History in Structure

Bashall Hall

A Grade II* Listed Building in Bashall Eaves, Lancashire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.8765 / 53°52'35"N

Longitude: -2.4414 / 2°26'28"W

OS Eastings: 371080

OS Northings: 442347

OS Grid: SD710423

Mapcode National: GBR CRDM.73

Mapcode Global: WH969.GTPK

Plus Code: 9C5VVHG5+JF

Entry Name: Bashall Hall

Listing Date: 16 November 1954

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1072193

English Heritage Legacy ID: 183177

ID on this website: 101072193

Location: Bashall Town, Ribble Valley, Lancashire, BB7

County: Lancashire

District: Ribble Valley

Civil Parish: Bashall Eaves

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lancashire

Church of England Parish: Mitton All Hallows

Church of England Diocese: Blackburn

Tagged with: House

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Description


SD 710 423 BASHALL EAVES

SD 74 SW

10/5 Bashall Hall
16.11.1954
GV II*

House, probably c.1600 with early C18th alterations, but with detailed
development unclear. Sandstone rubble with stone slate roof. Comprises
an east block of 3 storeys with attics with its main roof running
east-west and with 2 gables on each side facing north and south. To the
west is a central block, said to be reduced in height after a fire, of 2
storeys with the roof running north-south. The main roof of the adjoining
west wing is parallel. This wing projects towards the south and is of 2
storeys, formerly with attic. The early windows have an outer chamfer and
inner hollow chamfer, and hoods. The main facade faces south. Under the
right-hand gable of the east block the ground floor has a 12-light mullioned
and transomed window with king mullion, now cut into by a later window. On
the 1st floor is a 12-light mullioned and transomed window. On the 2nd
floor are 2 similar windows of 6 lights each. Above is a blocked oculus.
Under the left-hand gable on the ground floor is a 5-light mullioned window
and a door with plain reveals. On both the 1st and 2nd floors are 3 sashed
windows with glazing bars and stone surrounds with a shallow cyma moulding.
Above both sets of windows is a deep plain stone band. Under the gable is a
blocked Oculus matching the one to the right. The central block has
mullioned windows on the ground floor. The 1st floor has sashed windows with
glazing bars and architraves. Between them is a doorway reached by external
stone steps. It has an architrave with bolection moulding and a broken
segmental pediment on console brackets. Above is a cartouche. Below the
gable is a plain stone band, with a blocked oculus above. The west wing has
a 4-light mullioned window on the ground floor, a 14-light mullioned and
transomed window on the Ist floor and a blocked attic window. Its right-
hand return wall has a blocked chamfered doorway with Tudor-arched head.
The north wall has a buttress with moulded offsets towards the left (east).
Further right, on the 1st floor of the east block, is a doorway, now a
window, with a surround chamfered in two orders with a Tudor-arched head.
Further right, in the central block, is a large canted bay window, with a
3-light mullioned window on the ground floor, which is otherwise blank, and
continuous glazing on the 1st floor, with 2 transoms. Interior. The
eastern ground-floor room has ovolo-moulded main ceiling beams and 2
chamfered stone doorways with Tudor-arched heads. Further west, in line with
the 1st floor doorway visible on the outside of the north wall, is a dog-leg
stair with its 2nd flight of stone, and with the 1st floor landing partly
carried on a moulded stone arch. The barley-sugar balusters and ramped
handrails are probably a C18th addition. On the 1st floor the eastern room
has panelling mostly of an early C17th type. The room adjoining to the
west, on the south side, has panelling of an early C18th type, with raised
panels and bolection mouldings. The central block has a room with 2
chamfered doorways with Tudor-arched heads and a moulded fireplace with
Tudor arch, taken from elsewhere in the house. The west wing, presently
being restored and open to the roof on the 1st floor, has trusses of a steep
pitch with tall king posts rising off tie beams and with queen struts. Buck's
drawing of c.1720, labelled 'The East Prospect of Bashall The Seat of William
Ferrers Esq.,' shows the south front almost as it appears today. A low building
to the right may be a demolished east wing, or the retainers' building (q.v.)
behind the house. Samuel Buck's Yorkshire Sketchbook, Reproduced in Facsimile,
Wakefield, 1979.


Listing NGR: SD7108042347

External Links

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