History in Structure

Minster House

A Grade II* Listed Building in Ripon, North Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 54.1346 / 54°8'4"N

Longitude: -1.5209 / 1°31'15"W

OS Eastings: 431403

OS Northings: 471073

OS Grid: SE314710

Mapcode National: GBR KNTM.JM

Mapcode Global: WHC7V.LBZQ

Plus Code: 9C6W4FMH+RM

Entry Name: Minster House

Listing Date: 27 May 1949

Last Amended: 19 March 1984

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1149408

English Heritage Legacy ID: 329989

ID on this website: 101149408

Location: Ripon, North Yorkshire, HG4

County: North Yorkshire

District: Harrogate

Civil Parish: Ripon

Built-Up Area: Ripon

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Ripon Cathedral Parish with Littlethorpe

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: House

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Description


SE 3171 RIPON BEDERN BANK
1/3 (east side)
27.5.49
Minster House [formerly
GV listed as the Hall
(Bedern Bank)]

II*

Early C18 (marked on Thomas Parker's plan in Thomas Gent's "History ... of Ripon",
1733). Red brick. Ashlar quoins. Two storeys. Parapet. Band. South front of
7 bays, west front of 5 bays, and east front with 2 slightly projecting bays: sashes
with glazing bars and moulded sills. Central south doorway with broken stone pediment
enclosing shield of arms of the Oxley family, its C19 proprietors.

Interior has a very fine staircase, round 3 sides of a large oblong stair well with
moulded plaster ceiling and modillioned cornice. Three balusters per tread, one
turned, one spiral fluted and one a double spiral. Spiral curtail with fluted newel.
Fielded panels under each tread. Fielded panelling to dado height, ramped upwards to
fluted columnar muntins. Semi-circular arches to hall and to landing above, latter
(and its neighbours) flanked by fluted lower half-column taking full entablature.

Hall has 4 doorcases with moulded architraves and pediments. All rooms panelled, some
fielded, some bolection, one room with giant fluted pilasters. Contemporary chimney-
places, 2 flanked by giant fluted Corinthian columns taking full and enriched
entablatures. One room has re-used C16/C17 wainscotting, supposed to come from
Markington Hall. One room "wainscotted" with a particularly fine Victorian scrap
screen.

History. Minster House stands on or near the site of the Bedern, the domestic
accommodation of the College of Vicars. Vicars were appointed from 1303, both to
serve the Collegiate Church in the absence of the Prebendaries, and, as the Collegiate
Church was also a parish church, to perform parochial duties, most of the Prebendaries
being non-resident. The Vicars were established in their own College in 1414,
dissolved in 1547. Archbishop Sandys (1576-88) attempted unsuccessfully to use the
Bedern for the establishment of a Theological College. It is not known who built
Minster House, but, although it has been the Deanery since 1945, for the previous
100 years it was in private hands.


Listing NGR: SE3140271073

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