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Latitude: 54.8668 / 54°52'0"N
Longitude: -4.4393 / 4°26'21"W
OS Eastings: 243553
OS Northings: 555168
OS Grid: NX435551
Mapcode National: GBR HHDV.C8C
Mapcode Global: WH3TT.SX7Y
Plus Code: 9C6QVH86+P7
Entry Name: Gate Piers And Walls, Dunmore With Gates, Harbour Road, Wigtown
Listing Name: Harbour Road Dunmore with Gates Gatepiers and Boundary Walls
Listing Date: 30 January 1991
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 388926
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB42390
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200388926
Location: Wigtown
County: Dumfries and Galloway
Town: Wigtown
Electoral Ward: Mid Galloway and Wigtown West
Traditional County: Wigtownshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Circa 1845, converted to a house 1914; further additions and alterations, 1947. Tall single storey, 5-bay house, rectangular-plan, with lower single storey pavilions (former school wings). Whinstone rubble with red sandstone ashlar dressings, base and eaves course; droved and rusticated quoins and rybats; hoodmoulds to principal windows; white painted, harled end gables. Blockish tripartite ashlar porch at centre; modern door (former window), flanked by windows; 2 small windows under eaves on wallplane above and behind. 2 tall windows flanking each side that to left former door. Pavilion bays added 1947 with timber garage doors (glazed panels), that to left with pedestrian door in addition. 2 small windows (1 blocked), hoodmoulded, on left return. Right return with conservatory to rear.
REAR: painted rubble with ashlar dressings. Conservatory to left. Plate glass glazing in sash and case windows. Concrete tiles. Small end stacks. Cast-iron rainwater goods.
GATES, gatepiers and boundary walls: wrought-iron and xast-iron arrowhead gates, Anderson Foundary Bladnoch. 2 pairs of plain, tall red sandstone ashlar pedestrian gatepiers each with horizontal overthrow, blocking course and tablet; 1 tablet incised Dunmore, the other dated 1850. Rubble whinstone boundary walls, ashlar coped, heavily pointed in places and in quadrant form by driveway; adjoined to pavilion bays.
A quirky design, with historic interest as such, with gatepiers en blockish suite. The gateways and walls appear to be replicas of those at Dunure House (listed separetely). It was built as a Free Church junior school and later turned into a private school by George McClelland, eventually converted to a house, 1914, with additions formed from salvaged material, 1947. Sandstone dressings regularly treated with boiled linseed mixture.
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