Number 7 and Attached Wall Gloucester, England

Listed Building Data

Number 7 and Attached Wall has been designated a Grade II 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1271719
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
23 January 1952
Name
NUMBER 7 AND ATTACHED WALL
Location
NUMBER 7 AND ATTACHED WALL, 7, MILLERS GREEN
District
Gloucester
County
Gloucestershire
Grid Reference
SO 83044 18854
Easting
383043.7790
Northing
218853.5480

Listed Building Description

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

GLOUCESTER

SO8318NW MILLER'S GREEN 844-1/8/210 (South side) 23/01/52 No.7 and attached wall (Formerly Listed as: MILLER'S GREEN No.7)

GV II

House, the upper floor and attic converted to a separate flat. 1667-70, for William Lambe, gentleman. Incorporates medieval walls; major C18 and early C19 alterations and extension. Stone rubble in courses and random rubble, ashlar quoins, brick with stone and stucco details, tiled roof with gables, gabled dormers, brick stacks. Double-depth block with wide, projecting cross-wing on west side forming L-plan; within the angle a later, single-storey block flanking the entry to the house; on the east side a recessed, lateral, added wing at rear of small yard enclosed by walls. EXTERIOR: the main block and wing of three storeys, attic and cellar. On the front the entrance to the house through an early C19 archway leading to an open passage between the side of the projecting wing to right, and the small, single-storey end-gabled block to left; steps in the passage ascending to a two-storey porch with lean-to roof in angle of main block and wing; the stuccoed entrance archway, with plain jambs and basket arch, and framed by a square piers with plain, recessed panels on the outer face, links the corner of the wing and the corner of the small block. To right of the archway the front of the cross-gabled wing, of coursed, squared rubble, has an offset plinth, and a buttress at outer corner capped by a weathered offset just above first-floor level; on each floor two late C18 or early C19 sashes, all with glazing bars (3x4 panes) in plain openings; in the gable a double casement with leadlights; to left of archway the brick front of the small single-storey block has a central tri-partite window, the sashes with glazing bars (3x4 panes and 1x4 panes) and in timber frame within opening with brick, segmental-arched head. On the side of the wing and the front of the main block to left are late C17 cross windows, in the large gabled dormer on the side of the wing a fire escape door replacing casement and to left in the similar dormer gable a double casement, the gable-end wall of the main block of brick with coped gable. The garden front on the south side of brick, the main block of

four bays, originally with Dutch gables: on ground floor three sashes and C20 French doors to left, on each upper floor four sashes with glazing bars, and four C19 gabled dormers; early C18 wing to right with band at first-floor level. In the east wall at low level medieval masonry. INTERIOR: dog-leg staircase with closed string, turned balusters and swept handrail, probably C19; principal rooms with C18 and C19 joinery and chimney pieces; in cellar stop-chamfered bridging beams. SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: brick walls enclosing yard to north-east, with segmental-arched doorway. (Eward S: No Fine but a Glass of Wine, Cathedral Life at Gloucester: Salisbury: 1985-: 326).

Listing NGR: SO8304418854