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Latitude: 51.7171 / 51°43'1"N
Longitude: -5.1434 / 5°8'36"W
OS Eastings: 182963
OS Northings: 206715
OS Grid: SM829067
Mapcode National: GBR G3.YTH3
Mapcode Global: VH1RW.S3RJ
Plus Code: 9C3PPV84+RM
Entry Name: Monk Haven Manor
Listing Date: 25 August 1998
Last Amended: 25 August 1998
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 20346
Building Class: Domestic
ID on this website: 300020346
Location: Situated in a wooded valley leading to Monk Haven, SW of St Ishmaels and some 50m SW of the Church of St Ishmael.
County: Pembrokeshire
Town: Haverfordwest
Community: St. Ishmael's (Llanisan-yn-Rhos)
Community: St. Ishmael's
Locality: Monk Haven
Traditional County: Pembrokeshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Former vicarage, designed in 1835 but not marked on the St Ishmaels Tithe Map of 1839. The design was by Richard Barrett of Pembroke, copied from Plate 9 of J.B. Papworth, Rural Residences, 1818, `A Gothic cottage designed for a vicarage house'. The 1835 plans show dining-room and drawing-room to front, kitchen and study behind. Plans of 1884 by D.E. Thomas of Haverfordwest for enlargement of the rear wing, additional bay window to study end wall and alterations to left end outbuilding. Either then or later the gables were given bargeboards and a matching one-window section was added to the left end. Described as `a neat cottage ornee in the Elizabethan style' by S. Lewis in 1844.
Former vicarage, unpainted roughcast with slate overhanging-eaves roofs. Tudor style. Original building was of two storeys, the upper windows half-dormers, and 3 window-range with three octagonal rendered stacks. Extended by one bay to left in matching style. Originally there were 3 coped gables, the outer pair shouldered, the centre one crow-stepped, and centre porch was battlemented. Late C19 alterations included plain bargeboarded gables to all of these. Original tall casement-pair windows with Gothick intersecting bars in top panes, hoodmoulds to first floor left and right, slate sills. Dripcourse between floors and rendered gabled porch with chamfered 4-centred arched entry and diagonal buttresses. Tudor-arched plank door within. Added section to left has one matching ground floor window. Right end wall has broad gable and two ground floor canted bay windows with similar small-paned casements. one casement pair to first floor right. Short NE rear wing with one first floor casement pair to E. Rear has 2 casement pairs to centre over door and window, lean-to to right. Added W gable has large 20-pane sash to loft and first floor right, 4-pane sash each floor to left. French window ground floor right.
An unusual local example of pattern-book design in the Georgian Gothic style. Group value with St Ishmaels Church.
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