Hampshire Treasures
Volume 8 ( Test Valley North)
Page 58 - Barton Stacey
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Next page (Volume 8, Page 59) |
| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
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| Cottage |
River Cottage, Newton Stacey. Plaster on chalk cob. Roof of concrete tiles. Three casements on ground floor. Flat boarded porch. Restored. Originally a hall cottage. | SU 409 407 1704 11 |
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| Farm Building |
North of Manor Farm House. Large weather-boarded barn on brick base. Roof part thatched, part tiled. Possibly C.18. | SU 410 404 1704 10 |
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| Cottage |
Rupert Cottage, Newton Stacey. Restored. Plaster on chalk cob. Roof of concrete tiles with eaves raised over three upper windows. Plain casements on ground floor. Thatched porch entrance at side. | SU 410 403 1704 08 |
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| Monument |
Stump of mediaeval cross on south-east corner of All Saints churchyard wall. Made of Lower Ooiite limestone from Lanthony Abbey, Gloucestershire, to which the rectory of Barton Stacey belonged from C.13-C.16. O.S.A. No.SU44 SW4. Ref: V.C.H., Vol. 4, p.417 | SU 434 410 1704 19 |
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| Cottage |
Wheat Cottage. Red brick and flint in bands. Thatched roof with eaves raised over three upper windows. Casement windows on ground floor. 2-storey extension added at north end in 1981, of red brick with flint bands, and black matt tile cladding on north side and thatched roof. | SU 435 413 1704 02 |
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| Farmhouse |
Newton Down Farm, Newton Stacey. Plastered walls with wide plinth. Roof of concrete tiles with eaves raised over two upper windows. | SU 420 390 1704 12 |
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| House |
Old School House. 2 storeys, red and blue brick facade. Central semi-circular and two flanking rectangular casements on first floor. Enclosed porch with rounded hood between two tiled semi-hexagonal bays. | SU 435 410 1704 22 |
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