History in Structure

Butterwick House

A Grade II Listed Building in West Butterwick, North Lincolnshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.5441 / 53°32'38"N

Longitude: -0.7398 / 0°44'23"W

OS Eastings: 483604

OS Northings: 406016

OS Grid: SE836060

Mapcode National: GBR RW8G.M7

Mapcode Global: WHFFD.L5YT

Plus Code: 9C5XG7V6+M3

Entry Name: Butterwick House

Listing Date: 10 September 1987

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1051068

English Heritage Legacy ID: 165214

ID on this website: 101051068

Location: West Butterwick, North Lincolnshire, DN17

County: North Lincolnshire

Civil Parish: West Butterwick

Built-Up Area: West Butterwick

Traditional County: Lincolnshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lincolnshire

Church of England Parish: West Butterwick St Mary the Virgin

Church of England Diocese: Lincoln

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East Butterwick

Description


SE 80 NW
8/150

WEST BUTTERWICK
NORTH STREET
(east side)
No 26 (Butterwick House)

II

House. C18 origins, rebuilt 1833 for Capt. William Sowden Collinson.
Alterations and additions of 1920s. Brick, stuccoed to front, left return
and rear, and incised in imitation of ashlar. Pebbledashed to right return.
Sandstone dressings. Concrete tile roof. T-shaped on plan: 2-room, central
entrance-hall west front, 2-room rear wing with outshuts and C20 extensions
to each side. 2 storeys, 3 bays; symmetrical. Plinth. Side bays break
forward. Entrance has Doric doorcase with twin pilasters carrying
entablature with moulded cornice and hood. Step to C20 part-glazed panelled
door and overlight with margin lights in reveal. French windows to either
side with margin lights, in reveals and architraves with entablatures and
hoods. Left and right angles have frieze and cornice at first-floor level,
with first floor stepped-in above. First floor: 2-light casements with
margin lights in reveals and architraves with projecting sills on moulded
brackets. Stepped frieze and moulded corniced gutter. Rainwater heads to
angles dated 1833. Hipped roof. Side wall stacks with plinths, moulded
cornices. Left return: angle pilasters to ground floor carrying moulded
ashlar first-floor string course. Pairs of blind window panels to each
floor with sills. Right return has C20 fenestration. Rear wing: east end,
overlooking River Trent, has full-height canted bay with moulded stone
first-floor balcony carried on moulded brackets, with C20 railings and
first-floor glazing to original window with moulded cornice; modillioned
gutter, hipped roof, stack similar to south front. Interior. Open-well
staircase with ramped moulded handrail, plain stick balusters, turned newels
and profiled cheek-pieces. Moulded cornices to hall and main rooms, deep
coved cornice to first-floor rear room. Round arch to first-floor passage
with fluted soffit. 6-fielded-panel and 6-beaded-panel doors in architraves
throughout; panelled window shutters to front range. W Read, History of the
Isle of Axholme, 1858, pp 353-7; D L Roberts, "Lincolnshire and Humberside",
in J Hadfield (ed), The Shell Book of English Villages, 1980, p 379.

Listing NGR: SE8360406016

External Links

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