Hampshire Treasures
Volume 1 ( Winchester City District)
Page 326 - Wickham
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| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| House C.18 |
A. E. Knight, Builders, The Square. Stuccoed, with long and short quoins, modillion eaves cornice, parapet, small shop window. Casement windows to whole of first floor. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 572 115 1917 24B |
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| House C.18 |
Lloyds Bank, The Square. Stuccoed, with long and short quoins, modillion eaves cornice, parapet, and small shop window. Casement windows to whole of first floor. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 572 115 1917 24C |
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| House C.18 |
Lower Wickham Lodge, Winchester Road. Consists of centre portion and two wings. Red brick, modillion eaves cornice, hipped tiled roof. The wings red brick and grey headers, wooden eaves cornice. Half-hipped tiled roof. | T. & C.P. Act |
SU 568 115 1917 33 |
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| River Bridge C.18 |
Wickham Bridge, Bridge Street. Also called Church Bridge. Two shallow segmental arches, with red brick wall above surmounted by a stone parapet ramped in the centre to contain inscribed stone dated 1792. | C.A. |
SU 574 115 1917 05 |
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| House C.18 |
The Gables, Winchester Road. Red brick with grey headers, tiled roof. Doorway with engaged half -octagonaI panels, flat hood over and door of six moulded panels. To the south west are C.19 additions originally part of the same building, but forming a seperate house known as The Croft. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 571 114 1917 31 |
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| House C.18 |
Little Park Mansion, Titchfield Lane. Massive building converted into twelve flats. Originally the home of the Mott-Radciyffe's family. Stuccoed, hipped slate roof, shallow porch with engaged Doric columns. To the north of the main building is an L-shaped wing of lower elevation. | T. & C.P. Act |
SU 563 119 1917 36 |
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| House C.18 |
Warwick House, Bridge St., north east side. Painted brick, wooden dentilled eaves cornice, tiled roof. Two door-ways in moulded architrave surrounds. Ref: The Buildings of England; Hants. and I.O.W., (Pevsner and Lloyd), p.655. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 573 115 1917 12D |
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| Building C.18 |
Victory Hall, Bridge Street. Originally a Malt House or Brewery converted to village hall in 1921. Tiled roof. Timber-framed, largely refaced with red brick and with grey headers. Once painted. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 574 114 1917 09 |
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| House C.18 |
North east side of Bridge Street. (Occupied by Land Agents). Grey headers with red brick window dressings and quoins. Parapet, hipped tiled roof. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 574 115 1917 06 |
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