History in Structure

44, 45, Frenchwood Street

A Grade II Listed Building in Preston, Lancashire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.7545 / 53°45'16"N

Longitude: -2.6956 / 2°41'44"W

OS Eastings: 354229

OS Northings: 428909

OS Grid: SD542289

Mapcode National: GBR TBH.SN

Mapcode Global: WH85M.KWLL

Plus Code: 9C5VQ833+RP

Entry Name: 44, 45, Frenchwood Street

Listing Date: 20 December 1991

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1207278

English Heritage Legacy ID: 392009

ID on this website: 101207278

Location: Avenham, Preston, Lancashire, PR1

County: Lancashire

District: Preston

Electoral Ward/Division: Town Centre

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Preston

Traditional County: Lancashire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lancashire

Church of England Parish: Preston St John and St George the Martyr

Church of England Diocese: Blackburn

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Description



PRESTON

SD5428NW FRENCHWOOD STREET
941-1/14/125 (South West side)
Nos.44 AND 45

GV II

Pair of small town houses. c.1830-35, altered. Red brick in
5+1 English garden wall bond (painted cream at No.45), with
some slate-hanging at rear; sandstone dressings and slate
roof. Double-depth plan, each house single-fronted, with back
extensions, and a through lobby in the centre. Two storeys
over cellars, 1+1 bays; with a 1st-floor sill-band, plain
frieze and moulded gutter cornice. The doorways, up 3 and 2
steps to the left and right respectively, have round-headed
architraves with set-in Tuscan quarter columns, plain lintels,
and semicircular fanlights with convex moulded surrounds,
No.44 with a 6-panel door and No.45 with an altered door; and
the lobby doorway in the centre has a board door and wedge
lintel. Each house has one window on each floor, all with
raised sills and wedge lintels, those at No.44 sashed without
glazing bars and those at No.45 with altered glazing; and a
cellar window with wedge lintel (casement with glazing bars at
No.44, blocked at No.45), both protected by gratings. Large
linear multiple-flue common chimney stack at the junction.
Rear: No.45 slate-hung at 1st floor; No.44 recently rebuilt;
narrow individual extensions under mono-pitched roofs, with
privy attached at end of No.45.
INTERIOR: No.44 has entrance hall, front parlour with original
ornamental cast-iron fireplace (lacking hood and grate), back
kitchen, scullery-cum-wash-house in back extension with steps
down to keeping cellar under front room and coal cellar under
doorway; original cast-iron hob grates in both main bedrooms
at 1st floor (both dismantled during grant work, 1988, but
awaiting restoration).
The item is part of a formerly complete set of late Georgian
lower-middle class town houses in this street, and was the
first pair built at this end of this side.


Listing NGR: SD5422928904

External Links

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