History in Structure

White House Farmhouse

A Grade II Listed Building in Westhall, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.3679 / 52°22'4"N

Longitude: 1.5475 / 1°32'50"E

OS Eastings: 641597

OS Northings: 280352

OS Grid: TM415803

Mapcode National: GBR XNJ.G1V

Mapcode Global: VHM6X.RRY4

Plus Code: 9F439G9W+5X

Entry Name: White House Farmhouse

Listing Date: 23 April 1986

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1032058

English Heritage Legacy ID: 282111

ID on this website: 101032058

Location: Westhall, East Suffolk, IP19

County: Suffolk

District: East Suffolk

Civil Parish: Westhall

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Westhall St Andrew

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Description



TM 48 SW WESTHALL

3/37 Whitehouse Farmhouse
-

GV II

Farmhouse. C16 and C17, with C19 additions. 2 storeys, with attic to part; a
1½ storey brick lean-to added along the rear. Timber-framed; brick encased
main range, rendered on the front; clay pantiles. 3 3-light C20 casement
windows in traditional style with a horizontal bar to lights to the upper
floor, and 2 similar 4-light windows with segmental arched heads to the ground
floor, all in shallow reveals. Central C20 half-glazed door. An internal
chimney-stack with a large plain red brick shaft. Interior now has a 2-cell
lobby-entrance form, but this has evolved: at the north end a change of roof-
structure indicates a C17 extension. The main beam at the south end has a
supporting post from which the brace and a decorative shaft have been removed,
but which still has ogee-moulding down its sides. This appears to have been
part of an open truss, and on the upper floor a second post has been inserted
beside it. 2 original tie-beams have been removed and others inserted, some
with partitions. The present stack also appears to be an insertion. The
change in roof-type occurs a little to the north of the stack: the older roof,
of which only a small section is exposed, has moulding along the clasped
purlins and shallow-arched solid windbraces; the later roof has 2 rows of butt
purlins. In the rear wall at the north end is a blocked original 4-light
window with hollow chamfer moulding to the mullions: the surfaces are
weathered, and this may have been within the gable end of a former range
extending westwards. A straight flight of stairs was inserted at the south
end of the house in the early C18, and a corridor created on the upper floor
at the same time.


Listing NGR: TM4159780352

External Links

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