Hampshire Treasures
Volume 4 ( Winchester)
Page 44 - St Bartholomew
|
|
Next page (Volume 4, Page 45) |
| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Statue C.20 |
Alfred the Great. 1901. Standing bronze figure, raising one arm with a sword, on a rough block granite base. Statue by Sir Hamo Thornycroft. Inscribed 'Aelfred, To the founder of the Kingdom and Nation.' Celebrated in 1901, as the thousandth anniversary of Alfred's death, a year of great celebrations. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 485 293 1502 103 |
|
| Hyde Close (north side) | ||||
| Cottages C.19 |
Nos. 1 to 19 (consec.). Terrace of small 2-storey cottages. Flint with red brick dressings. Pantile roofs. | SU 479 301 1502 128 |
||
| Building C.19 |
Opposite Nos. 21 to 25. Originally a schoolhouse, by Soane. Red brick with hipped slate roof. Sash windows with arched heads in arched recesses. Central recess has double doors. Formerly used as a drill hall. | T. & C. P. Act C.A. |
SU 480 300 1502 27 |
|
| Hyde Close (south side) | ||||
| Wall C.17 |
Nos. 20 to 25. Formerly the garden wall of No. 23, Hyde Street. Flint and brick with brick and tile coping. Two Tudor brick buttresses on south side. North and west sections of wall only protected as a scheduled ancient monument. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. S.A.M. No. 428 |
SU 480 300 1502 28 |
|
| Arch C.17 |
In wall of No. 25. Stone arch now blocked. Jacobean-Renaissance carved head with fan motif. Formerly part of Hyde House. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. S.A.M. No. 428 |
SU 480 300 1502 29 |
|
| Hyde Street (west side) | ||||
| Building C.19 |
No. 21A. 3-storey. Red brick. Central tower of 4 storeys. Gothic window on ground floor. Designed by Thomas Stopher in 1869. Originally a brewery. | C.A. |
SU 480 300 1502 111 |
|
| Building C.17 |
No. 23. Hyde Abbey House. Refronted late C.18. 2 storeys and attic. Red brick walls, modillon cornice and string course between floors. Hipped old tile roof with five dormers. Central doorcase. Doric pillars supporting open pediment. Radiating and wreathed fanlight. Some C.17 panelling and ceilings in interior. Former Hyde Abby School, long considered as one of the first classical seminaries in the kingdom. Described by Charles Dickens as 'Rood Priory' in 'Household Words', 1850. Ground floor room used for cockfighting in early C.19. Ref: Parish of Hyde. (Pennell). | T. & C. P. Act C.A. |
SU 480 300 1502 03 |
|
| Garden Wall C.18 |
No. 23. Flint and brick. Brick and tile coping. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 480 300 1502 24 |
|
|
|
Next page (Volume 4, Page 45) |
