Grade II* listed buildings
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Sally Lunn's House
Bath, England
1680
Dating from 1680, Sally Lunn's historic bakery still serves its world-famous Bath buns, along with other regional specialties. The kitchen used by Sally Lunn is preserved in a museum downstairs.
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Port of Liverpool Building
Liverpool, England
1903-07
One of the “Three Graces” on Liverpool's iconic riverfront, the Port of Liverpool Building is a Baroque-style Grade II listed building completed in 1907.
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Kenfield Hall
Petham, England
c. 1730
Kenfield Hall is a Grade-II mansion house built c. 1730, with a northwest wing added in 1909.
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Church of St Peter and St Paul
Shiplake, England
Church. C13 with C15 alterations and restoration 1869 by G.E. Street.
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Church of St Kenelm
Enstone, England
Church. Late C12, late C13 and C15; tower and alterations early/mid C16; restored 1856 by G.E. Street.
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Church of St. Nicholas
Steventon, England
13c
A Grade II listed building, Steventon Church is best known for its connection to Jane Austen, whose father was the rector. Jane lived at the nearby rectory and attended this church for the first 25 years of her life.
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Church of St Lawrence
Besselsleigh, England
Church. Early C12, with early C14 and C15 alterations. c.1632 for William Lenthall, Speaker of House of Commons, and 1788 for William John Lenthall. Uncoursed limestone rubble; gabled stone slate roof. Nave and chancel.
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Ipsden Church
Ipsden, England
12th-14th century flint church with Romanesque, Transitional and Perpendicular features, wall monuments, and a beautifully painted organ.
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Church of St Nicholas
Rotherfield Greys, England
Church and chapel. Romanesque, early C17 chapel, restoration in 1865 by W. Woodman.
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Government Offices Great George Street (Her Majesty's Treasury)
London, England
Begun in 1898, this massive Baroque-Revival building houses Her Majesty's Treasury, various other government offices, and the Churchill War Rooms.
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West Banquetting House to Old Campden House
Chipping Campden, England
c. 1627
Circa 1627. Built by Sir Baptist Hicks.
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Almshouses
Chipping Norton, England
1640
The Chipping Norton almshouses were built in 1640 for Henry Cornish, a wealthy local man who outlived his wife and all 12 of their children. He donated them to the use of eight godly widows.