History in Structure

56-64 Fitzwilliam Street and attached front garden walls

A Grade II Listed Building in Hoyland, Barnsley

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.4952 / 53°29'42"N

Longitude: -1.4234 / 1°25'24"W

OS Eastings: 438347

OS Northings: 399984

OS Grid: SK383999

Mapcode National: GBR LXH0.MT

Mapcode Global: WHDD4.3DFW

Plus Code: 9C5WFHWG+3J

Entry Name: 56-64 Fitzwilliam Street and attached front garden walls

Listing Date: 23 April 1974

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1151091

English Heritage Legacy ID: 333879

ID on this website: 101151091

Location: Elsecar, Barnsley, South Yorkshire, S74

County: Barnsley

Electoral Ward/Division: Hoyland Milton

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Hoyland

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): South Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Elsecar Holy Trinity

Church of England Diocese: Sheffield

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Description


This list entry was subject to a Minor Enhancement on 22/10/2020

SK39NE
5/7

HOYLAND NETHER
Elsecar
FITZWILLIAM STREET (north-east side),
Nos 56-64 (even) and attached front garden walls

23.4.74

GV

II
Terrace and attached front garden walls. Mid-C19, for the Fitzwilliam estate.

MATERIALS: deeply-coursed, dressed sandstone, Welsh slate roof.

EXTERIOR: a two-storey terrace that has a symmetrical frontage with a gabled central bay that breaks slightly forward of the paired flanking cottages to each side. The replacement, part-glazed doors have overlights and plain lintels. The central door is flanked by unequally-hung 10-pane sashes in cavetto-moulded surrounds, all set beneath a single hood supported on brackets. The flanking cottages have their door to the far side of similar paired sashes with bracketed sills. The first-floor has paired, round-headed sashes to each bay aligned with the ground-floor windows. The terrace has a projecting eaves course with stone gutter brackets that continues beneath the central gable which features a central glazed oculus window. The gables have stone ashlar copings. Inserted roof-lights flank four stone-built ridge-stacks, these having bracketed tabling. The contemporary enclosure walls to the front yards have triangular copings and sweep down to the right, accommodating the falling ground, between simple gate posts.

HISTORICAL CONTEXT: from the late C18, Elsecar was the industrial village of the Earls Fitzwilliam, whose seat of Wentworth Woodhouse lies nearby. At Elsecar they invested in coal mining and iron working, erecting industrial buildings along with good quality workers’ housing and a range of other urban facilities including a church and school, all within what had been an agricultural landscape. The survival of many of these buildings makes Elsecar an important and significant place, telling the story of three centuries of coal mining, Christian paternalism, and industrial boom and decline. The terrace of five cottages, 56-64 (even) Fitzwilliam Street, is thought to have been commissioned by the fifth Earl Fitzwilliam (1786-1857) around the same time as the neighbouring Miners’ Lodging House built in 1853. Workers’ housing provided by the Fitzwilliam Estate was regarded as being of a superior quality, for instance they were built with walled yards to both front and rear to provide private outdoor space in addition to the separate allotment garden that was assigned to each cottage.


Listing NGR: SK3834799984

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