Hampshire Treasures
Volume 3 ( Hart and Rushmoor)
Page 14 - Crondall
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| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| House C.15/16 |
Greensleeves. Originally three cottages, then two, and until 1951 known as Tudor Cottage. Part reputed to be extremely old. Timber-framed with brick infilling. Old tile roof. Part 1 storey and attic, part 2-storey. Tall gable with elaborate timber-framing and herringbone infill to left hand. Leaded casement windows. Ref: Ordained in Powder, (Butterfield), p.69. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 796 486 2002 18 |
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| Cottage C.16 |
Verneys, near Swanthorpe House. Timber-framed with brick infilling, rendered and cream painted. Peg-tiled roof. Small paned casement windows. Recently modernised. Barn at rear converted into garage. Vernie Croft mentioned in Crondall Customary of 1567. | SU 785 467 2002 49 |
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| House C.16 |
Kings Head House, Itchel Lane. 2 storeys. Brick structure. Mainly casement windows. Fireback found in chimney dated 1640, during alterations in 1960. Former inn dating from pre-Civil War. An inn unitl early C.20. Ref: Monastery and Manor, (Butterfield), p.92. | C.A. |
SU 793 487 2002 32 |
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| Farmhouse C.16 |
Green's Farmhouse, Pankridge Street. 2 storeys. Brick structure. Offset eaves. Old tiled roof. 5-bay front. Converted into two cottages C.19. Charles II coin found in roof 1940 when cottages were re-converted into one house. Central panelled door and rectangular fanlight under flat hood. Ref: Crondall Records, (Baigent), p.181. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 796 490 2002 04 |
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| House C.16 |
Amberley House, Pankridge Street. Brick and partly timber-framed structure. Semi-detached. Only surviving part of a large house destroyed by fire early this century. | C.A. |
SU 795 488 2002 92 |
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| Building C.16 |
The Meeting House, formerly The Meeting Room. 2 storeys. Colourwashed brick. Old tiled roof. Casement windows. Brick circa 1550, restored 1966. Used as Plymouth Brethren meeting room 1900-60. Now a private house. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 794 488 2002 30 |
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| House C.16 |
Heath House, Ewshot. Oldest part was Elizabethan hunting lodge. Random flint walls 2 ft. thick. Hipped tiled roof. All walls rendered and painted white. C.18 and C.19 rendered flint and brick extensions. Modern metal-farmed diamond paned casements. Once the Dower House of the Clare Park estate. Porch on south side. Cellars with hooks for hanging, and slabs for cutting up game. Ref: 1. Monastery and Manor, (Butterfield). Ref: 2. Ordained in Powder, (Butterfield). | SU 818 494 2002 80 |
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| Inn C.16 |
The Plume of Feathers, The Boro'. 2 storeys. Timber-framed with brick infilling. Old tiled roof. Half-hipped gable on northwest front, upper part overselling. Similar, but lower 2-storey wing. Southwest front has oversailing upper part. Probably early Elizabethan and the oldest inn in the parish. | T. & C. P. Act C.A. |
SU 794 488 2002 05 |
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