Grade II listed buildings

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  • Mornington Terrace Liverpool, England mid-19C

    Located near Liverpool Cathedral on Upper Duke Street, this Grade II listed building is a terrace of five houses dating from the mid-19th century. It has three stories with a red brick exterior.

  • Black-E (Former Congregational Church) Liverpool, England 1840-41

    Located next to the Chinatown gate, this former Congregational church (1841) with a distinctive dome has been an arts and community center since 1968. Its name is based on the 1960s nickname “Blackie” for its former soot-covered appearance.

  • Anna Sewell House Old Catton, England 18C

    The Anna Sewell House in Old Catton is a Grade II listed building constructed in the 18th century. It was the home of its namesake, the author of Black Beauty (which was written here), for the last 10 years of her life, 1867-1878.

  • Anna Sewell House Great Yarmouth, England early 17C

    The Sewell House in Great Yarmouth is a Grade II listed building constructed in the early 17th century. Best known as the birthplace of Anna Sewell, author of Black Beauty, it is open to visitors as part of the Redwings Horse Sanctuary.

  • Minster Garth Beverley, England

    Late C18. 3 storeys in red brick. 3 windows, all reglazed, painted stone cill string to 1st floor, and heads with fluted key blocks to windows.

  • Mendips (John Lennon's House) Liverpool, England 1933

    This semi-detached house built in 1933 was the childhood home of John Lennon from ages 5 to 22 and an early practice venue for the Beatles. It is now a museum operated by the National Trust.

  • Green Park Railway Station Bath, England

    Railway station, now in commercial use. 1869, by JH Sanders, train shed by JS Crossley (Chief Engineer of the Midland Railway), restored and converted c1983, with former lines removed and platform well raised to common floor level.

  • Victoria Vase Bath, England 1880

    This Neo-Classical limestone vase was erected in 1880 beside a small lake to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the opening of Royal Victoria Park.

  • Empire Hotel Bath, England

    Overlooking Parade Gardens, this grand hotel of many styles was built 1900-01 by Major C.E. Davis for hotelier Alfred Holland. It was restored and converted to apartments in 1996 and a Garfunkel's restaurant occupies the ground floor.

  • The Grange Harwich, England 1911

    The Grange in Harwich is a Grade-II listed brick mansion, later a sixth form college, built around 1911 by H. Steward Watling for H.G. Hepworth. Left vacant for many years, it suffered a major fire in July 2023.

  • Turf Tavern Oxford, England

    Original date indeterminate but remodelled in C18. 2 storeyed cement-faced timber-framing. Welsh slate roof. Brick shaft on a central moulded stone base. There is a boxed-out bar front to the ground floor on the north with C18 windows.

  • 1 S Square, Grays Inn London, England c. 1759

    Built around 1759, this building in Gray's Inn housed the offices where Charles Dickens worked as a solicitor's clerk at age 15. When bored, he threw cherry pits from the top window onto passing lawyers below.

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