Hampshire Treasures
Volume 5 ( New Forest)
Page 95 - Dibden
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Next page (Volume 5, Page 97) |
| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Building C.19 |
The Anchor and Hope Inn, High Street, Hythe. Circa 1840. 2 storeys. Stucco-faced, double- fronted house. Hipped slate roof with wide eaves. Central columned porch. Single-storey extension, circa 1860, curved round corner. Stuccoed. Round headed window and door with linked architraves and keystones. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 423 080 2207 22 |
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| Building C.19 |
Nos. 19/19A, The Marsh, Hythe. Circa 1840. 2 storeys. Stucco faced with low pitched hipped slate roof. Wide eaves. Sash windows with glazing bars. Two doors on ground floor. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 424 079 2207 23 |
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| Hotel C.19 |
The Drummond Arms Hotel, Prospect Place, Hythe. Rusticated, rendered ground floor, yellow brick above. Roof not visible. Large rectangular block of 3 storeys, with lower out-buildings. Pilasters on front with rendered bases and caps. Parapet with central coat of arms. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 423 080 2207 25 |
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| Building C.19 |
No. 39, St. John's Street, Hythe. Brick faced with pebbledash. Low pitched slate roof with wide eaves. 3 storeys. Pair of canted bay sash windows on ground floor. Central door under pedimented hood on consoles. | T. & C.P. Act |
SU 425 078 2207 16 |
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| Buildings C.19 |
Nos. 13 and 15, St. John's Street, Hythe. 2 storeys. Stucco walls. Welsh slate roof, hipped on left. Sash windows with glazing bars. Doric pedimented porch to No. 15. | T. & C.P. Act |
SU 424 079 2207 14 |
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| Group F - Historical or Literary Associations | ||||
| Churchyard |
Members of the Lisle Family, Royalists who fought against Monmouth in the Battle of Sedgemoor are buried in the churchyard. | SU 398 086 2207 51 |
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| Building C.18 |
Hythe Promenade (former International Stores.) Originally built as a bulk store. 2 storeys. Rendered brick with hipped old tile roof. Central ground floor double doors. Single-storey extension with pentice roof. Before land reclamation this building stood directly on the waterfront. Visually important in the view from Hythe Pier to the village. One of the only surviving buildings relating to Hythe's waterborne trade. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 424 081 2207 13 |
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| Pier C.19 |
Hythe Pier. The last cast-iron pier on Southampton Water still in use. It is the longest pier on the south coast and measures 2100ft. It remains as built i n 1880. A ferry service operates to the town quay. A 2ft. gauge electric railway still runs its length. Ref: Hampshire Industrial Archaeology; A Guide, (Ellis), p.43. | C.A. |
SU 425 082 2207 54 |
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