History in Structure

The Old Rectory

A Grade II* Listed Building in Whitchurch Urban, Shropshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.9738 / 52°58'25"N

Longitude: -2.6838 / 2°41'1"W

OS Eastings: 354176

OS Northings: 342043

OS Grid: SJ541420

Mapcode National: GBR 7L.JNL5

Mapcode Global: WH89H.RJ52

Plus Code: 9C4VX8F8+GF

Entry Name: The Old Rectory

Listing Date: 1 May 1951

Last Amended: 1 March 1988

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1056008

English Heritage Legacy ID: 260602

Also known as: The Old Rectory, Claypit Street

ID on this website: 101056008

Location: Whitchurch, Shropshire, SY13

County: Shropshire

Civil Parish: Whitchurch Urban

Traditional County: Shropshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Shropshire

Church of England Parish: Whitchurch St Alkmund

Church of England Diocese: Lichfield

Tagged with: Clergy house

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Description


SJ 54 SW
1/48

WHITCHURCH URBAN CP
CLAYPIT STREET (north west side)
The Old Rectory

(formerly listed under London Road)

1.5.51

GV
II*
Rectory, now house. Formerly dated 1749. Red brick with some grey sandstone ashlar dressings. Slate roof. Main block with service wing adjoining to south east.

Two storeys and attic over basement with two storey service wing. Plinth with moulded brick top, stone cornice band, and parapet with stone coping. Integral brick end stack to right and external brick end stack to left. Three flat-roofed dormers with two-light wooden casements. Five bays; boxed glazing bar sashes with stone cills and gauged-brick heads (two ground floor sashes to left with bars removed to form four panes). Basement windows, blocked to left and with two-light wooden casements to right. Central door with six raised and fielded panels, moulded stone architrave and painted stone Tuscan doorcase with pilasters supporting entablature and triangular pediment. Three stone steps up to door.

Left-hand gable-end: plinth. Two bays; right-hand bay with first floor fixed sash, ground-floor blind window and basement window. Full-height canted bay to left with moulded wooden eaves cornice and hipped slate roof; three glazing bar sashes to each floor, fixed to first floor.

Rear: plinth and stone cornice band. Five bays; boxed glazing-bar sashes, some replaced with late C18 glazing bar sashes and mid to late C20 small-paned metal casements. Set-back service wing adjoining to south east. T-plan. Two storeys. Plat bands (with raised top course), dentil brick eaves cornice (bricks on side), and parapeted gable ends, those to central wing with stone coping. Brick ridge stack off-centre to left, tall square brick ridge stack off-centre to right, and wing with pair of integral brick end stacks.

Left-hand part with two first-floor boxed glazing bar sashes, two ground floor C18 leaded wooden cross windows to left with wrought-iron catches (left-hand window partly obscured by later addition in angle) and flat brick arches, and C18 door to right with six raised and fielded panels, pegged frame with double-quirked beading, and shaped brackets supporting flat hood with two-panelled soffit and moulded cornice.

Right-hand part with two first floor boxed glazing bar sashes, blocked ground floor window to left, and sash to right, later cut down to form door (see straight joints). Central wing, with two gables to front. Probably late C18 (see straight joints). Two first floor boxed glazing bar sashes. Left-hand return front with blind first floor window (painted in imitation of a sash) and ground floor C20 three-light casement, and right-hand return front with first-floor boxed glazing bar sash (16-pane) and two ground floor segmental-headed leaded wooden cross windows.

Rear of service wing with plat band and dentil brick eaves cornice. Seven or eight bays with first floor boxed glazing bar sashes, and ground floor with mid C18 wooden cross windows to left and late C18 glazing bar sashes to right. Two storey C19 addition in angle of main block and service wing.

Interior of house: largely complete mid C18 fixtures and fittings. Entrance hall with dado panelling, windows with moulded architraves and panelled shutters, and moulded plaster cornice. Three-flight rectangular-well oak staircase to right, with landings, open string with cut brackets, moulded nosings, column-on-vase balusters (each tread with central unfluted column on plain vase flanked by barley sugar columns on wreathed vases), and ramped moulded handrail, wreathed to fluted Doric columnar foot newel. Balustrade returns to landing. Ramped C18 dado with panelled dies. Dog-leg oak back staircase with winders, closed string, column-on-vase balusters, moulded handrail, and square foot newel post.

Left-hand ground-floor room: moulded plaster cornice. Fireplace with marble slip, lugged architrave with egg and dart enrichment, frieze and dentil cornice. Back corridor with partly fluted plain panelling.

The house stands, along with a former coach house (q.v.), in a moated site. The house is notable for its complete mid C18 interior.

Listing NGR: SJ 54176 42043

External Links

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