History in Structure

8, Castle Park

A Grade II Listed Building in Lancaster, Lancashire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 54.0492 / 54°2'57"N

Longitude: -2.806 / 2°48'21"W

OS Eastings: 347327

OS Northings: 461775

OS Grid: SD473617

Mapcode National: GBR 8PVM.96

Mapcode Global: WH846.WH04

Plus Code: 9C6V25XV+MJ

Entry Name: 8, Castle Park

Listing Date: 22 December 1953

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1194941

English Heritage Legacy ID: 383080

ID on this website: 101194941

Location: Lancaster, Lancashire, LA1

County: Lancashire

District: Lancaster

Electoral Ward/Division: Castle

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Lancaster

Traditional County: Lancashire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lancashire

Church of England Parish: Lancaster St Mary with St John and St Anne

Church of England Diocese: Blackburn

Tagged with: Building House

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Lancaster

Description



LANCASTER

SD4761NW CASTLE PARK
1685-1/6/48 (South side)
22/12/53 No.8

GV II

House. Mid C18, raised 1854. Sandstone ashlar with ashlar
dressings, and slate roof with gable chimney stacks.
Double-depth plan with a rear wing to the left, which may have
been altered from a former stable. 3 storeys above a cellar,
and 2 wide bays with chamfered quoins, nosed sill courses on
the first and second floors and a moulded eaves cornice. All
the openings have moulded architraves. The windows have large
16-pane sashes, and the doorway has a recessed door with
fielded panels including a concave-sided hollow diamond in the
lower half, an upper glazed panel, and an overlight with
glazing bars forming a pattern based on a pointed oval.
Because of the sequence of raising the party walls to
accommodate an extra storey, the top storey appears to be
offset about 50cm to the left, overlapping the gable of No.10
(qv), which has only 2 storeys, and overlapped in its turn by
the front wall of No.6 (qv).
INTERIOR: reeded architraves to doorways. A dogleg open-string
staircase with stick balusters and mahogany handrail, up to
the first floor, with a rib-vaulted ceiling at landing level.
An earlier staircase from the first to the second floors, not
continuous with the first staircase and perhaps moved upstairs
when the house was raised, with 2 slender turned balusters per
tread.
HISTORY: the title deeds include a plan and notes for 'taking
down a part of this dwelling house... and built and reared the
additional height, Nov. 3rd 1854'. The earliest deed, of 1753,
is a mortgage by Thomas Mackrel, barber and peruke maker, who
had inherited a moiety of 'one messuage or dwelling house, one
maltkiln, one stable...etc'.


Listing NGR: SD4732861766

External Links

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