History in Structure

Llwyn-Y-Go Farmhouse

A Grade II Listed Building in Kinnerley, Shropshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.7831 / 52°46'59"N

Longitude: -3.0198 / 3°1'11"W

OS Eastings: 331311

OS Northings: 321102

OS Grid: SJ313211

Mapcode National: GBR 74.XQYB

Mapcode Global: WH8B9.L96R

Plus Code: 9C4RQXMJ+63

Entry Name: Llwyn-Y-Go Farmhouse

Listing Date: 19 January 1952

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1176419

English Heritage Legacy ID: 256573

ID on this website: 101176419

Location: Shropshire, SY10

County: Shropshire

Civil Parish: Kinnerley

Traditional County: Shropshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Shropshire

Church of England Parish: Maesbrook St John

Church of England Diocese: Lichfield

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Description


SJ 32 SW; 7/25

KINNERLEY C.P.,
LLWYN-Y-GO,
Llwyn-y-go Farmhouse

19.01.52

II

Farmhouse, now house. Late C15, remodelled early C17 with later
additions and alterations and comprehensively restored late C20.
Timber-framed of cruck construction with rendered infill, much renewed especially
to front; machine tile roof, half-hipped to right. Original plan
an open-hall house comprising a hall of two cruck-framed bays with partition
and solar to right (now removed) and through-passage and 2-storey single-
bay service end to left. The hall was floored over in C17 when a
central stack was inserted and a central gable to front and the two
projecting gables to rear were added. The present external stack is
probably a late C17 addition. Two storeys. Framing: much renewed
and partly clad and rebuilt in brick (now rendered). Centre gable
to front has diagonal bracing above tie beam and C20 carved corner
brackets. Two carvings of human heads attached to wall plate below
gable are either late C20 or recarved at this date. Rear has square
and rectangular panels including to left gable, which is jettied to
first floor and attic with carved corner brackets. Right gable, jettied
only to attic with carved corner brackets, has close studding and
herring-bone bracing to first floor. True cruck truss with cambered collar
to left gable end partly obscured by massive external rubblestone stack
with top rebuilt in C20 red brick. Similar cruck truss to right gable
end, repaired and truncated and partly obscured by late C20 porch.
Late C20 casements to front, one on each floor to centre, to left and
right on ground floor and to contemporary gabled eaves dormers to either
side of centre gable. C20 casements also to rear except for paired
C19 casements on ground floor to left and right of right gabled projection.
Each gable has 3-light wooden mullion windows with latticed lights
directly below eaves on both sides,repaired in late C20 following discovery
of infilled C17 windows during restoration. Present entrance through
late C20 door in left gable end. C20 red brick stack immediately
in front of ridge to right of centre gable.

INTERIOR. Right
ground-floor room (now knocked in to one with centre room) has early C17 deep-
chamfered cross beam ceiling and heavy chamfered joists with stepped
and ogee stops. Large stack has inglenook fireplace to left. Centre
ground-floor room has deep-chamfered spine beam with stepped and ogee
stops. Oak-panelled screen (plastered over to left of doorway) separates
it from present kitchen. This has elaborately moulded spine beam
running through screen to meet chamfered cross beam, supported in centre
by post with carved bracket, straddling space between the two cruck blades
of truss to right of screen. The presence of this spine beam suggests
that this end of the house always had a first floor and the cross beam
straddling the two cruck blades suggests that there was a screens passage
and spere truss at this point. All four cruck trusses (except for truss
to right gable end) are visible on first floor, first truss from right
(former centre truss of open hall) with arch-braced collar supporting
cusped king-post (visible in roof space), the cruck blades also being
cusped above collar. First truss from left is closed and has short
plain king-post above yoke [not seen at time of resurvey (October 1986)].
Collar and tie beam truss immediately to left of former centre truss
of hall is probably associated with insertion of centre stack in C17.
Plank and muntin screen running along axis of building on first floor
to centre with doorway to right (fluted carving to lintel looks Jacobean)
is not in situ and was formerly situated under cruck truss to present
right gable end.


Listing NGR: SJ3131121102

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