E end of Buness House, and appears to have been built as a single storey T or L-plan house with a concealed attic. Uyea, like Buness, was subsequently altered in the later 19th century. Changes in the stonework to the rear of the principal range suggests these works included raising the wallhead and installing dormers to the principal range, building new principal stacks, and possibly extending the length of the service wing. Photographs of 1909 held at Buness House show the dormers and gables to be ball-finialled, 12-pane timber sash and case glazing to the windows of the principal elevation, vertically-boarded timber shutters to the entrance door, and urns surmounting the upswept ends of the terrace wall.

External Links

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