History in Structure

Park House

A Grade II Listed Building in Euston, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.3602 / 52°21'36"N

Longitude: 0.8044 / 0°48'15"E

OS Eastings: 591058

OS Northings: 277271

OS Grid: TL910772

Mapcode National: GBR RF3.06M

Mapcode Global: VHKCL.WYM2

Plus Code: 9F429R63+3Q

Entry Name: Park House

Listing Date: 12 April 1984

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1031258

English Heritage Legacy ID: 284159

ID on this website: 101031258

Location: Fakenham Magna, West Suffolk, IP24

County: Suffolk

District: West Suffolk

Civil Parish: Euston

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Euston St Genevieve

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Tagged with: House

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Description


TL 97 NW EUSTON EUSTON PARK

5/38 Park House
-

- II

House. Early to mid C16, mid C17 and C18. 2 storeys and attics.
Timber-framed and rendered with black glazed pantiled roofs.
Extensively modernised in 1960s. A range of 3-light small-paned
C20 casement windows to each storey: one 2-light window above the
porch: 4 gabled dormers with fluted bargeboards and 2-light
casements. A C20 enclosed gabled porch with boarded door. One
internal chimney-stack, and another on the south gable end, both
with plain rebuilt red brick shafts. 8 bays including a chimney
bay. The basic house, C16, consisted of the bay to the south of
the internal stack, and the 2, possibly 3, bays to the north of
it. In the bays to each side of the stack, both forming complete
rooms originally, the ground storey ceilings have heavy
unchamfered joists, on the north, the main beam has a multiple
roll-moulding. When the fireplace on the south side of the stack
was opened up during restoration a fireback was discovered,
bearing the Royal Arms and the date 166- (most probably 1660, in
celebration of the Restoration). The 2 upper rooms in the
central section-of the house have reused roll-moulded joists, cut
in half lengthwise and set on edge: one has an incised circular
floral motif. The northernmost bay has a plain heavy beam-and-
joist ceiling, but the 2 intermediate bays have had the joists
replaced at a very late stage. At the south end, 2 C18 bays have
been added, with an end chimney-stack: typical late framing,
reused timbers, roof with 2 rows of butt purlins. At the rear, 2
matching one-and-a-half storey wings, added in the mid C17, with
butt-purlin roofs: below one floor a number of mummified cats
were discovered during restoration, and 2 remain in the house.
Various original doorways, some blocked, remain, and visible
outer parts of the frame are weathered. This is the only
surviving house of the lost village of Little Fakenham.


Listing NGR: TL9105877271

External Links

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