History in Structure

26 Eastgate Street and 32 Eastgate Row South

A Grade II* Listed Building in Chester, Cheshire West and Chester

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.1903 / 53°11'25"N

Longitude: -2.8903 / 2°53'25"W

OS Eastings: 340607

OS Northings: 366280

OS Grid: SJ406662

Mapcode National: GBR 7B.30D5

Mapcode Global: WH88F.K2VL

Plus Code: 9C5V54R5+4V

Entry Name: 26 Eastgate Street and 32 Eastgate Row South

Listing Date: 28 July 1955

Last Amended: 6 August 1998

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1376230

English Heritage Legacy ID: 470224

ID on this website: 101376230

Location: Chester, Cheshire West and Chester, Cheshire, CH1

County: Cheshire West and Chester

Electoral Ward/Division: Chester City

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Chester

Traditional County: Cheshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Cheshire

Church of England Parish: Chester, St Peter

Church of England Diocese: Chester

Tagged with: Architectural structure

Description


This list entry was subjected to a Minor Enhancement on 19 February 2025 to update the description and add Source and reformat the text to current standards

SJ4066SE
595-1/4/180

CHESTER CITY (IM)
EASTGATE STREET AND ROW (South side)
No.26 Street and No.32 Row

(Formerly Listed as: EASTGATE STREET No.26 Street & No.32 Row)

28/07/55

GV
II*

26 Eastgate Street and 32 Eastgate Row South are an undercroft, Row and former townhouse constructed in the C17, probably on the site of an earlier building. The building was altered in the early C18, and then restored in 1858 in Vernacular Revival style by Thomas Mainwaring Penson for a local jewellers, Butt and Company Ltd. Penson became a leading figure in this style, and his work can be seen elsewhere on Eastgate Street, including at 22 Eastgate Street and 24-28 Eastgate Row South, and 28 Eastgate Street and 34 Eastgate Row South. The building at 26 Eastgate Street and 32 Eastgate Row South is considered to be one of the earliest forerunners of Vernacular Revival style in Chester.

Butts Jewellers had links to the Richardson family, who established a goldsmiths in Eastgate Row in the early C18. Butts occupied both the undercroft and Row shops until the company was taken over by Mappin and Webb in the mid-C20. They retained the Row shop as a jewellers until the early C21, with ancillary offices and storage above. The undercroft shop is now (2024) a separate retail premises.

The building is of sandstone and timber-framed construction with plaster panels. The west elevation is of old brown brick. There is a grey-slate roof, with its ridge at right angles to Eastgate Street.

EXTERIOR: The building is of four storeys including an undercroft and Row.
The undercroft has a modern shopfront to the street, between two sandstone stop-chamfered end piers. These continue up through the Row and have half-round responds and foliar capitals to the Row storey.
The Row level has Gothic cast-iron railings to the front opening, and a covered sloping stallboard that measures 2.2m from front to back. The Row has a terrazzo walkway and a shopfront with a panelled ceiling above the stallboard and Row walk.

The third storey is carried on the Row-top bressumer, which has moulded chamfers. Above this is a row of 10 small-framed panels beneath a leaded five-light mullioned and transomed casement window with two close-stud panels to each side. Four quadrant brackets, carried by angel corbels with 10 small panels between, support the fourth-storey jetty beam, which has a moulded arris.

The fourth storey has a central canted, three-light oriel window on a massive moulded corbel, set within an arch-braced truss. There is a S-shaped strut to each side of the oriel and chamfered corner posts. The gable has richly carved and crocketed bargeboards, and a carved finial with a pendant.

The western brick elevation has a replacement three-light mullioned window and a tall lateral chimney.
INTERIOR: The undercroft, the floor level of which is three steps down from the street, has all of its internal surfaces covered. The early-C20 Row shop has the form of a previous galleried hall. There is an early-C18 open-string, open-well stair to the rear with plinthed newels, three vase balusters per step, shaped brackets, and a heavy swept rail (all painted). There is a C17 parlour above the Row, which has oak wainscot to all walls with two rows of panels beneath the dado rail, three rows of vertical proportion above, and a row of broad panels beneath an oak cornice. The parlour also has a carved oak fireplace with architraves flanked by foliar motifs and a frieze with a fine pictorial panel of old Chester and the Dee in relief, between swags. There is an oak door of two short, two long, and two short fielded panels, boxed beams, and the original joists.

Listing NGR: SJ4060766280

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