Hampshire Treasures
Volume 10 ( Fareham)
Page 100 - Warsash
|
|
Next page (Volume 10, Page 101) |
| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| House C.19 |
Nos. 23/25 Lorn Villa. Two-storey Victorian house built in 1865 for the manager of the iron smelting works, the letters L.O.R.N. were stamped on the iron ingots. The house is built of red brick with white window dressings and quoins. Bay windows. | SU 494 061 0708 147 |
||
| Shop and Cottage C.19 |
Nos. 31 and 33. Group of Victorian buildings adding considerably to the character of Newtown Road. | SU 494 059 0708 156 |
||
| House C.19 |
No. 46, Hamble Bank and No. 42, Farthing House. Two and a half storeys including basement, stuccoed facade, with hipped slate roof. Four sash windows, off-centre entrance bay with round arched entrance. Additional door to north with steps. | T&CP Act |
SU 493 060 0708 44 |
|
| Cottages C.18 |
Nos. 45 and 47. Originally single storey cob built cottages. Later the walls were faced with brick and extended to form an upper storey, which is tile hung. Tiled roof with catslide to rear. Three chimney stacks. Casement windows, one on ground floor being original. Two simple doorcases. Cottage once tenanted by the father of James Gray the noted Victorian artist. | T&CP Act |
SU 494 059 0708 47 |
|
| House C.19 |
Greystones. Probably early C.19, two-storey brick built house, originally within its own large garden, which has now been developed. The house has a slate roof with dormer windows. Windows are both sash and casement all with small panes. In about 1870 it was Warsash's first post office, formerly known as Dingley Dell. Ref: A Short History of Warsash (Light) p.23. | SU 494 059 0708 46 |
||
| Cottage |
Withybank. Two storeys, old tiled roof, small casement windows. Possibly C.1 7. One of the last of original cottages of community of Newtown. | SU 494 054 0708 48 |
||
| Building C.20 |
School of Maritime Studies. The Cadets's Block. Rectangular five-storey building, faced with brick. Symmetrical pattern of small and large windows. First floor has three large square sided glazed projections. Ref: Buildings of England, Hampshire and IOW, (Pevsner and Lloyd) pp.643-644. | SU 492 053 0708 60 |
||
| Building C.20 |
School of Maritime Studies, Library. Ground floor is recessed, revealing concrete under-structure of the first floor. Upper storey is mostly brick faced, clerestory lighting. Ref: Buildings of England, Hampshire and IOW, (Pevsner and Lloyd) pp.643-644. | SU 492 053 0708 149 |
|
|
Next page (Volume 10, Page 101) |
