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Listed buildings in Tattenhall

Tattenhall is a former civil parish, now in the parish of Tattenhall and District, in Cheshire West and Chester, England. It contains 27 buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated listed buildings. Of these, three are listed at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. Apart from the village of Tattenhall, the parish is rural. In the village the listed buildings include the church and its sundial, the war memorial, and houses and cottages, some dating from the 17th century and with a timber-framed core. Outside the village, the listed buildings include country houses and associated structures, other houses and cottages, farmhouses, and a boundary stone.

Key edit

Grade Criteria[1]
II* Particularly important buildings of more than special interest
II Buildings of national importance and special interest

Buildings edit

Name and location Photograph Date Notes Grade
St Alban's Church
53°07′20″N 2°46′08″W / 53.1222°N 2.7688°W / 53.1222; -2.7688 (St Alban's Church)
 
Early 16th century The earliest parts of the church are its core and the tower. In 1869–70 John Douglas carried out a major restoration. The church is built in red sandstone with a green slate roof, and consists of a nave with aisles, a chancel, an embattled west tower, and a timber-framed south porch.[2][3][4][5] II*
Woodlake House
53°06′41″N 2°45′57″W / 53.11139°N 2.76578°W / 53.11139; -2.76578 (Woodlake House)
Mid 16th century This originated as a Tudor house, later used as a house. It was remodelled in 1683, and further alterations were made in the 20th century. The house is built in rendered brick with stone dressings and a Welsh slate roof. It has an L-shaped plan with a porch in the angle, it is in two and three storeys, and has a three-bay front, the central bay projecting forward under a gable. The windows are casements. Inside the house is an inglenook.[6] II*
Rock Bank and Rock Cottage
53°07′14″N 2°46′07″W / 53.12065°N 2.76858°W / 53.12065; -2.76858 (Rock Bank and Rock Cottage)
1601 Originating as a farmhouse, this was later converted into a house and a shop. Alterations were carried out in the 19th and 20th centuries. The front of the building is timber-framed with brick nogging, the sides and back are in rendered brick, and the roof is in Welsh slate. It is in two storeys, and has a four-bay front. The windows are casements.[7][8] II
Tattenhall Hall
53°07′07″N 2°46′08″W / 53.11852°N 2.76895°W / 53.11852; -2.76895 (Tattenhall Hall)
c. 1610 A country house in Jacobean style, it is built in brick on a stone plinth, with sandstone dressings and a Welsh slate roof. The interior was altered in 1858. It has an irregular H-shaped plan, is in two and three storeys, and has a five-bay entrance front. There are two gables that are similar in style but different in height. The windows are mullioned and transomed.[9][10][11][12] II*
Bank and house,
Church Bank
53°07′16″N 2°46′08″W / 53.12124°N 2.76877°W / 53.12124; -2.76877 (Bank and house)
17th century This originated as a farmhouse, later converted into a house and bank. The building is timber-framed with brick nogging on a stone plinth with a Welsh slate roof. It has a rectangular plan with a cross-wing on the left. The building is in 1+12 storeys, and has a five-bay front. The windows are 20th-century casements, the upper ones in gabled dormers with shaped bargeboards.[13] II
Hawthorn Cottage
53°07′04″N 2°44′54″W / 53.11778°N 2.74847°W / 53.11778; -2.74847 (Hawthorn Cottage)
17th century A cottage with a shippon added in the following century. It is mainly timber-framed with brick nogging, some brick repairs, and one bay in sandstone. The cottage is in 1+12 storeys and has a four-bay front. The windows are casements, the upper ones in half-dormers. The sandstone bay has been painted to give the appearance of timber-framing.[14] II
Ivy Cottage
53°07′32″N 2°43′31″W / 53.12558°N 2.72517°W / 53.12558; -2.72517 (Ivy Cottage)
17th century The cottage was reconstructed in 1983. It is timber-framed on a sandstone plinth. and has a thatched roof. It is in a single storey and has a front of three bays. The windows are casements. At both ends are small lean-to extensions.[15] II
Greenbank
53°06′59″N 2°46′19″W / 53.11629°N 2.77199°W / 53.11629; -2.77199 (Greenbank)
Mid to late 17th century A cottage that was extended in the 19th century by the addition of a rear wing. It is a timber-framed building with brick nogging, partly rendered and painted to resemble timber-framing. The south gable wall has been rebuilt in brick and rendered, and the roof is slated. The cottage is in 1+12 storeys and has a three-bay front. There is a central porch, two square windows on the ground floor, and three gables dormers above.[16] II
Sundial
53°07′19″N 2°46′07″W / 53.12205°N 2.76871°W / 53.12205; -2.76871 (Sundial)
 
18th century The sundial is in the churchyard of St Alban's Church. It is in buff sandstone and consists of a fluted baluster standing on three square steps, having a base decorated with acanthus leaves and an egg-and-dart frieze. On the top is a square cap with a square plaque inscribed with the date 1822, and the names of churchwardens.[17] II
Boundary stone
53°06′21″N 2°45′06″W / 53.10586°N 2.75171°W / 53.10586; -2.75171 (Boundary stone)
Late 18th century The boundary stone is a rectangular red sandstone block set into the roadside wall. It is carved with a vertical line, to the left of which is the inscribed initial "B" (for Broxton), and to the right "T" (for Tattenhall).[18] II
Henhull Cottage
53°06′51″N 2°44′34″W / 53.11411°N 2.74286°W / 53.11411; -2.74286 (Henhull Cottage)
Late 18th century This originated as a house, was then used as a wheelwright's cottage and a stable, then converted again for use as a house. It is in brick on a sandstone plinth, with a Welsh slate roof. The house is in two storeys, the southeast face having a four-bay front. To the right of the front are small-paned windows, and to the left ventilation holes. The northwest front has nine bays, and contains two square pitch holes.[19] II
Laurel Bank
53°07′09″N 2°46′16″W / 53.11923°N 2.77099°W / 53.11923; -2.77099 (Laurel Bank)
Late 18th century A farmhouse, later a house, it was altered in the 19th century. The house is in brick on a stone plinth with rusticated quoins and a Welsh slate roof. It is in two storeys and has a four-bay front. At the top is a dentilated cornice and coped gables. The windows are sashes, and over the door is an architrave containing a fanlight.[20] II
Medway House
53°07′17″N 2°46′06″W / 53.12125°N 2.76829°W / 53.12125; -2.76829 (Medway House)
Early 19th century A brick house on a plastered plinth with a Welsh slate roof. It is in two storeys, and has a symmetrical three-bay front. In the lateral bays are sash windows. The central bay contains a doorway under a semicircular head.[21] II
St Albans and St Albans House
53°07′18″N 2°46′08″W / 53.12158°N 2.76895°W / 53.12158; -2.76895 (St Albans and St Albans House)
Early 19th century A pair of brick houses with a Welsh slate roof. They have a rectangular plan, are in two storeys, and have a six-bay front. The windows are sashes under stone wedged heads; in the right end bay is a canted bay window. The doors have wooden architraves, and the right house has a trelliswork porch.[22] II
Offices, High Street
53°07′14″N 2°46′07″W / 53.12044°N 2.76870°W / 53.12044; -2.76870 (Offices, High Street)
Early 19th century A house, later converted into offices, it is in stuccoed brick on a stone plinth with a hipped Welsh slate roof. The building has a double-pile plan, is in three storeys, and has a symmetrical three-bay front. The windows are sashes. In the centre is a detached Ionic porch with unfluted columns leading to a doorway with a fanlight above it.[23] II
The Cottage and Conifers
53°07′17″N 2°46′08″W / 53.12138°N 2.76888°W / 53.12138; -2.76888 (The Cottage and Conifers)
Early 19th century A brick house and cottage with a Welsh slate roof. The building has a rectangular plan, with two storeys, the house having three bays and the cottage two. At the top is a dentilated cornice. The windows are sashes.[24] II
Olympus House
53°07′15″N 2°46′05″W / 53.12088°N 2.76814°W / 53.12088; -2.76814 (Olympus House)
Early to mid 19th century A stuccoed brick house on a stone plinth with stone dressings and a Welsh slate roof. It is in three storeys, and has a four-bay front. On the corners are rusticated quoins. The windows are sashes. In the second bay is a detached Doric porch with unfluted columns. Four steps lead up to a doorway with a rectangular fanlight.[25] II
Claremont
53°07′18″N 2°45′54″W / 53.12175°N 2.76489°W / 53.12175; -2.76489 (Claremont)
c. 1840 A brick house with a hipped Welsh slate roof. It has a double-pile plan, is in two storeys, and has a symmetrical three-bay front, the centre bay being slightly set back. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor having semicircular heads, those in the upper floor with flat heads, In the centre is a porch with plain pilasters leading by three steps up to the entrance.[26] II
Greengates
53°07′19″N 2°45′55″W / 53.12181°N 2.76518°W / 53.12181; -2.76518 (Greengates)
c. 1840 A brick house with stone dressings and a stone-slate roof. It has a double-pile plan, is in two storeys, and has a symmetrical three-bay front, the lateral bays projecting slightly forward. The windows are all sashes, those in the ground floor under semicircular heads, and those above with flat heads. In the centre is a Doric porch with half-fluted columns. Above the door is a fanlight.[27] II
The Mount
53°07′15″N 2°46′06″W / 53.12080°N 2.76835°W / 53.12080; -2.76835 (The Mount)
c. 1850 A house in stuccoed brick with a Welsh slate roof. It has a square plan, is in three storeys, and has a symmetrical three-bay front. At the corners are pilasters, and across the front of the house is a wooden verandah. The central bay contains a doorway with a semicircular head and a fanlight, and at the top of the bay is a simple triangular pediment.[28] II
Gate piers, walls and railings, Tattenhall Lodge
53°06′24″N 2°45′12″W / 53.10662°N 2.75320°W / 53.10662; -2.75320 (Gate piers, walls and railings)
Mid 19th century The gate piers and attached walls and railings were built for the Bolesworth estate. The piers and walls are in sandstone, the gates are in wrought iron. The piers flank the entrance, and there are intermittent piers along the walls, which are curved. The piers are castellated, and the railings are decorative with clustered-leaf finials.[29] II
Gate piers and wing walls,
Tattenhall Hall
53°07′06″N 2°46′09″W / 53.11824°N 2.76930°W / 53.11824; -2.76930 (Gate piers and wing walls)
1858 (probable) The gate piers and wing walls stand at the entrance to the grounds of the hall, and were designed by Thomas Harrison. They are in red sandstone and have a Greek cross plan. The piers are plain and stand on moulded plinths, and have moulded caps with ball finials. The wing walls are curved and have triangular and beaded coping.[30] II
Haybarn
53°07′05″N 2°46′07″W / 53.11792°N 2.76848°W / 53.11792; -2.76848 (Haybarn)
1859–60 The haybarn was part of a model farm for Tattenhall Hall designed by Thomas Harrison. It is in brick with a roof partly in Welsh slate and partly in corrugated asbestos. It has a long seven-bay front, the central bay projecting to the south. Along the front is an arcade of seven semicircular-headed arches, and there are similar arches on the gabled sides of the haybarn and on the projection.[31][32] II
The Rookery
53°07′25″N 2°46′14″W / 53.1236°N 2.7706°W / 53.1236; -2.7706 (The Rookery)
1909 A country house rebuilt on the site of an earlier house, it is timber-framed on a stone plinth, incorporating some brick at the rear, and has a stone-slate roof. It was built for F. W. Wignall of the Tate & Lyle company. It is in two and three storeys, the upper storeys being jettied. Other features include Tudor-style chimney stacks, and a large two-storey gable. The windows are mullioned and transomed.[2][33][34][35] II
War Memorial
53°07′11″N 2°46′10″W / 53.11971°N 2.76936°W / 53.11971; -2.76936 (War Memorial)
1922 The war memorial is in sandstone and consists of a Celtic cross on a tapered shaft. This stands on deep plinth on a stepped base. There are two plates containing the names of those lost in the wars.[36] II
Rose Corner
53°07′08″N 2°46′23″W / 53.11885°N 2.77306°W / 53.11885; -2.77306 (Rose Corner)
1927 A pair of partly stuccoed brick cottages with a hipped green slate roof. They were designed by Clough Williams-Ellis in Neo-Palladian style. They have a rectangular plan, are in one and two storeys, and have a symmetrical seven-bay front. In the centre three bays is a four-column portico with a pediment. The windows are sashes. The outer bays have one storey and end in pilasters with urn finials.[31][37] II

References edit

Citations

  1. ^ Listed Buildings, Historic England, retrieved 3 April 2015
  2. ^ a b Hartwell et al. (2011), p. 626
  3. ^ Richards (1947), pp. 324–328
  4. ^ Hubbard (1991), pp. 129–130
  5. ^ Historic England, "Church of St Alban, Tattenhall (1230254)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  6. ^ Historic England, "Woodlake House, Tattenhall (1278610)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  7. ^ Historic England, "Rock Bank and Rock Cottage, Tattenhall (1230477)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  8. ^ Rock Cottage (1601), Tattenhall and District Local History, retrieved 21 September 2013
  9. ^ Hartwell et al. (2011), pp. 626–627
  10. ^ de Figueiredo & Treuherz (1988), p. 275
  11. ^ Historic England, "Tattenhall Hall (1230476)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  12. ^ Tattenhall Hall, Tattenhall and District Local History, retrieved 21 September 2013
  13. ^ Historic England, "National Westminster Bank and house adjoining to the south, Tattenhall (1230257)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  14. ^ Historic England, "Hawthorn Cottage, Tattenhall (1230253)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  15. ^ Historic England, "Ivy Cottage, Tattenhall (1230264)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  16. ^ Historic England, "Greenbank, Tattenhall (1265202)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 September 2013
  17. ^ Historic England, "Sundial in Church of St Alban's Churchyard, Tattenhall (1230255)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  18. ^ Historic England, "Boundary stone, Tattenhall (1278686)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 September 2013
  19. ^ Historic England, "Henhull Cottage, Tattenhall (1278688)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 September 2013
  20. ^ Historic England, "Laurel Bank, Tattenhall (1230259)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  21. ^ Historic England, "Medway House, Tattenhall (1230475)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  22. ^ Historic England, "St Albans and St Albans House, Tattenhall (1278689)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 September 2013
  23. ^ Historic England, "Office premises of Calypso Co. Ltd., Tattenhall (1230262)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  24. ^ Historic England, "The Cottage and The Conifers, Tattenhall (1230256)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  25. ^ Historic England, "Olympus House, Tattenhall (1278597)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 September 2013
  26. ^ Historic England, "Claremont, Tattenhall (1278687)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 September 2013
  27. ^ Historic England, "Greengates, Tattenhall (1230252)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  28. ^ Historic England, "The Mount, Tattenhall (1230263)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  29. ^ Historic England, "Gatepiers with attached walls and railings at Tattenhall Lodge (1230265)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  30. ^ Historic England, "Gate piers and wing walls to Tattenhall Hall (1230260)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  31. ^ a b Hartwell et al. (2011), p. 627
  32. ^ Historic England, "Haybarn 75m south-east of Tattenhall Hall (1230261)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  33. ^ de Figueiredo & Treuherz (1988), p. 268
  34. ^ Historic England, "The Rookery, Tattenhall (1230258)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  35. ^ ‘The Rookery’ (formerly ‘Bank House’), Tattenhall and District Local History, retrieved 21 September 2013
  36. ^ Historic England, "War Memorial, Tattenhall (1246646)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013
  37. ^ Historic England, "Rose Corner, Tattenhall (1230251)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 September 2013

Sources

listed, buildings, tattenhall, tattenhall, former, civil, parish, parish, tattenhall, district, cheshire, west, chester, england, contains, buildings, that, recorded, national, heritage, list, england, designated, listed, buildings, these, three, listed, grade. Tattenhall is a former civil parish now in the parish of Tattenhall and District in Cheshire West and Chester England It contains 27 buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated listed buildings Of these three are listed at Grade II the middle grade and the others are at Grade II the lowest grade Apart from the village of Tattenhall the parish is rural In the village the listed buildings include the church and its sundial the war memorial and houses and cottages some dating from the 17th century and with a timber framed core Outside the village the listed buildings include country houses and associated structures other houses and cottages farmhouses and a boundary stone Key editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Grade Criteria 1 II Particularly important buildings of more than special interestII Buildings of national importance and special interestBuildings editName and location Photograph Date Notes GradeSt Alban s Church53 07 20 N 2 46 08 W 53 1222 N 2 7688 W 53 1222 2 7688 St Alban s Church nbsp Early 16th century The earliest parts of the church are its core and the tower In 1869 70 John Douglas carried out a major restoration The church is built in red sandstone with a green slate roof and consists of a nave with aisles a chancel an embattled west tower and a timber framed south porch 2 3 4 5 II Woodlake House53 06 41 N 2 45 57 W 53 11139 N 2 76578 W 53 11139 2 76578 Woodlake House Mid 16th century This originated as a Tudor house later used as a house It was remodelled in 1683 and further alterations were made in the 20th century The house is built in rendered brick with stone dressings and a Welsh slate roof It has an L shaped plan with a porch in the angle it is in two and three storeys and has a three bay front the central bay projecting forward under a gable The windows are casements Inside the house is an inglenook 6 II Rock Bank and Rock Cottage53 07 14 N 2 46 07 W 53 12065 N 2 76858 W 53 12065 2 76858 Rock Bank and Rock Cottage 1601 Originating as a farmhouse this was later converted into a house and a shop Alterations were carried out in the 19th and 20th centuries The front of the building is timber framed with brick nogging the sides and back are in rendered brick and the roof is in Welsh slate It is in two storeys and has a four bay front The windows are casements 7 8 IITattenhall Hall53 07 07 N 2 46 08 W 53 11852 N 2 76895 W 53 11852 2 76895 Tattenhall Hall c 1610 A country house in Jacobean style it is built in brick on a stone plinth with sandstone dressings and a Welsh slate roof The interior was altered in 1858 It has an irregular H shaped plan is in two and three storeys and has a five bay entrance front There are two gables that are similar in style but different in height The windows are mullioned and transomed 9 10 11 12 II Bank and house Church Bank53 07 16 N 2 46 08 W 53 12124 N 2 76877 W 53 12124 2 76877 Bank and house 17th century This originated as a farmhouse later converted into a house and bank The building is timber framed with brick nogging on a stone plinth with a Welsh slate roof It has a rectangular plan with a cross wing on the left The building is in 1 1 2 storeys and has a five bay front The windows are 20th century casements the upper ones in gabled dormers with shaped bargeboards 13 IIHawthorn Cottage53 07 04 N 2 44 54 W 53 11778 N 2 74847 W 53 11778 2 74847 Hawthorn Cottage 17th century A cottage with a shippon added in the following century It is mainly timber framed with brick nogging some brick repairs and one bay in sandstone The cottage is in 1 1 2 storeys and has a four bay front The windows are casements the upper ones in half dormers The sandstone bay has been painted to give the appearance of timber framing 14 IIIvy Cottage53 07 32 N 2 43 31 W 53 12558 N 2 72517 W 53 12558 2 72517 Ivy Cottage 17th century The cottage was reconstructed in 1983 It is timber framed on a sandstone plinth and has a thatched roof It is in a single storey and has a front of three bays The windows are casements At both ends are small lean to extensions 15 IIGreenbank53 06 59 N 2 46 19 W 53 11629 N 2 77199 W 53 11629 2 77199 Greenbank Mid to late 17th century A cottage that was extended in the 19th century by the addition of a rear wing It is a timber framed building with brick nogging partly rendered and painted to resemble timber framing The south gable wall has been rebuilt in brick and rendered and the roof is slated The cottage is in 1 1 2 storeys and has a three bay front There is a central porch two square windows on the ground floor and three gables dormers above 16 IISundial53 07 19 N 2 46 07 W 53 12205 N 2 76871 W 53 12205 2 76871 Sundial nbsp 18th century The sundial is in the churchyard of St Alban s Church It is in buff sandstone and consists of a fluted baluster standing on three square steps having a base decorated with acanthus leaves and an egg and dart frieze On the top is a square cap with a square plaque inscribed with the date 1822 and the names of churchwardens 17 IIBoundary stone53 06 21 N 2 45 06 W 53 10586 N 2 75171 W 53 10586 2 75171 Boundary stone Late 18th century The boundary stone is a rectangular red sandstone block set into the roadside wall It is carved with a vertical line to the left of which is the inscribed initial B for Broxton and to the right T for Tattenhall 18 IIHenhull Cottage53 06 51 N 2 44 34 W 53 11411 N 2 74286 W 53 11411 2 74286 Henhull Cottage Late 18th century This originated as a house was then used as a wheelwright s cottage and a stable then converted again for use as a house It is in brick on a sandstone plinth with a Welsh slate roof The house is in two storeys the southeast face having a four bay front To the right of the front are small paned windows and to the left ventilation holes The northwest front has nine bays and contains two square pitch holes 19 IILaurel Bank53 07 09 N 2 46 16 W 53 11923 N 2 77099 W 53 11923 2 77099 Laurel Bank Late 18th century A farmhouse later a house it was altered in the 19th century The house is in brick on a stone plinth with rusticated quoins and a Welsh slate roof It is in two storeys and has a four bay front At the top is a dentilated cornice and coped gables The windows are sashes and over the door is an architrave containing a fanlight 20 IIMedway House53 07 17 N 2 46 06 W 53 12125 N 2 76829 W 53 12125 2 76829 Medway House Early 19th century A brick house on a plastered plinth with a Welsh slate roof It is in two storeys and has a symmetrical three bay front In the lateral bays are sash windows The central bay contains a doorway under a semicircular head 21 IISt Albans and St Albans House53 07 18 N 2 46 08 W 53 12158 N 2 76895 W 53 12158 2 76895 St Albans and St Albans House Early 19th century A pair of brick houses with a Welsh slate roof They have a rectangular plan are in two storeys and have a six bay front The windows are sashes under stone wedged heads in the right end bay is a canted bay window The doors have wooden architraves and the right house has a trelliswork porch 22 IIOffices High Street53 07 14 N 2 46 07 W 53 12044 N 2 76870 W 53 12044 2 76870 Offices High Street Early 19th century A house later converted into offices it is in stuccoed brick on a stone plinth with a hipped Welsh slate roof The building has a double pile plan is in three storeys and has a symmetrical three bay front The windows are sashes In the centre is a detached Ionic porch with unfluted columns leading to a doorway with a fanlight above it 23 IIThe Cottage and Conifers53 07 17 N 2 46 08 W 53 12138 N 2 76888 W 53 12138 2 76888 The Cottage and Conifers Early 19th century A brick house and cottage with a Welsh slate roof The building has a rectangular plan with two storeys the house having three bays and the cottage two At the top is a dentilated cornice The windows are sashes 24 IIOlympus House53 07 15 N 2 46 05 W 53 12088 N 2 76814 W 53 12088 2 76814 Olympus House Early to mid 19th century A stuccoed brick house on a stone plinth with stone dressings and a Welsh slate roof It is in three storeys and has a four bay front On the corners are rusticated quoins The windows are sashes In the second bay is a detached Doric porch with unfluted columns Four steps lead up to a doorway with a rectangular fanlight 25 IIClaremont53 07 18 N 2 45 54 W 53 12175 N 2 76489 W 53 12175 2 76489 Claremont c 1840 A brick house with a hipped Welsh slate roof It has a double pile plan is in two storeys and has a symmetrical three bay front the centre bay being slightly set back The windows are sashes those in the ground floor having semicircular heads those in the upper floor with flat heads In the centre is a porch with plain pilasters leading by three steps up to the entrance 26 IIGreengates53 07 19 N 2 45 55 W 53 12181 N 2 76518 W 53 12181 2 76518 Greengates c 1840 A brick house with stone dressings and a stone slate roof It has a double pile plan is in two storeys and has a symmetrical three bay front the lateral bays projecting slightly forward The windows are all sashes those in the ground floor under semicircular heads and those above with flat heads In the centre is a Doric porch with half fluted columns Above the door is a fanlight 27 IIThe Mount53 07 15 N 2 46 06 W 53 12080 N 2 76835 W 53 12080 2 76835 The Mount c 1850 A house in stuccoed brick with a Welsh slate roof It has a square plan is in three storeys and has a symmetrical three bay front At the corners are pilasters and across the front of the house is a wooden verandah The central bay contains a doorway with a semicircular head and a fanlight and at the top of the bay is a simple triangular pediment 28 IIGate piers walls and railings Tattenhall Lodge53 06 24 N 2 45 12 W 53 10662 N 2 75320 W 53 10662 2 75320 Gate piers walls and railings Mid 19th century The gate piers and attached walls and railings were built for the Bolesworth estate The piers and walls are in sandstone the gates are in wrought iron The piers flank the entrance and there are intermittent piers along the walls which are curved The piers are castellated and the railings are decorative with clustered leaf finials 29 IIGate piers and wing walls Tattenhall Hall53 07 06 N 2 46 09 W 53 11824 N 2 76930 W 53 11824 2 76930 Gate piers and wing walls 1858 probable The gate piers and wing walls stand at the entrance to the grounds of the hall and were designed by Thomas Harrison They are in red sandstone and have a Greek cross plan The piers are plain and stand on moulded plinths and have moulded caps with ball finials The wing walls are curved and have triangular and beaded coping 30 IIHaybarn53 07 05 N 2 46 07 W 53 11792 N 2 76848 W 53 11792 2 76848 Haybarn 1859 60 The haybarn was part of a model farm for Tattenhall Hall designed by Thomas Harrison It is in brick with a roof partly in Welsh slate and partly in corrugated asbestos It has a long seven bay front the central bay projecting to the south Along the front is an arcade of seven semicircular headed arches and there are similar arches on the gabled sides of the haybarn and on the projection 31 32 IIThe Rookery53 07 25 N 2 46 14 W 53 1236 N 2 7706 W 53 1236 2 7706 The Rookery 1909 A country house rebuilt on the site of an earlier house it is timber framed on a stone plinth incorporating some brick at the rear and has a stone slate roof It was built for F W Wignall of the Tate amp Lyle company It is in two and three storeys the upper storeys being jettied Other features include Tudor style chimney stacks and a large two storey gable The windows are mullioned and transomed 2 33 34 35 IIWar Memorial53 07 11 N 2 46 10 W 53 11971 N 2 76936 W 53 11971 2 76936 War Memorial 1922 The war memorial is in sandstone and consists of a Celtic cross on a tapered shaft This stands on deep plinth on a stepped base There are two plates containing the names of those lost in the wars 36 IIRose Corner53 07 08 N 2 46 23 W 53 11885 N 2 77306 W 53 11885 2 77306 Rose Corner 1927 A pair of partly stuccoed brick cottages with a hipped green slate roof They were designed by Clough Williams Ellis in Neo Palladian style They have a rectangular plan are in one and two storeys and have a symmetrical seven bay front In the centre three bays is a four column portico with a pediment The windows are sashes The outer bays have one storey and end in pilasters with urn finials 31 37 IIReferences editCitations Listed Buildings Historic England retrieved 3 April 2015 a b Hartwell et al 2011 p 626 Richards 1947 pp 324 328 Hubbard 1991 pp 129 130 Historic England Church of St Alban Tattenhall 1230254 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Woodlake House Tattenhall 1278610 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Rock Bank and Rock Cottage Tattenhall 1230477 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Rock Cottage 1601 Tattenhall and District Local History retrieved 21 September 2013 Hartwell et al 2011 pp 626 627 de Figueiredo amp Treuherz 1988 p 275 Historic England Tattenhall Hall 1230476 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Tattenhall Hall Tattenhall and District Local History retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England National Westminster Bank and house adjoining to the south Tattenhall 1230257 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Hawthorn Cottage Tattenhall 1230253 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Ivy Cottage Tattenhall 1230264 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Greenbank Tattenhall 1265202 National Heritage List for England retrieved 22 September 2013 Historic England Sundial in Church of St Alban s Churchyard Tattenhall 1230255 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Boundary stone Tattenhall 1278686 National Heritage List for England retrieved 22 September 2013 Historic England Henhull Cottage Tattenhall 1278688 National Heritage List for England retrieved 22 September 2013 Historic England Laurel Bank Tattenhall 1230259 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Medway House Tattenhall 1230475 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England St Albans and St Albans House Tattenhall 1278689 National Heritage List for England retrieved 22 September 2013 Historic England Office premises of Calypso Co Ltd Tattenhall 1230262 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England The Cottage and The Conifers Tattenhall 1230256 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Olympus House Tattenhall 1278597 National Heritage List for England retrieved 22 September 2013 Historic England Claremont Tattenhall 1278687 National Heritage List for England retrieved 22 September 2013 Historic England Greengates Tattenhall 1230252 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England The Mount Tattenhall 1230263 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Gatepiers with attached walls and railings at Tattenhall Lodge 1230265 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Gate piers and wing walls to Tattenhall Hall 1230260 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 a b Hartwell et al 2011 p 627 Historic England Haybarn 75m south east of Tattenhall Hall 1230261 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 de Figueiredo amp Treuherz 1988 p 268 Historic England The Rookery Tattenhall 1230258 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 The Rookery formerly Bank House Tattenhall and District Local History retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England War Memorial Tattenhall 1246646 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Historic England Rose Corner Tattenhall 1230251 National Heritage List for England retrieved 21 September 2013 Sources de Figueiredo Peter Treuherz Julian 1988 Cheshire Country Houses Chichester Phillimore ISBN 0 85033 655 4 Hartwell Clare Hyde Matthew Hubbard Edward Pevsner Nikolaus 2011 1971 Cheshire The Buildings of England New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 17043 6 Hubbard Edward 1991 The Work of John Douglas London The Victorian Society ISBN 0 901657 16 6 Richards Raymond 1947 Old Cheshire Churches London Batsford OCLC 719918 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Listed buildings in Tattenhall amp oldid 1083720784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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