NHER 41994 (Building record) - White Hall

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Summary

A brick two storey house built around 1800 with a clay lump rear wing and a black pantile roof. There is a later 19th century dairy and kitchen wing.

Protected Status/Designation

Location

Map sheet TF90SW
Civil Parish CARBROOKE, BRECKLAND, NORFOLK

Map

Wrongly named on (S1) as The White House but has always been White Hall.

Around 1800, brick with clay lump rear wing, black pantiles. 2 storeys, 3 bays, sash windows of varying sizes. Gable stacks behind ridge. Later 19th century dairy and kitchen wing left with battlements. Entrance front in cross wing to rear. Of three bays with door. Two blind windows to south face of façade.
Information from (S1).

Building in fact consists of main wing with four bay façade, one bay being blank with evidence of blocked door; the right hand gable with blank windows as mentioned is rebuilt and so block may have been reduced by one bay. Bricks have horizontal skintlings. Rear wing is later as its roof fossilises the slope of the main roof; the latter has a reuse tiebeam but this does not appear to be ancient. The rear wing is of similar brickwork and only a catslide is clay lump. Interior all remodelled mid to late 19th century. The porch on the main doorway of rear wing has two ornate iron columns said to be from Watton railway station.
Clay lump stable said to have a dated tiebeam but this was not seen.
E. Rose (NLA), 12 September 2005.

  • <S1> Designation: Historic England. National Heritage List for England.

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Record last edited

Feb 7 2011 1:08PM

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