History in Structure

Waterperry House and Attached Wall

A Grade II* Listed Building in Waterperry with Thomley, Oxfordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.7517 / 51°45'6"N

Longitude: -1.0897 / 1°5'22"W

OS Eastings: 462935

OS Northings: 206286

OS Grid: SP629062

Mapcode National: GBR B0P.1BL

Mapcode Global: VHCXY.278G

Plus Code: 9C3WQW26+M4

Entry Name: Waterperry House and Attached Wall

Listing Date: 18 July 1963

Last Amended: 5 June 1985

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1369255

English Heritage Legacy ID: 246721

ID on this website: 101369255

Location: Waterperry, South Oxfordshire, OX33

County: Oxfordshire

District: South Oxfordshire

Civil Parish: Waterperry with Thomley

Traditional County: Oxfordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Oxfordshire

Church of England Parish: Waterperry

Church of England Diocese: Oxford

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Waterperry

Description


WATERPERRY
SP60NW
6/201 Waterperry House and attached
18/07/63 wall
(Formerly listed as Waterperry
Horticultural School)

GV II*


Mansion, now college. c.1713 for Sir John Curson, incorporating late C17 wing:
altered c.1820 for Henley family. Stucco with limestone ashlar dressings; brick;
squared coursed limestone rubble; Welsh-slate and old plain-tile roofs.
Double-depth plan with U-plan rear wing. 3 storeys with 2-storey rear wing. Main
block, with heavy cornice, balustraded parapet and projecting quoins, has
7-window front, the central bay breaking forward slightly, with a large
Ionic-mullioned Venetian window at first floor above an Ionic tetrastyle
balustraded portico beneath which is a double-leaf 6-panel door flanked by
narrow lights set in chamfered rustication. 6-window return walls have central 2
bays breaking forward, more prominently to left. Rear wall includes a 3-storey
bowed section in English-bond brickwork. Tiled hipped roof. Service range to
rear incorporates the earlier rubble house, facing to right, which has a central
6-panel door and short projecting wings at each end of the range, that to left
further extended and incorporating a stone arched doorway of 2 chamfered orders
which may be C14. At first floor in the front and wings are leaded wood-framed
cross windows, and the rear has rows of similar windows on both floors. Left
wing has stucco oval set between 4 fleurs-de-lys which contains the date 1705.
Hipped roof (which is slated at the front and tiled elsewhere, has a ridge stack
to right of centre and a stack on the flush rear gable of the left wing which
originally extended to the rear). Rear hopper head is dated 1799. Interior: Main
block has columned hall leading to stair hall containing late C18/early C19
open-well stair with ramped and wreathed handrail; arched window contains
mostly-continental C16 and C17 painted glass. Back stair has late C17 twisted
balusters and ramped handrail, probably a C18 re-arrangement. Early c18 panelled
room has blocked arched doorway flanked by fluted pilasters supporting an
entablature incorporating the dentil cornice. C17 wing has large internal stack
and butt-purlin roof. Brick and rubble wall runs from rear wing to Church of St.
Mary (q.v.).
(V.C.H.: Oxfordshire, Vol.V, p.296; Buildings of England: Oxfordshire. p,828),


Listing NGR: SP6293706283

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