History in Structure

Berry House

A Grade II Listed Building in Thorverton, Devon

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.8086 / 50°48'30"N

Longitude: -3.5269 / 3°31'36"W

OS Eastings: 292512

OS Northings: 102115

OS Grid: SS925021

Mapcode National: GBR LG.Y8BX

Mapcode Global: FRA 36HY.PSY

Plus Code: 9C2RRF5F+C6

Entry Name: Berry House

Listing Date: 5 April 1966

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1240387

English Heritage Legacy ID: 438806

ID on this website: 101240387

Location: Thorverton, Mid Devon, EX5

County: Devon

District: Mid Devon

Civil Parish: Thorverton

Built-Up Area: Thorverton

Traditional County: Devon

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Devon

Church of England Parish: Thorverton St Thomas of Canterbury

Church of England Diocese: Exeter

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Description


SS 90 SW THORVERTON BULLEN STREET, Thorverton
8/124 Berry House
-
5.4.66
GV II
House, divided into 2 dwellings. Colourwashed, plastered and blocked out; slate
roof, hipped at ends; left end stack, axial stack to main range, axial stack to rear
wing, front lateral stack at left end of main range, heating adjoining block, all
with brick shafts.
Plan : L plan round a rear courtyard, the main range facing Bullen Street, the rear
right wing probably derives from the late C17 inn on the site, the Royal Oak, and a
coach entrance in the Bury to the north of Berry House gives access to the courtyard.
Single depth main range, 3 rooms wide with an entrance to left of centre into a
through passage, the rear door opening into the courtyard. 1 heated room to left of
entrance, 2 to right, the right hand room heated by a stack on the rear wall. The
stair rises in the rear wing with access from the through passage via an axial rear
passage. Part of the rear wing is now a separate property. A single storey block at
the left end with a corrugated iron lean-to roof is heated by the lateral stack at
the front left corner.
Exterior 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 4 bay front with regular fenestration, very deep
eaves and a moulded cornice. 2 leaf panelled front door to left of centre with a
timber doorcase and rectangular fanlight with glazing bars, sloping slate porch
canopy, fenestration of 12-pane sashes. The rear wing has a 3-bay elevation to the
Bury with 12-pane sashes.
Interior : Features of interest include plaster cornices, chimney-pieces, a stick
baluster stair lit by an extremely tall sash stair window facing the courtyard. The
rear door to the through passage has a semi-circular lunette.
The Royal Oak is documented in 1669 and may have been converted to a house by the
Pugh family before 1787. In 1841 the Reverend Coleridge occupied the house while
the new vicarage was being completed; in 1860 it became a private school.
A photograph of Bullen Street in the Bell Inn shows a small thatched block at right
angles to Berry House, adjoining the front at the left. Presumably the odd lateral
stack at the left is part of this structure.
Notes on the history of the house in the possession of a former owner.


Listing NGR: SS9250402112

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