History in Structure

Gatehouse to Le Marchant Barracks with gate piers

A Grade II Listed Building in Roundway, Wiltshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.3616 / 51°21'41"N

Longitude: -1.9746 / 1°58'28"W

OS Eastings: 401867

OS Northings: 162506

OS Grid: SU018625

Mapcode National: GBR 2TV.KLL

Mapcode Global: VHB4G.Q1HH

Plus Code: 9C3W926G+J5

Entry Name: Gatehouse to Le Marchant Barracks with gate piers

Listing Date: 17 February 1984

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1271946

English Heritage Legacy ID: 452302

ID on this website: 101271946

Location: Roundway, Wiltshire, SN10

County: Wiltshire

Civil Parish: Roundway

Built-Up Area: Devizes

Traditional County: Wiltshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Wiltshire

Church of England Parish: Bishop's Cannings and Etchilhampton St Mary the Virgin

Church of England Diocese: Salisbury

Tagged with: Gatehouse

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Description


The entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 25 October 2019:

1.
1042
SU 06 SW
9/16

LONDON ROAD
(South side)
Gatehouse to Le Marchant Barracks with Gate Piers
SU 06 SW 9/16

II

Armoury, guard house and store, now part warehouse; and gateway. Dated 1878, designed at the War Office by Major HC Seddon RE. Red brick laid in English Bond with limestone and stone dressings; lateral stacks and asphalt roof. Fortress Gothic Revival style. PLAN: square, with ground-floor guard room and detention cells, corner stairs, stores on the upper floors. EXTERIOR: 4 storeys; 5-window range. A regular, square block with opposite square stair towers rising above the roof, with corbel tables and machicolation; the other two corners chamfered, with raised parapets, stone sill and lintel bands, dentil eaves and crenellated parapet. Battered ground floor to a weathered band, narrow metal-framed windows with stone lintels, stepped in threes to the stair towers. A glazed iron verandah over the entrance to the former guard room. To the rear is a double door formerly for the barracks fire engine. INTERIOR: not inspected, but noted as having a fire-proof frame of iron columns to jack arches, stone open-well stairs, and a standard layout of stores and other rooms. SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: attached wicket gateway with an iron gate, and one of originally two gate piers forming the main entrance to the barracks. HISTORY: the Keep was a secure armoury, store, guard house and lock-up, and the characteristic building of the Localisation depots. These were part of the Cardwell reforms, which redistributed barracks around the country to encourage local connections and assist recruitment. As such, the Keep raised the local profile of the barracks, and provided an emblematic focus for the local Wiltshire regiment, whose home this was from 1878 until 1967. With the similar version at Reading, one of only ten surviving examples of this important symbolic building. (Watson Colonel Sir HM: History of the Corps of Royal Engineers: Chatham: 1954-: 157-160).

This asset was previously listed twice. The duplicate record (List entry number 1243314) was removed from the List on 25 October 2019.

External Links

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