Hampshire Treasures
Volume 3 ( Hart and Rushmoor)
Page 193 - Aldershot
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| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
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| Building C.19 |
Former Ebenezer Methodist Chapel, Ash Road/Herret Street. Built 1885. One storey, red brick structure with Portland stone decoration. Circular window over porch. Now used for industrial purposes. Ref: The Story of Aldershot, (Cole), p. 263. | SU 877 500 0103 06A |
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| House C.19 |
Cross House, No. 177, Ash Road. 2 storeys. Plastered walls. Tiled roof. Ref: The Story of Aldershot, (Cole), p. 262. | SU 878 499 0103 07 |
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| House C.19 |
Ayling House, Ayling Lane. 2 storeys. Red brick with blue headers. Hipped tiled roof. Probably older than date stated. The name is that of the last Abbot of Waverley Abbey, William Ayling, who rented land in Aldershot until 1536. | SU 858 499 0101 01 |
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| Building C.19 |
St. Anthony's Convent, Alexandra Road. 3 storeys with 2-storey extension. Red brick and stucco walls. Slate roof. Statue of St. Francis. Now the Franciscan Missionaries of the Divine Motherhood. Ref: The Story of Aldershot, (Cole), p. 300. | SU 866 507 0101 06 |
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| Building C.19 |
The Aldershot Institute, on corner of Victoria Road and Station Road, 1886. 3 storeys. Red brick structure. Two large gable ends with parapet. Home of Aldershot Social Club. Ground floor was a nurses' training school. | SU 865 506 0104 107 |
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| Buildings C.19 |
Cargate Avenue. On high ground to west of Aldershot. Developed as middle-class Victorian residential area with a variety of large well built houses dating from 1875-1895. Mostly of red brick. Each has a variety of pinnacles, towers and spires. Best examples Nos. 24, 30, 33, Cargate Avenue and the Coach House, Cargate Grove. | SU 861 502 0101 23 |
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| School C.19 |
East End School, Windmill Road. Opened 1874. The oldest school building in Aldershot. Red brick with white brick window surrounds. Single storey with three large protruding gables. Spacious area of classrooms. Now in use as a college for students. | SU 871 504 0103 13 |
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| Building C.19 |
Coach house of mid Victorian date. Brick overhang supported by wooden pillars. Fine example of small stables and two coach bays in yard. Built as a public house circa 1870, in New Town, now North Town. | SU 879 507 0103 15 |
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| House C.19 |
Norfolk Villa, Ash Road. Circa 1860. 3 storeys and semi-basement. Slate roof. Originally red brick, fronted in white with buff surrounds. Two entrances by steps with stone banisters. Stands back from road. | SU 874 500 0103 17 |
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