Tythrop House Kingsey, England

Listed Building Data

Tythrop House has been designated a Grade I listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1159819
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
26 August 1949
Name
TYTHROP HOUSE
Location
TYTHROP HOUSE, HADDENHAM ROAD
Parish
Kingsey
District
Aylesbury Vale
County
Buckinghamshire
Grid Reference
SP 73953 07022
Easting
473953.0000
Northing
207022.0000

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

SP 70 NW KINGSEY HADDENHAM ROAD

6/322 Tythrop House

26.8.49 I GV

Country house. Early C17 E-plan house, remodelled by 1680. Interior plaster work by William Morris I, Katherine Morris and William Morris II, 1730s. Altered early C19 and restored 1960s. Brick, the bulk of the north front stuccoed with incised masonry lines. Timber modillion cornices. Hipped tiled roofs. 2 storeys plus dormers and basement under early C17 parts. South or garden front of 9 bays with projecting centre bay carried up to gabled attic storey window with segmental pediment. East front of 9 bays, the centre 3 set forward with 3rd storey crowned by balustrade. North or entrance front has 3 bay projecting wings each end and 5 bay centre with modern pedimented porch flanked by colonnade. West elevation has single storey 3 bay addition at south west. Plinth, band course and modillion cornice surrounds house, except 3 storey centre of east front which has moulded brick cornice and pulvinated frieze between 2nd and 3rd storeys. C19 sashes, except north front, where 5 centre bays have 1730s sashes with thick glazing bars. South front has 3 gabled leaded-light dormers either side of centrepiece and evidence of Caroline cement architraves to previous cross casement windows. Central glazed door in stone doorcase of 2 Corinthian columns, entablature, bracketed dentil cornice and segmental pediment. First floor window architraved with enriched scroll supports. East front has one dormer each side of raised centre bays. Left hand middle bay windows blank, outer windows of right bays blank windows. End walls of wings on north front brick with 2 sashes each. Early C18 sashes on north front have keystones. West elevation has 6 windows to first floor, only centre 2 glazed, others blank. 2 sashes only on ground floor. Stacks tall with panelled faces and moulded cornice heads. Interior. Full height Hall with first floor balustraded balcony on all four sides, supported on large acanthus modillion brackets. Egg and dart cornices. Plasterwork by Morris includes portrait medallions of Homer, Virgil (?) Milton and Pope. To west of hall is Staircase Bay with very fine elaborate pierced balustrade panels to staircase carved in floral scrolls inhabited by wyverns and snakes. Carved in elm. Foliage carved strings and soffits with egg and dart corniced hand rails. Later acanthus console to lowest newel. Dogleg plan. Ornate pendants below newels. Plaster work panels and full length figures of Juno and Athena, busts of Mercury, Mars and Zeus. Timber doorcases and overdoors with bay leaf pulvinated friezes and door surrounds. Corniced tops. Modillion cornice. Staircase carving attributed to Edward Pierce II (1630-95), mainly on stylistic grounds (c.f. Sudbury Hall, Derbyshire). Centre room on first floor south front has pre- 1680 timber cornice with pulvinated bay leaf frieze below box cornice. Bay leaf architraved doorcases. Other rooms on both floors have modillion box cornices and egg and dart corniced dado rails and enriched skirting boards. Upstairs rooms in west wing have dentil cornices and acanthus friezed dado rails. Left hand ground floor room has marble fireplace from Ashburnham House with Corinthian order. Victorian reeded doorcases. Centre ground floor room has fireplace with console brackets and festoons, and overmantel with mirror in lugged surround flanked by pilasters and topped by scroll pediment, probably 1730s. Right ground floor room has egg and dart architraved windows. Overdoors with foliage friezes below cornices. Hall has Rococo centrepiece plaster work to ceiling later than rest of scheme. The history of the house is complex, but appears to have been built for Henry Spiller after 1619. The original one room deep E-plan house with hall and staircase bay was doubled in thickness by the addition of a suite of rooms along the south before 1680 and the earlier house altered and remodelled for James Herbert I, 6th child of the 4th Ea