History in Structure

The White Hart Public House

A Grade II* Listed Building in Weymouth, Dorset

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.6099 / 50°36'35"N

Longitude: -2.4554 / 2°27'19"W

OS Eastings: 367869

OS Northings: 79007

OS Grid: SY678790

Mapcode National: GBR PY.DGZ0

Mapcode Global: FRA 57RG.778

Plus Code: 9C2VJG5V+XR

Entry Name: The White Hart Public House

Listing Date: 12 December 1953

Last Amended: 22 December 1997

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1147950

English Heritage Legacy ID: 467918

ID on this website: 101147950

Location: Weymouth, Dorset, DT4

County: Dorset

Electoral Ward/Division: Melcombe Regis

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Weymouth

Traditional County: Dorset

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Dorset

Church of England Parish: Radipole and Melcombe Regis

Church of England Diocese: Salisbury

Tagged with: Pub

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Description


This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 28 February 2022 to update text and reformat to current standards

SY6779SE
873-1/20/230

WEYMOUTH
ST NICHOLAS STREET (West side)
The White Hart Public House

(Formerly Listed as: LOWER BOND STREET (South side) No.20)
(Formerly Listed as: LOWER BOND STREET (South side) The White Hart Hotel)

12/12/53

II*

Includes: No.20 LOWER BOND STREET.

Hotel. Early C17. Portland stone ashlar, front range rendered, slate roofs.

PLAN: symmetrical single-room depth front range has a narrow wing to the left, and a broader range to the right, incorporating the former No.20, Lower Bond Street; between the rear ranges is the gabled early stair turret. Later low ranges have been added to the left (S), and across the rear, enclosing a small courtyard.

EXTERIOR: two storeys with attics, the front to Nicholas Street was completely refenestrated in the mid C19, with plain sashes. There are three flat-roofed dormers above broad canted two-storey bays with moulded cornices at each level. At first floor is a central sash, above the projecting square porch with glazed doors and cheeks in square pilasters and responds; a C20 door beyond the bay at each end, under the continuation of the bay cornices. The cornices have dentils to the porch and left half of the front only. A small plinth, returned to the gable ends, and a plain coped parapet set between the scrolled kneelers to saddle-back coped gables with square ashlar stacks at either end, to cappings with very small dentils.

The right gable is plain, but with a large three-panel door in pilasters, with entablature. This front, to Lower Bond Street, continues with a front rebuilt in the late C19, 'stitched in' at the right-hand end to the earlier ashlar coped gable. The centre section has a good two-light sash raking dormer in a tiled roof above an 8:12:8-pane oriel, and at ground floor three plain sashes in flush surrounds.

The front gable, in the same plane as the remainder, has a two-light hollow-chamfer mould stone casement with label above a 4:12:4-pane sash, also with label course. Ground floor has two plain sashes. The return gable has a glazed door in pilaster surround. This gable has a small terminal stack, and simple coping, the other has saddle-back coping. The south side has a rubble gable, with a blocked attic light in a flush chamfered surround, and, at first floor, a two-light recessed chamfer casement with label. Beyond is the lower gabled wing, with coping and kneelers, and a large blocked three-light casement with label. The stair turret at the rear has a coped gable with kneelers, and is in good ashlar. There are sundry additions at low level.

INTERIOR: the ground floor has been substantially modified; on the inner wall of the range to the right is a former two-light window in a stone wall, with hollow-chamfer mullions, and the front room, left, has a wide fireplace with a flat four-centred stone lintel, the mouldings partly broken off. The wide spiral stone staircase, in a half-cylindrical well, has the treads roughly shaped to the soffits, and carried to corbels on the outer wall; it continues through the upper storey in simplified form and the central stone newel finishes with a slightly rounded capping and fluted sides.

The upper room to the right has fine bolection-mould panelling, and a C19 fire surround with reeding and paterae. The ceiling, which continues across the whole of the front range at this level, although interrupted by later partitions, is in richly moulded plasterwork in a series of diamonds with fleur-de-lys enrichment. The roof was not fully inspected, but appears to have been replaced in the C19. The attics are not in use, and the floor structure there is in poor condition. One of the more substantial early buildings of the town, at the time of survey surrounded by dereliction or mid C20 development.

No.20 Lower Bond Street listed on 18.6.70.

Listing NGR: SY6786479006

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