Hampshire Treasures
Volume 10 ( Fareham)
Page 24 - Fareham
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| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| House C.19 |
No. 1. The Potteries. Two-storey red brick building with hipped slate roof. Sash windows with red rubbed brick window arches. Central panelled door with round arched fanlight. | T&CP Act |
SU 579 072 0702 141 |
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| Farmhouse C.16 |
Dean Farmhouse. A C.16 timber-framed house with later additions. Front elevation has square timber framing with herringbone brickwork infill, and two asymmetrical gables. Two windows on brackets with mullions and transom, small window in each gable, and hipped roof dormer. Central door with small flat hood on brackets. To the west is a lower section, rendered with old tile roof, and casement windows. | T&CP Act |
SU 574 083 0702 81 |
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| Farmhouse C.19 |
Albany Farmhouse. A fine early C.19 Victorian building. | SU 579 090 0702 82 |
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| Group E - Street Patterns, Street Furniture and Open Spaces | ||||
| Street Lamps C.19 |
High Street. Ten cast iron lamp standards are spaced along the street, each has a cylindrical plinth bearing date panel 1897 and name of town. From the plinth rises a shaft with a bulbous base with floral bas relief decoration. The shaft has an enriched bank and terminates in cornice with cross arms and a large curved bracket with scrolls now fitted with electric light. The gird reference locates an approximate centre point. | T&CP Act CA |
SU 586 068 0702 208 |
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| Group F - Historical or Literary Associations | ||||
| House |
Funtley House, Iron Mill Lane. Residence from about 1784 until his death in 1812 of Samuel Jellicoe the partner of Henry Cort of Funtley Iron Mills. Henry Cort was the inventor of the rolling mill and the puddling furnace which were of importance for the production of iron during the Napoleonic Wars. Some of his inventions were tried out at these mills of which little remains other than the mill house. | SU 552 082 0702 281 |
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| Tramway C.20 |
Bus Depot at Hoeford. Between 1905 and 1929 the north-eastern portion of the depot housed the electric trams of the Gosport and Fareham line. Most of the fan of the track leading into the buildings can still be seen. SMR SU50SE32. Ref: Hampshire Industrial Archaeology (SUIAG) p.28. | SU 579 046 0702 280 |
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