History in Structure

Street Farmhouse with Attached Outbuilding

A Grade II* Listed Building in Botesdale, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.3433 / 52°20'35"N

Longitude: 1.0068 / 1°0'24"E

OS Eastings: 604914

OS Northings: 275943

OS Grid: TM049759

Mapcode National: GBR SGW.3CB

Mapcode Global: VHKCX.DCMH

Plus Code: 9F4382V4+8P

Entry Name: Street Farmhouse with Attached Outbuilding

Listing Date: 16 March 1988

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1352339

English Heritage Legacy ID: 280749

ID on this website: 101352339

Location: Botesdale, Mid Suffolk, IP22

County: Suffolk

District: Mid Suffolk

Civil Parish: Botesdale

Built-Up Area: Rickinghall

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Redgrave cum Botesdale with the Rickinghalls

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Rickinghall

Description


BOTESDALE THE STREET (SOUTH EAST
TM 0475
SIDE)
6/28 Street Farmhouse with
- attached Outbuilding
GV II*
Inn, latterly 2 dwellings and a farmhouse, now a house. Early C15, extended
early C16, floor and stacks inserted C17, extended C18; refronted, partially
reroofed and altered early C19 for G. St Vincent Wilson of Redgrave Hall (not
listed), '1833 G St.V.W.' datestone on outbuilding. Timber frame, plastered,
refronted in red brick. Plaintiled roofs. Early large open hall of 2 unequal
bays with lower end to right, no traces of original service bay or crosswing;
C16 additions to left consist of a 3 bay cross wing projecting slightly
forwards and possibly replacing an earlier upper cross wing, a 3 bay
originally jettied range with a-narrow cross passage bay to left and to far
left a short 2 bay 'service' cross wing; stacks inserted in hall upper bay and
in formerly jettied range; an C18 dairy bay added to far left. Now all 2
storeys with an attic in original hall. Main entrance in C19 red brick front
is at upper end of hall range, architraved double 6 panelled doors, shaped
brackets to a pedimental hood with a panelled soffit. To right a recessed 16
pane sash with a slightly cambered gauged brick head, first floor transomed 3-
light part opening metal frame glazing bar casement with a similar head.
Continuous offset plinth, boxed eaves. Projecting slightly to left is early
C16 3 bay cross wing with a ground floor 16 pane sash, two first floor metal
frame cross casements, gauged brick cambered heads, bargeboards to gable,
slightly lower ridge. A pilaster strip to left where former jettied range has
been underbuilt and 'service' cross wing has been subsumed into a broad 2 bay
frontage with ground floor 3 and 4-light metal frame part opening glazing bar
casements with cambered heads, first floor cross casements, roof half hipped
to left. An axial ridge stack in right bay of former jettied range, cap
rebuilt in white brick, to rear of early upper bay is a second inserted stack.
Lower C18 dairy to far left with a kitchen stack adjoining main build. Right
gable end is red brick with wavy bargeboards. To rear early bays have ground
floor red brick, a C19 6 panelled door with a fanlight opposite main entrance,
a 2-light gabled dormer in hall upper bay; cross wing has a 2-light glazing
bar casement over a lean-to outshut which continues behind former jettied
range, C19 overhanging first floor. Interior: early C15 hall bays; frame
concealed on ground floor, first floor very close studding of large scantling
with a large reverse curved tension brace in upper end wall, wall plates have
splayed scarf joints at open truss where posts have moulded heads, arched
braces removed, double wave moulded cambered tie beam with grooved soffit,
octagonal crown post with elaborately moulded brattished cap and broached
base, large 2-centred arched 4 way braces, a longitudinal brace at lower end,
smoke blackened rafters with tenoned soulaces to collars. Early C16 build: 3
bay crosswing; frame concealed on ground floor with a partition to left
removed, rebated corner posts, first floor entrance into rear bay to right
with a 4-centred arched door head, close studding, 4-centred arched braces
from posts to chamfered cambered tie beams, 2 slender octagonal crown posts,
simply moulded brattished caps and bases, 2 way arched bracing to collar
purlin with a bridled scarf joint, downward curved braces from crown posts in
end walls, no blackening. 3 bay formerly jettied range, jetty had brackets to
every third joist, close studding, stop chamfered axial binding beam on 4
centred arched brackets, 1 removed, inserted stack has a stop chamfered
fireplace bressumer, first floor entrance to rear of cross passage bay to left
with a 4-centred arched door head, a 2-light cavetto mullioned window opening,
reverse curved tension braces in left end wall, cambered tie beams, crown
posts removed, stack cuts collar purlin, no blackening. 2 bay service cross
wing has rebated corner posts, altered roof retaining central truss with 4-
centred arched braces from posts to chamfered cambered tie beam, a square
crown post with 2-way arched bracing, no blackening. Attached to rear right a
flint and red brick wall with a door links to stable outbuilding, flint and
red brick, pantiled roof. Datestone in gable facing house, inner elevation
has 3 boarded doors and 3 windows all with cambered heads, flint outer
elevation has a 2-light window. Attached to rear of house is a C19 iron pump
with a timber casing. Formerly known as The White Hart and from c.1700 as
White Hart Farm (East Anglian Miscellany, 1925, pp.62-4).


Listing NGR: TM0491475943

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