We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 53.2308 / 53°13'50"N
Longitude: -3.1956 / 3°11'44"W
OS Eastings: 320285
OS Northings: 371084
OS Grid: SJ202710
Mapcode National: GBR 6X.0J83
Mapcode Global: WH76Y.W2G1
Plus Code: 9C5R6RJ3+8P
Entry Name: Hen Rake, including attached Garden and Yard Walls
Listing Date: 11 October 2000
Last Amended: 31 January 2002
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 24117
Building Class: Domestic
ID on this website: 300024117
Location: An isolated house approximately 500m to NW of village of Halkyn, set back on the E side of a minor road between Halkyn and Windmill.
County: Flintshire
Town: Holywell
Community: Halkyn (Helygain)
Community: Halkyn
Locality: Windmill
Traditional County: Flintshire
Tagged with: House
A mid C19 house first shown on the 1870 Ordnance Survey. Probably a manager's house connected with mineral workings on the mountain. The house was used by Grosvenor Estate for meetings; a safe on the first floor was used for estate money, wages etc. 'Rake' is a common term for a lead mine. The Grosvenor family owned an extensive estate and mineral rights in the Halkyn area. Halkyn Castle was built for the second Earl Grosvenor in 1824-7 and was used as an occasional residence. The Earl was later made Duke of Westminster.
A 2-storey double-fronted house of roughcast walls over stone, and slate roof with end rendered rectangular stacks to the main range and at the end of the rear wing. The front faces SE and has a central doorway with panelled door (part glazed) under a modern gabled porch. Windows are 16-pane hornless sashes, the upper-storey windows beneath the eaves, the lower-storey windows with cambered heads. On the L (SW) side the rear wing is a 2-window elevation with 16-pane sash windows, larger to R. A lean-to porch/conservatory obscures the lower R window. On the opposite, NE side, where a former cartshed has been taken into the house, are sash windows in the upper storey, a 2-light small-pane casement lower L and 2 inserted mid C20 windows lower R.
The garden to the front (SE) of the house, and the yard to the SW are enclosed by stone walls.
The entrance hall has a main stair with swept handrail, stick balusters, and tapering newel. Most rooms retain panelled window shutters; the doors in the front of house are 6-panelled, and principal rooms and bedrooms have C19 fireplaces. One ground-floor door is a simple boarded door with hand-forged ironwork. There is a second (service) stair near the rear kitchen with boarded partitioning. The doors in the rear of the house suggest a late C19/early C20 re-ordering of this area. The ground-floor front room to the N of the entrance hall has an arched recesses flanking the chimney. The front bedroom (S) has built-in panelled cupboards.
Listed as a mid C19 house retaining much of its original character, with historic connections with local mineral industries.
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