History in Structure

Longcot House

A Grade II* Listed Building in Longcot, Oxfordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.6166 / 51°36'59"N

Longitude: -1.6019 / 1°36'6"W

OS Eastings: 427660

OS Northings: 190939

OS Grid: SU276909

Mapcode National: GBR 5W7.PT9

Mapcode Global: VHC0S.6M0K

Plus Code: 9C3WJ98X+J6

Entry Name: Longcot House

Listing Date: 21 November 1966

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1048786

English Heritage Legacy ID: 250571

ID on this website: 101048786

Location: Longcot, Vale of White Horse, Oxfordshire, SN7

County: Oxfordshire

District: Vale of White Horse

Civil Parish: Longcot

Built-Up Area: Longcot

Traditional County: Berkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Oxfordshire

Church of England Parish: Longcot with Fernham

Church of England Diocese: Oxford

Tagged with: House

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Description


1. LONGCOT MALLINS LANE
Longcot House

SU 29 SE 2/19 21.11.66

II*


2.
Circa 1703 as recorded on a datestone now lost with an early C19 SE front. Rubble
stone and courses of squared and dressed chalk with brick dressings and chalk quoins
and cement render to the C19 front. Hipped stone tiled roofs to NE, SE and SW fronts,
2 gabled ends to NW front with a valley between and cement render and brick stacks.
2 storey, 5 bay SE front with 6 and 3 pane sashes to upper floor and 6 pane sashes to
ground floor. Centrally placed pseudo Tuscan Doric porch with roundels on the
entablature and a 6 panel door with side panels and a semi-circular fanlight of
Bloomsbury type. The principal front was originally on the SW which has a coved
cornice and 2 six pane sashes to the upper floor and a 3 light 6 pane casement with
2 light upper panes on the ground floor. One storey and attic, 4 bay range to the NE
of squared and dressed chalk and brick dressings with a gabled machine tiled roof and
on its SE front at the junction with the main block, a polygonal bay.
Inside the Regency addition comprises a staircase hall and on either side a dining
room and a drawing room and bedroms above. The staircase is cantilevered and gives
access to a landing. It has an elm rail, plain squared banisters and carved
tread-ends. The doors to all rooms have reeded surrounds with stopped roundels
similar to those on the porch, and fanlights of the same design as that above the
front door light the passages that connect the Regency addition to the older block on
the ground floor and on the landing. All the early Cl9 rooms are panelled up to dado
level and around the windows and the landing window has candle holders projecting from
its architrave. The decorative scheme is all of a piece and surprisingly well
preserved but it does have the undeniable stamp of the pattern book. The SE bedroom
has an original Regency chimneypiece and there is a C17 chimneypiece in the SW bedroom
of the C17 section.


Listing NGR: SU2766090939

External Links

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