NHER 43858 (Building record) - St Andrew's Lodge, Attleborough Road

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Summary

House, originally pre-1780, remodelled around 1840, with a low pitched hipped roof and overhanging eaves. The east elevation has windows with louvred shutters and a projecting round headed doorway on the left. The north elevation has two two storey bays. The west elevation has mainly blank walls, but there is a round headed doorway with moulded decoration.

Protected Status/Designation

Location

Map sheet TG00SW
Civil Parish HINGHAM, SOUTH NORFOLK, NORFOLK

Map

November 1959. Listed, Grade II.
Listing Description:
"House, early 19th century. Painted brick.Low pitched hipped roof with overhanging eaves. Two storeys.
East elevation: three widely spaced windows, sashes with glazing bars and louvred shutters, projecting doorway on left with round- head and semi-circular fanlight and flush-panel door.
North elevation has two two-storeyed canted bays left hand three sashes wide, right with round headed sash over round headed door with traceried semi-circular fanlight. West elevation mainly blank walls, but with round headed doorway with moulded architrave, traceried semi-circular fanlight and panelled door with canopy over."
Information from (S1).
Please consult the National Heritage List for England (S1) for the current listing details.
A. Cattermole (NLA), 24 February 2006.

A garden boundary wall associated with St Andrew's Lodge was listed Grade II in 1977. This is now recorded separately as NHER 65413.
P. Watkins (HES), 20 February 2022.

March 1996. Field Observation.
House impinges on churchyard and was stated by owners to be shown on an Enclosure Map of 1776 as having three bays facing the churchyard, and to have been extended around 1840 by Fuller Coker, builder of Cranworth Rectory, using his wife’s dowry. However the Enclosure Map in Norfolk Record Office is dated 1781. Interior has doorways with iron arched and traceried fanlights and moulded doors, some Gothick, some Classical, and some curved to fit round a 19th century staircase. Brickwork of exterior obscured by thick paint, but has horizontal skintlings. Join between two sections hard to see.
E. Rose (NLA), 24 August 2006.

  • <S1> Designation: Historic England. National Heritage List for England. List Entry 1050448.

Object Types (0)

Record last edited

Feb 20 2022 3:45PM

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