Hampshire Treasures
Volume 7 ( Havant)
Page 40 - Emsworth
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Next page (Volume 7, Page 41) |
| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
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| Stable Block |
Holmwood Mews, No. 28, King Street. Painted brick. Hipped slate roof. Projecting centre portion with gable over and roundheaded loft door. | C.A. |
SU 751 055 1109 47 |
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| Water Mill |
The Mill, Queen Street. 3 storeys and attic. Red brick walls. Tiled roof. Multi-paned windows. One of the last working water mills in Hampshire - in use until the 1960s. Ref: 1. Tour Through England and Wales (Defoe), p.135. Ref: 2. P.H.F.C., Vol. 25, 1968. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 751 057 1109 35 |
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| House C.19 |
No. 1, Queen Street. 2 storeys. Red brick with grey headers. Tiled roof. Brick eaves cornice. Semi-circular doorstep. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 751 057 1109 13 |
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| Building C.19 |
No. 3, Queen Street. 2 storeys. Modillion eaves cornice. Hipped tiled roof. Three windows with glazing bars missing. Modern shop window in south western half. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 750 057 1109 191 |
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| Inn C.19 |
Lord Raglan, No. 35, Queen Street. 2 storeys. Faced with rough flints with yellow brick window dressings, quoins and modillion eaves cornice. Hipped tiled roof. An interesting building at the eastern entrance to Emsworth. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 751 057 1109 27 |
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| House C.19 |
Trentham Cottage, No. 2, Tower Street. 2 storeys. Stuccoed walls. Slate roof. Circular first floor window with octagonal divisions. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 750 056 1109 48 |
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| House C.19 |
Trentham House, No. 4, Tower Street. 2 storeys. Stuccoed walls. Eaves cornice. Slate roof. Regency bay windows and wrought iron balconies. | T. & C. P. Act C.A. |
SU 750 056 1109 50 |
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| Group E - Street Patterns, Street Furniture and Open Spaces | ||||
| Public Open Space |
Conigar Point. Named from Coney rabbit and locally nicknamed 'The Bunnies'. Centred on grid reference. | N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 737 052 1109 08 |
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| Public Open Space |
St. Peters Square ('The Square'). Centre of the town and probably the original site of the market and fair granted to the Lord of the Manor in 1239. The market lapsed in the C.18 and the fair lasted until the C.19. Stocks, pillory and village pump were sited here. | C.A. |
SU 749 057 1109 53 |
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| Pond |
The Tidal Mill Pond. Taken over by old Warblington U.D.C. in the 1920s. The embankment has been turned into a promenade. | C.A. |
SU 748 055 1109 61 |
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