Hampshire Treasures
Volume 6 ( East Hampshire)
Page 63 - Bramshott
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| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
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| Cottage C.18/19 |
Old Forge, Conford. 2 storeys. Roughly coursed sandstone with brick quoins. Tiled roof with gable ends. External chimney on western gable. Modern additions including wing on north east corner. Diamond shaped leaded windows. Home of the head of the Moss family who were 'edge tool' makers in C.19. The 1851 census records that there were four households of Moss' involved in the tool-making work, but the business closed in 1916. | SU 825 329 2301 51 |
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| House C.18/19 |
Ship House, No. 3, The Square, Liphook. White plaster-faced brick. Slate roof. Sash windows and glazing bars. Earlier remains at rear. Formerly the Old Ship Inn. | C.A. |
SU 839 314 2301 19 |
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| Cottage and Outbuildings C.19 |
Bramshott Cottage. Rebuilt 1826 on site of earlier cottage. Stone structure with tiled roof. Stable used as garage. Barn converted to studio. Ref: A Hampshire Parish, (Newman), p.45. | SU 842 332 2301 36 |
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| Hopkilns (4) C.19 |
Near Passfield House Farm. Two circular oast houses together, and a circular and a square oast house separated by barn. Sandstone and rubble structures with tiled roofs cemented over. Square oast houses and barn with slate roofs. Used for storage only. | SU 824 345 2301 23 |
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| House C.19 |
Ludshott Manor formerly known as Woolmer Lodge. Built 1827-8 in plain Tudor style. On site of earlier house. Some outbuildings of Elizabethan or Jacobean date. O.S.A. No. SU83 SW7. Ref: 1. Buildings of England; Hants. and I.O.W., (Pevsner and Lloyd), p.141. Ref: 2. A Hampshire Parish, (Newman), pp.42-45. Ref: 3. Rural Life in Hampshire, (Capes), pp.275-6, 281. | SU 842 340 2301 12 |
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| House C.19 |
Osbornes, Portsmouth Road, Liphook. 2 storeys. Slate roof and plaster faced walls. Regency cast iron verandah on south side. Sash windows. Traces of earlier work, Queen Anne date. Panelled door with hood. | T. & C.P. Act C.A. |
SU 839 314 2301 17 |
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| Building C.19 |
Formerly Liphook School, now a library. Begun in 1872 when Sir William Erie gave the site and a donation to build a National School for girls and small boys. Squared stone structure with tiled roofs. Many additions. Small shingle-hung tower with shingled roof. | SU 840 316 2301 85 |
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