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Northumberland County Council

Listed building outline

Reference Name Listed building Geometry Notes Organisation Entry date Start date End date
1041668 Sally Port 1041668 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.005243 55.767897,-2.005232 55.767884,-2.005163 55.767910,-2.005154 55.767904,-2.005063 55.767979,-2.005085 55.767990,-2.005173 55.767922,-2.005243 55.767897))) 1. 840 BRIDGE STREET (South Side) Sally Port NT 9952 11/30 II GV 2. A narrow old tunnel passage between Bridge Street and Quayside. All the listed buildings in Bridge Street (South Side) from Nos 25 to 61 (odd) form a group. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041669 45 To 53, Bridge Street 1041669 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.005008 55.768450,-2.005148 55.768503,-2.005280 55.768410,-2.005213 55.768385,-2.005168 55.768419,-2.005078 55.768388,-2.005129 55.768342,-2.005057 55.768310,-2.004924 55.768419,-2.005008 55.768450))) 1. 840 BRIDGE STREET (south Side) Nos 45 to 53 (odd) NT 9952 11/32 1.8.52. II GV 2. C18. 2 storeys, Stone with moulded jambs to windows, pantiled roof. Nos 47 and 49 have later shop fronts, No 51 has good doorcase with fluted pilasters, broken pediment and traceried fanlight, No 53 has a moulded doorway similar to windows. Upper storey has 8 window. All the listed buildings in Bridge Street (South Side) from Nos 25 to 6l (odd) form a group. , 1952-08-01 1952-08-01
1041670 55 And 57, Bridge Street 1041670 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.005148 55.768503,-2.005300 55.768570,-2.005440 55.768478,-2.005371 55.768453,-2.005331 55.768483,-2.005233 55.768443,-2.005148 55.768503))) 1. 840 BRIDGE STREET (South Side) Nos 55 & 57 NT 9952 11/33 II GV 2. C18, 2 storeys, slate roof with scroll foot stones. Modern shop windows, with 6 12-parted sash windows above. Coved cornice. All the listed buildings in Bridge Street (South Side) from Nos 25 to 6l (odd) form a group. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041671 1, Bridge Terrace 1041671 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.005906 55.768564,-2.005964 55.768620,-2.006049 55.768585,-2.005986 55.768533,-2.005906 55.768564))) 1. 840 BRIDGE TERRACE No 1 NT 9952 11/35 1.8.52. II 2. Corner house at East end, with return side on Bridge End. Early C19. Ashlar, 3 storeys, 2 sash windows each floor. , 1952-08-01 1952-08-01
1041672 Grain Store 1041672 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.006082 55.768870,-2.006121 55.768883,-2.006114 55.768890,-2.006175 55.768910,-2.006169 55.768917,-2.006247 55.768943,-2.006369 55.768827,-2.006223 55.768723,-2.006110 55.768771,-2.006166 55.768812,-2.006184 55.768804,-2.006200 55.768816,-2.006183 55.768834,-2.006204 55.768843,-2.006193 55.768852,-2.006124 55.768830,-2.006082 55.768870))) 1. 840 BRIDGE TERRACE Grain Store NT 9952 11/37 II 2. Probably circa 1800. Stone with pantiled roof, 3 storeys. 3 rows of 4 windows, with 6 windows each floor on Love Lane facade. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041673 Conduit Head 1041673 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.007274 55.771573,-2.007193 55.771517,-2.007178 55.771516,-2.007274 55.771573))) 1. 840 CASTLEGATE (North Side) Conduit Head NT 9953 11/38 II 2. C18. Rusticated front surmounted by a parapet inscribed renovated 1909. Inscription on door head gave the original date but is almost obliterated. Both datestones have the names of the respective mayors. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041674 War Memorial 1041674 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.008373 55.773407,-2.008362 55.773416,-2.008365 55.773436,-2.008379 55.773443,-2.008426 55.773433,-2.008425 55.773412,-2.008373 55.773407))) 1. 840 CASTLEGATE (North Side) War Memorial NT 9953 11/42 II 2. Stone pedestal surmounted by a bronze winged figure, and the pedestal carries bronze plates with names of dead. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041675 Garfield Guest House 1041675 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.007152 55.771275,-2.007283 55.771356,-2.007520 55.771263,-2.007465 55.771228,-2.007405 55.771259,-2.007360 55.771231,-2.007323 55.771238,-2.007292 55.771219,-2.007152 55.771275))) 1. 840 CASTLEGATE (South Side) No 1 (Garfield Guest House) (formerly listed as No 1) NT 9953 11/44 1.8.52. II* GV 2. 1849, classical. Ashlar, with slate roof. 2 storeys. Flanking panelled pilasters, cornice, blocking course. Good doorcase with Roman Ionic columns and entablature. 3 12-paned sash windows up, 2 down, all with good moulded stone frames, and those on the ground floor also with cornices. Nos 1 to 19 (odd) and No 23 form a group. , 1971-05-26 1952-08-01
1041676 11 And 13, Castlegate 1041676 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.007544 55.771517,-2.007675 55.771598,-2.007999 55.771492,-2.007977 55.771473,-2.007952 55.771481,-2.007941 55.771472,-2.007808 55.771515,-2.007755 55.771481,-2.007910 55.771430,-2.007874 55.771400,-2.007544 55.771517))) 1. 840 CASTLEGATE (South Side) Nos 11 & 13 NT 9953 11/47 II GV 2. Mid-Cl9. Ashlar, with heavily corbelled cornice and acroteria. 2 storeys. 2 doorways in centre flanked by 2 shop fronts, and 3 12-parted sash windows above. Nos 1 to 19 (odd) and No 23 form a group. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041677 Church Of St Bartholomew And St Boisil 1041677 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.008672 55.764027,-2.008806 55.764029,-2.008809 55.763970,-2.008917 55.763972,-2.008918 55.763950,-2.008974 55.763950,-2.008977 55.763911,-2.008965 55.763910,-2.008966 55.763884,-2.008573 55.763881,-2.008573 55.763894,-2.008424 55.763891,-2.008421 55.763951,-2.008491 55.763952,-2.008489 55.763990,-2.008579 55.763991,-2.008581 55.763967,-2.008675 55.763968,-2.008672 55.764027))) 1. 840 CHURCH ROAD TWEEDMOUTH Church of St Bartholomew NT 9952E 9/241 1.8.52. B 2. Built 1783, enlarged and gothicised in 1866. Nave windows, ceiling, tower arch and South porch 1906. Interesting late Georgian West gallery. AMENDMENT 08/12/2009 MATERIALS: large blocks of ashlar with slate roofs except to the porch which has a tiled roof. PLAN: nave and chancel with separate roof, west tower, north transept and vestry, and south porch. EXTERIOR: The chancel (1866) has buttresses fluch with the east wall and a large east window with Gothic style curvilinear tracerty and hoodmould with carved terminals. There are two pointed arch windows with tracery and hoodmoulds to each side. On the north side a gabled vestry (1868) extends from the west end of the chancel and has a small square headed window to the east, and a pointed arch window and square headed door, set in an arched recess pierced with a roundel, in the gable end. The door is approached up a short flight of steps. The nave has four pointed arch windows of similar style to the chancel on the south side, and one window to either side of the north transept, that to the west is blocked while that to the east is similar to those on the south side. The transept has a triple lancet window to the north with hoodmoulds and a small lancet in the gable. To either side is a lancet window with Y-tracery and broad hoodmoulds, possibly reused from an earlier church. The blocked window is of a similar type. On the north side of the west end of the nave is a quatrefoil window at a low level. The nave has raised gables. The tower is centrally placed at the west end and is of two stages with hollow-chamfered string courses and battlements, topped by a slated spire. The two-light traceried window on the west side replaces an ealrier entrance, now blocked On each side near the top is a quatrefoil window. The porch (1907) is attahed to the south side of the tower and has diagonal buttresses and a moulded pointed arch doorway with double plank doors with decorative iron brackets. Above the door is a recessed niche. INTERIOR: The chancel has a scissor-braced roof with ashlar pieces and is floored with encaustic tiles. The timber reredos (1924) has blind tracery and there is a timber communion rail and plain timber choir stalls The chancel arch is moulded on stone shafts. The nave has a canted roof, boarded and divided into panels by moulded ribs with flat carved bosses at the intersections. The pews have ends with canted corners and carved crosses in roundels. At the west end is a gallery supported on square section boxed posts, accessed by a boxed stair to the south. The front has fielded panels and a dentil cornice, with a central section with moulded balusters. The pews in the gallery are plain boxed. The north transept has a similar roof to the nave but plainer, and contains the organ (reused from St Andrew's Church, Berwick). A doorway at the rear of the nave leads to the tower and porch. The pulpit is polygonal in timber with blind tracery and a timber balustrade to the stairs. The font (C19) is in stone with an octagonal carved bowl and decorated base and stem. In the south wall is a window by Kempe dated to 1886, and the quatrefoil in the west is probably by Wailes. HISTORY: The current building replaces earlier churches on the site dating back to at least the 12th century (first reference 1145). The earliest parts of the building date to 1783 when earlier ruins were removed and the tower and nave built, possibly using some earlier fabric. The gallery dates to this period. The north transept was added in 1841, originally containing a gallery for the 'poors' and later the choir. The chancel and vestry were built in 1866-8 to designs by F R Wilson, and the south porch added in 1907-8 at which time the nave and transept were re-roofed. SUBSIDIARY: The graveyard contains a number of interesting monuments, the earliest decipherable from 1696. These include a memorial to John Mackay Wilson (Grade II) and one to William Stephenson which has the inscription Sacred to the memory of William Stephenson engine driver who lost his life on the 2nd day of March 1853 on the Newcastle & Tynemouth Railway by his engine No 184 running off the line of rails over the embankment at the west end of Wellington Viaduct. Aged 32 years he has left a widow & 2 children to lament his death. He opened the Newcastle & Berwick Railway out in July 1847 by taking the first train of passengers from Tweedmouth to Newcastle. He was greatly respected by all his fellow workman and alsways obliging to his master. SOURCES: Pevsner, Northumberland, (1973 edn), 185; Robertson, R M, Tweedmouth Parish Church, (1998). REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The Church of St Bartholomew and St Boisil at Tweedmouth is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons: * The tower and the main fabric of the nave date to 1783, a period before the great expansion of church building in the C19, and therefore have rarity value; * The west gallery is pre-1800 with its original fittings and as such a relatively rare survival; * The roofs of both the chancel and the nave are of interest, being well executed with finely detailed decoration in the nave; * There is stained glass by Kempe and probably Wailes; * The church stands in a churchyard containing a number of interesting memorials. 2009-12-08 1952-08-01
1041678 Number 26 (Incorporating 28) 1041678 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.001735 55.769624,-2.001949 55.769656,-2.002261 55.769721,-2.002298 55.769664,-2.001793 55.769574,-2.001785 55.769591,-2.001758 55.769585,-2.001735 55.769624))) 1. 840 CHURCH STREET (East Side) No 26 (incorporating No 28) NT 9952 11/57 II GV 2. C18. Rock-faced stucco. 3 storeys. large Venetian window on 1st floor, and sashes. Nos 2 to 26 (even) form a group. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041679 Ha-Ha Wall To South Of Morwick Hall 1041679 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.633732 55.328554,-1.633685 55.328560,-1.633637 55.328590,-1.633619 55.328612,-1.633518 55.328599,-1.633405 55.328599,-1.633327 55.328611,-1.633181 55.328671,-1.633053 55.328753,-1.632989 55.328815,-1.632971 55.328856,-1.632985 55.328943,-1.633003 55.328949,-1.633016 55.328941,-1.633002 55.328869,-1.633004 55.328847,-1.633017 55.328824,-1.633078 55.328764,-1.633142 55.328719,-1.633271 55.328653,-1.633339 55.328628,-1.633412 55.328617,-1.633515 55.328617,-1.633638 55.328632,-1.633679 55.328587,-1.633706 55.328574,-1.633732 55.328572,-1.633789 55.328578,-1.633875 55.328613,-1.633897 55.328607,-1.633878 55.328589,-1.633804 55.328562,-1.633732 55.328554))) NU 20 SW WARKWORTH MORWICK HALL 12/321 Ha-Ha wall to south of Morwick Hall GV II Ha-Ha wall. C18. Squared stone. Curving 1-metre high flat-coped wall with semicircular projection enclosing old tree at west end. Included for group value. Attached rubble wall to west and C19 brick wall to east are not of special interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041680 Gate Screen At Drive Entrance 220 Metres South Of Morwick Hall 1041680 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.633292 55.327258,-1.633305 55.327267,-1.633392 55.327264,-1.633439 55.327202,-1.633427 55.327195,-1.633410 55.327199,-1.633372 55.327248,-1.633302 55.327249,-1.633292 55.327258))) NU 20 SW WARKWORTH MORWICK HALL 12/323 Gate screen at drive entrance 220 metres south of Morwick Hall GV II Gate screen. Late C18, brought from Tynemouth to Morwick by Mr. William Linskill c.1860. Squared stone with ashlar piers. Main piers have monolithic octagonal shafts with moulded plinths, and moulded caps with acanthus friezes and domed tops. 1-metre high quadrant wall to south with moulded plinth and renewed coping sloped up at each end; longer 0.6-metre high wing wall at north end with flat slab coping; lower end piers similar but without frieze. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041681 New Barns Farmhouse 1041681 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.617761 55.334480,-1.617816 55.334473,-1.617778 55.334372,-1.618013 55.334341,-1.617962 55.334184,-1.617873 55.334197,-1.617896 55.334246,-1.617705 55.334270,-1.617726 55.334326,-1.617693 55.334330,-1.617750 55.334481,-1.617761 55.334480))) NU 20 SW WARKWORTH NEW BARNS 12/325 New Barns Farmhouse GV II House and attached outbuilding, mid-C19. Coursed rubble with tooled quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roof with 2 stacks rebuilt in brick on old bases. Square villa plan with single-storey outbuilding range to north-east. South elevation 2 storeys, 3 bays, symmetrical. Chamfered plinth and chamfered 1st-floor band. Central old half-glazed door flanked by renewed 12-pane sashes; 4-pane sashes above. All openings in alternating-block surrounds, the windows with slightly-projecting sills. Hipped roof with right-of-centre ridge stack rebuilt on old base. 2-bay left return shows 12-pane sashes, renewed in right bay; stepped-and- corniced ridge stack. 2-bay left return shows renewed 12-pane sashes on 1st floor and single-storey outbuilding set forward on right, with boarded door and 4-pane sash in left return. Rear elevation shows 12-pane sashes and inserted door; projecting outbuilding range to left shows blocked doorway with small casement window inserted, boarded door and 3 small windows. Interior: 4-panel doors. Stair with stick balusters. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041682 Garden Wall To East South And West Of New Barns Farmhouse 1041682 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.617626 55.334226,-1.617954 55.334187,-1.617953 55.334174,-1.617606 55.334217,-1.617697 55.334486,-1.617707 55.334492,-1.617765 55.334488,-1.617761 55.334480,-1.617720 55.334484,-1.617626 55.334226))) NU 20 SW WARKWORTH NEW BARNS 12/326 Garden wall to east, south and west of New Barns Farmhouse GV II Garden wall, mid-C19. Roughly-coursed rubble with cut dressings. Wall 1 metre high, with pitched coping, joins north-west corner of house and returns to enclose garden on west, south and east. Gateway on west; coping sloped down near west end of south wall. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041683 Farmbuilding Group North West Of Northfield Farmhouse 1041683 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.609438 55.364994,-1.609476 55.365042,-1.609943 55.364921,-1.609909 55.364879,-1.609998 55.364872,-1.610019 55.364863,-1.610035 55.364840,-1.610013 55.364813,-1.609967 55.364807,-1.609918 55.364818,-1.609878 55.364840,-1.609823 55.364777,-1.609746 55.364797,-1.609820 55.364891,-1.609438 55.364994))) NU 20 NW WARKWORTH NORTHFIELD 10/328 Farmbuilding group north-west of Northfield Farmhouse GV II Barn, gingang and shelter shed/granary. Shelter shed/granary range c.1800, barn early C19, gingang mid-C19. Shelter shed/granary rubble with tooled dressings; barn squared rubble with tooled-and-margined dressings; gingang rock faced stone. Welsh slate roofs. L-plan; cartshed/granary on north of yard and barn, with gingang at rear, on west. Elevations to yard: Shelter shed/granary range: Main 2-storey part has 5-bay segmental arcade with 3 part-slatted windows above; single-storey part at right end with 2 doorways, one blocked, and hip-ended roof. Barn shows stable door and 3 slit vents. Rear elevations: Shelter shed/granary has 2 stable doors, boarded door and 2 windows; single-storey end part has boarded door and 3 slit vents. Barn shows stable doors in alternating-block surrounds to either side of gingang with 5 square piers and conical roof. Interior: Gingang roof has radial ties to metal plate at foot of octagonal central post; 2 levels of curving purlins. Attached C20 covered yard is not of interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041684 Warkworth Hermitage 1041684 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.620806 55.347058,-1.620839 55.347077,-1.620878 55.347084,-1.620911 55.347073,-1.620921 55.347080,-1.620974 55.347060,-1.620956 55.347045,-1.620967 55.347031,-1.620931 55.347000,-1.620887 55.347003,-1.620865 55.346989,-1.620827 55.346994,-1.620770 55.346943,-1.620674 55.346957,-1.620806 55.347058))) WARKWORTH RIVER COQUET NU 2405 22/331 Warkworth Hermitage 31.12.69 I Hermitage. Mid-C14, enlarged late C14 or early C15. Original part cut in natural sandstone cliff; later parts squared stone with cut dressings. Plan: 3-bay chapel with parallel sacristy to rear cut into cliff; built against foot of cliff later hall with solar over, and kitchen. External elevation: front wall of hall/solar stands to 4 metres, with projecting stepped chimney breast and remains of chamfered window openings to left. Right remains of door to entrance lobby (beneath later stair) with left chamfered round arch to hall and right blocked chamfered door into kitchen; only footings remain of kitchen, with base of oven on right return. Stair from kitchen leads up to roughly-arched chapel door in rock face above; to right a quatrefoil loop and a window of two pointed lights under a rough enclosing arch; to left a recessed,loop, all cut in rock. To right of chapel a rock buttress with flight of steps rising through short tunnel to the hermit's former garden on the cliff top. Interior: Chapel doorway opens into small porch with worn crucifix above small inner doorway. Chapel 6.2'x 2.3 metres, with imitation groined vaulting on semi-octagonal wall shafts with moulded caps and bases. Rock-cut altar with cusped recess above; south of altar worn relief carvings, perhaps a Nativity, on inner sill of 2-light window; north 4-light traceried window opening into sacristy. Centre bay has cusped squint on north and bowl cut into sill of quatrefoil window on south. West bay has doorway to sacristy, beneath shield with Emblems of Passion. Sacristy has plain arched roof; damaged altar at east end, 2 cupboards on north and traces of screen near west end. Remains of doorway at west end of south wall (west end now open to cliff face) into chamber (also open to west) with 4 slits looking into west end of chapel. Historical Notes: first recorded in 1487 when Thomas Barker was appointed for life by the 4th Earl of Northumberland to be 'chaplain of the chantry in Sunderland park'. Abandoned by 1567. One of the most elaborate and well preserved cave hermitages in the British Isles. Scheduled Ancient Monument Northumberland 6A. English Heritage Guide by C.B. Hunter Blair & H.L. Honeyman. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1041685 Garden Walls 100 Metres West Of Shortridge Hall 1041685 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.623935 55.364462,-1.623946 55.364471,-1.624277 55.364475,-1.624755 55.364466,-1.624770 55.364433,-1.624788 55.364327,-1.624881 55.363927,-1.624863 55.363922,-1.624851 55.363928,-1.624732 55.364450,-1.624302 55.364457,-1.623948 55.364453,-1.623935 55.364462))) WARKWORTH SHORTRIDGE HALL NU 20 NW 10/333 Garden walls 100 metres west of Shortridge Hall GV II Garden walls, probably early C19. Brick in stretcher bond with cut stone dressings; outer face.squared tooled stone. L-plan. Walls 3.5 metres high, with flat slab coping. At west end of north wall a segmental archway; at south end of west wall a short return to east with coping ramped down. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041686 Farmbuilding Group To North Of Southside Farmhouse 1041686 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.661698 55.349284,-1.661792 55.349293,-1.661810 55.349239,-1.661896 55.349247,-1.661912 55.349193,-1.661824 55.349185,-1.661924 55.348866,-1.661849 55.348857,-1.661776 55.349081,-1.661721 55.349222,-1.661104 55.349167,-1.661089 55.349224,-1.661339 55.349247,-1.661698 55.349284))) WARKWORTH SOUTHSIDE NU 20 NW 10/337 Farmbuilding group to north of Southside Farmhouse GV II Planned farmbuildings. West range probably C18, altered c.184O when engine house added. North range C18 altered early C19. West range roughly-coursed stone with tooled-and-margined quoins, dressings and chimney stack; north range rubble with roughly-shaped quoins and cut dressings. Welsh slate roofs. Overall L-plan. West range in 3 sections. Single-storey left part has through-passage at left end, 4 boarded doors and one window. Taller centre has boarded double doors under segmental arch and boarded door, with 3 slit vents above. 2- storey barn at right end, partly behind north range, has boarded and stable doors and 2 loft windows with slightly-projecting sills. Most openings have chamfered alternating-block surrounds. Coped gables. North end of barn shows boarded pitching door in tooled-and-margined chamfered surround, with 2 older chamfered openings (one blocked) beneath. Rear elevation shows engine house projecting from barn, with truncated stack on right return. North range 2 storeys, 10 irregular bays. Three pairs of segmental arches, those near left end, with chamfered surrounds, are early C19 insertions; 2 boarded doors; external stone stair to boarded loft door; slatted loft windows set directly beneath eaves. Coped left gable. Boarded loft door and similar loft windows at rear. Interior: Engine house has engine sump pit and millstone on timber platform. Pent cart shed at rear of north range, and C20 shed north of engine house, are not of special interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041687 Garden Wall To Number 1 1041687 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.613227 55.348569,-1.613225 55.348507,-1.613200 55.348500,-1.613193 55.348506,-1.613195 55.348571,-1.613216 55.348578,-1.613227 55.348569))) WARKWORTH THE STANNERS NU 2406 21/340 Garden wall to No. 1 GV II Front garden wall, late C18 or early C19. Outer face squared stone, inner old brick. Wall 0.6 metre high with rough coping of flat slabs. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041688 Outbuildings And Gate Piers To North Of Sturton Grange Farmhouse 1041688 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.662687 55.356673,-1.662736 55.356669,-1.662694 55.356517,-1.662602 55.356523,-1.662625 55.356622,-1.662496 55.356631,-1.662509 55.356685,-1.662687 55.356673)),((-1.662496 55.356631,-1.662483 55.356571,-1.662438 55.356575,-1.662453 55.356634,-1.662496 55.356631))) WARKWORTH STURTON GRANGE NU 20 NW 10/342 Outbuildings an gate piers to north of Sturton Grange Farmhouse GV II Outbuildings and gate piers. Late C18 altered in mid C19. Brick except for rear wall of north range and east range which are rubble with rock-faced quoins and dressings; cut sandstone piers. Welsh slate roofs. Plan: L-plan group on west and north of yard, separate building on east with gateway at south end. Elevations to yard: West range in 2 sections: Left part, C18 heightened in C19, 2 storeys, 3 bays. Centre boarded door; renewed casement windows, ground floor left in former doorway, in alternating-block surrounds. Single-storey bay to right shows boarded double doors under timber lintel. Single-storey 3-bay north range shows centre boarded door and part-slatted window to left, both in chamfered alternating-block surrounds; C20 doors under timber lintel to right. Roof hipped to right. Single-storey east range shows 2 boarded doors; hipped roof. Adjacent gateway has square piers with pyramidal caps. Rear elevation of west range shows several casement windows in alternating- block surrounds. Rear of east range shows boarded hatch and small window. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041689 Detached Byre 50 Metres North Of Sturton Grange Farmhouse 1041689 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.662802 55.356766,-1.662812 55.356765,-1.662804 55.356741,-1.663013 55.356722,-1.663001 55.356678,-1.662632 55.356717,-1.662651 55.356780,-1.662802 55.356766))) WARKWORTH STURTON GRANGE NU 20 NW 10/344 Detached byre 50 metres north of Sturton Grange Farmhouse GV II Byre. Probably early C18, extended mid-Cl9. C18 part roughly-squared stone with roughly-shaped dressings; C19 part rubble with rock-faced quoins and dressings. C20 synthetic grey slate roof. South wall 4 bays, the right a C19 extension. Boarded door in right end bay; slit ventes. Raised gable coping at left, roof hipped to right. Left return shows central boarded door with large roughly-tooled lintel and small vent directly above. Rear (north) side similar to south. Interior; east end of C18 building remains as cross wall, with doorway and vent as in west end. Asbestos-roofed shed at east end is not of interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041690 Castle Curtain Walls With Gateway, Towers And Attached Buildings 1041690 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.611999 55.345629,-1.611890 55.345679,-1.611890 55.345696,-1.612249 55.345547,-1.612327 55.345481,-1.612377 55.345062,-1.612378 55.345020,-1.612361 55.344992,-1.612398 55.344969,-1.612403 55.344949,-1.612398 55.344942,-1.612379 55.344931,-1.612354 55.344930,-1.612239 55.344966,-1.611965 55.344917,-1.611975 55.344878,-1.611953 55.344876,-1.611958 55.344851,-1.611815 55.344840,-1.611811 55.344855,-1.611777 55.344853,-1.611767 55.344891,-1.611360 55.344899,-1.611191 55.344921,-1.611212 55.344982,-1.611301 55.344971,-1.611326 55.345107,-1.611306 55.345109,-1.611317 55.345144,-1.611343 55.345141,-1.611409 55.345381,-1.611336 55.345387,-1.611350 55.345439,-1.611424 55.345437,-1.611573 55.345660,-1.611674 55.345660,-1.611681 55.345619,-1.611694 55.345605,-1.611718 55.345596,-1.611776 55.345603,-1.611798 55.345637,-1.611867 55.345638,-1.611872 55.345628,-1.611917 55.345627,-1.611974 55.345613,-1.611999 55.345629))) WARKWORTH WARKWORTH CASTLE NU 2405 22/346 Castle curtain walls with 31.12.69 gateway, towers and attached buildings GV I Castle curtain walls with gateway, towers and attached buildings. C12 to C16 with some post-medieval patching. Earliest parts probably built by Earl William (later William the Lion of Scotland); much later medieval remodelling under the Percy family who held Warkworth from 1332 onwards; fell into ruin in later C16. Squared stone of various types. Plan: built on earlier motte-and-bailey, an irregular triangle with the donjon (q.v.) on motte at the north apex. Great Gate Tower in centre of south curtain, Carrickfergus Tower at south-west corner, Amble or Montagu Tower at south-east corner. Near north of curtain walls are Grey Mare's Tail Tower on east and West Postern Tower. Interior: Collegiate Church divides Inner and Outer wards;Outer (south) Ward has principal apartments on west and chapel on south-west. Exterior. Great Gate Tower of c.1200 has pointed arch in corbelled recess - under wall-head machicolation, flanked by semi-octagonal towers with tall polygonal buttresses at southern angles, battered bases and cruciform arrow loops low in wall. Curtain east of gatehouse, 2-3 metres high, is post- medieval rebuild on C13 foundations. Square late C15 four-storey Amble or Montagu Tower, projecting to east, has slits to lower floors and 2-light windows above. Taller C13 curtain west of gatehouse runs to polygonal C13 3-storey Carrickfergus Tower projecting to south; west part largely fallen. Tall arrow loops on ground floor. East curtain: north of Amble and Montagu Tower is East Postern with mutilated pointed arch, and C13 projecting turret with 2 quatrefoil loops high in wall. Beyond this the curtain is C12, heightened in C13. Semi-octagonal C13 Grey Mare's Tail Tower is well preserved: battered base, tall arrow loops and embattled parapet. C13 wall running up motte has large semi-octagonal buttress. West curtain: C13 southern part has round-arched recess, with carved panel above square-headed window, which probably held solar balcony. Windowless C12 centre part alongside hall; north lower post-medieval part and C14 section, with chamfered set-backs and 2 relieving arches at base, joining West Postern Tower which has slightly-pointed arch and square-headed windows on 2 floors above; embattled parapet with cruciform loop on left return. C13 wall running up motte has buttress as on east. Beam sockets below parapets of curtains and tower held timber fighting gallery. Interior: Great Gate Tower has passage with pointed barrel vault, with twin portcullis slots and arrow slits in side walls. Flanking guard chambers have similar vaults. Beyond guard chambers curving flights of stairs up to 1st floor chamber. Chapel to west has piscina on south but otherwise much ruined. Apartments on east side of Outer Ward largely remodelled in C15. Lion Tower served as porch to north end of Hall (and to Collegiate Church) and has diagonal buttresses flanking moulded arch. Large recessed panel above on fan corbels with relief carvings of Percy lion and other emblems. Interior has groin vault. Hall is much ruined but has pier bases and south respond, with nailhead decoration, of C13 arcade; bases of 2 hearths; at south end broad stair in thickness of curtain wall led up to solar. Little Stair Tower formed second porch to south end of Hall, solar undercroft and Chapel: diagonal buttresses, 4-centred archways, and remains of groin vault on 1st floor. Newel stair in west wall rises to umbrella vault in taller turret capped by stone spire. Service rooms and kitchen to north of hall much ruined. Cruciform Collegiate Church, never completed, had aisled 4-bay nave and 2-bay chancel: Lower courses and pier bases only, except for passage with Tudor- arched ashlar vault beneath east end (link between inner and outer wards) and 2 chambers with similar vaults beneath choir and north transept. Brewhouse or Laundry in Inner Ward, range of buildings (including stables) along east curtain and range alongside east part of south curtain are mostly reduced to footings. Detached well house in outer'ward similarly ruinous but has well cleared to depth of 18 metres. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1041691 Cemetery Chapel 1041691 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.607942 55.349807,-1.607950 55.349825,-1.608099 55.349801,-1.608080 55.349763,-1.607930 55.349786,-1.607942 55.349807))) WARKWORTH WARKWORTH CEMETERY NU 2406 21/348 Cemetery Chapel II Cemetery Chapel, mid-C19. Squared rubble with tooled-and-margined quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roof with moulded stone ridge. Simple 2-bay aisleless rectangle. West end shows boarded double doors with C hinges in pointed arch of two orders, outer chamfered, with chamfered impost band. Lancet window above, and bellcote with pointed arch and wheel-cross finial. 2 ogee-headed lights on north. East end has 3 trefoiled lancets under pointed arch. 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041692 Coquet Lodge Cottages 1041692 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.625372 55.347912,-1.625374 55.347904,-1.625333 55.347901,-1.625368 55.347740,-1.625228 55.347729,-1.625191 55.347891,-1.625204 55.347892,-1.625211 55.347866,-1.625253 55.347869,-1.625247 55.347894,-1.625272 55.347896,-1.625267 55.347914,-1.625369 55.347923,-1.625372 55.347912))) WARKWORTH WARKWORTH MILL NU 20 NW 10/350 Coquet Lodge Cottages 31.12.69 (Nos. 1 and 2) (formerly listed as Warkworth Mill or Coquet Lodge) GV II House, now divided. Mid C18; outshuts added, and gables and roof rebuilt, in early C19. Large squared stone; outshuts squared rubble with tooled-and- margined quoins and dressings. Pantile roof except for Welsh slates on outshut; 2 stacks rebuilt in brick. 3 storeys, 3 bays, slightly irregular. Boarded door to No. 1 between right bays, with 6-pane casement window above. Other windows to lower floors are 12-pane Yorkshire sashes, ground-floor left set in older blocked door, ground- floor centre and left with external iron bars. Top floor has 2-pane casements set directly beneath eaves. Coped gables. Stepped-and-corniced left end stack; rebuilt stepped-and-banded stacks to ridge and right end. Far left end outshut with boarded door to No. 2. Left return shows 9-pane casement in outshut; above outshut roof are 12-pane Yorkshire sash and blocked window, and 4-pane casements to top floor. Right return shows boarded 2nd-floor door under timber lintel, with 4-pane casement to right. Rear elevation shows boarded door and 4-variously-glazed windows in outshut; fenestration to upper floors as at front except that lst-floor end windows are blocked. Interior: Old beams and simple fireplaces; boarded doors. Formerly the miller's house; the top floor seems to have served as a granary, as shown by the external door and trapdoors for hoists inside. , 1988-09-01 1969-12-31
1041693 Cartshed Range On South Of Yard 1041693 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.625450 55.347604,-1.625384 55.347672,-1.625759 55.347789,-1.625805 55.347743,-1.625500 55.347648,-1.625520 55.347626,-1.625450 55.347604))) WARKWORTH WARKWORTH MILL NU 20 NW 10/352 Cartshed range on south of yard GV II Cartshed range with granary over, probably C.1840, Roughly-squared stone with tooled-and-margined quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roof with grey brick stack. Main part 2 storeys, 4 windows. Arcade of 5 chamfered segmental arches, left two with boarded double doors; 1st-floor windows, 3 with renewed glazing, 1 slatted, in alternating-block surrounds with slightly-projecting sills. Coped gables; rebuilt left end stack. Left single-storey 2-bay part with boarded doors in chamfered alternating-block surrounds, chamfered slit window and inserted window with 16-pane Yorkshire sash. Coped left end gable. Right return shows external stone stair to boarded granary door. Eaves band. All gables have chamfered slit windows. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041694 Warkworth Station 1041694 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.633455 55.353875,-1.633496 55.353887,-1.633560 55.353814,-1.633653 55.353843,-1.633673 55.353820,-1.633695 55.353826,-1.633797 55.353712,-1.633817 55.353717,-1.633835 55.353697,-1.633813 55.353690,-1.633823 55.353680,-1.633793 55.353671,-1.633845 55.353611,-1.633826 55.353606,-1.633834 55.353597,-1.633806 55.353589,-1.633798 55.353599,-1.633779 55.353593,-1.633728 55.353651,-1.633696 55.353642,-1.633661 55.353680,-1.633694 55.353690,-1.633631 55.353763,-1.633544 55.353738,-1.633450 55.353847,-1.633455 55.353875))) WARKWORTH WARKWORTH STATION NU 20 NW 10/353 Warkworth Station GV II Railway station, now divided into 2 private houses, c.1847 by Benjamin Green for the Newcastle and Berwick Railway Co. Squared tooled stone with raised tooled ashlar quoins and dressings; Welsh slate roofs. Main part H-plan, with single storey wings to south and north-east and outshut on north. Tudor style. East elevation: Main part 2 storeys on tall basement, 1 + 1 + 1 bays. Recessed centre has renewed door at head of external stair (partly collapsed at time of survey) with single and 2-light windows on left, and central gabled dormer holding 2-light window. Gabled left end bay has flight of 17 steps up to portico; flanking walls have pitched coping and end piers with chamfered plinths and pyramidal caps. Portico has diagonal buttresses and 3 pointed arches (left with door), with old margined glazing, below a moulded parapet; one similar arch on each return of portico; 3-light window above. Inside portico centre-opening panelled door flanked by 8-pane sashes. Gabled right end bay behind lower projecting L-plan wing; inner return shows 4-panel door with 3-light window to left, and renewed window in gabled half dormer. Far left lower part with boarded door to basement; two single and one 2-light window above; left return shows canted bay window. Most windows are 8-pane sashes; slits in gables. All openings in raised chamfered surrounds with extended lintels, sill and mid-blocks; some under straight drip-moulds. Gables coped on moulded kneelers, some retaining ball finials. Stepped-and- corniced stacks,with diagonally-set multiple shafts, on ridges and some gables. Rear elevation to railway: Cross wings extend to flank platform canopy, now with C20 part-glazed front wall; above canopy an empty clock surround and 2 windows in gabled half dormers. Wing to right has 2-storey canted bay. Lower part to far right also has canopy with C20 part-glazed front wall. Interior: Platform canopies have arcades of timber posts with wavy braces to axial and transverse members. Several contemporary fireplaces. The room with the canted bay in the single-storey south wing is said to have been the Duke of Northumberland's private waiting room. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041695 Berwick Bridge 1041695 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.006101 55.768484,-2.006231 55.768442,-2.006223 55.768435,-2.006455 55.768363,-2.006471 55.768377,-2.006620 55.768387,-2.006631 55.768319,-2.006619 55.768309,-2.006867 55.768232,-2.006896 55.768261,-2.007029 55.768281,-2.007041 55.768196,-2.007029 55.768183,-2.007211 55.768128,-2.007222 55.768141,-2.007338 55.768161,-2.007360 55.768099,-2.007348 55.768085,-2.007539 55.768027,-2.007550 55.768040,-2.007659 55.768063,-2.007685 55.767998,-2.007674 55.767987,-2.007835 55.767939,-2.007844 55.767947,-2.007947 55.767964,-2.007966 55.767908,-2.007958 55.767902,-2.008097 55.767861,-2.008108 55.767873,-2.008247 55.767892,-2.008262 55.767824,-2.008252 55.767815,-2.008387 55.767775,-2.008495 55.767798,-2.008514 55.767746,-2.008507 55.767738,-2.008621 55.767704,-2.008636 55.767718,-2.008724 55.767740,-2.008745 55.767684,-2.008733 55.767671,-2.008882 55.767628,-2.008927 55.767641,-2.008948 55.767613,-2.008943 55.767607,-2.009094 55.767562,-2.009111 55.767582,-2.009166 55.767598,-2.009194 55.767548,-2.009184 55.767537,-2.009311 55.767503,-2.009320 55.767513,-2.009402 55.767537,-2.009413 55.767478,-2.009408 55.767474,-2.009547 55.767434,-2.009632 55.767468,-2.009641 55.767429,-2.009628 55.767411,-2.009758 55.767372,-2.009805 55.767389,-2.009823 55.767364,-2.009817 55.767356,-2.009926 55.767321,-2.009966 55.767333,-2.009976 55.767304,-2.010056 55.767277,-2.010106 55.767286,-2.010075 55.767171,-2.010007 55.767232,-2.009934 55.767255,-2.009885 55.767244,-2.009873 55.767265,-2.009878 55.767273,-2.009768 55.767307,-2.009712 55.767294,-2.009706 55.767317,-2.009715 55.767326,-2.009591 55.767361,-2.009581 55.767351,-2.009515 55.767335,-2.009492 55.767379,-2.009499 55.767388,-2.009369 55.767426,-2.009279 55.767396,-2.009259 55.767456,-2.009141 55.767490,-2.009080 55.767461,-2.009050 55.767508,-2.009056 55.767516,-2.008901 55.767561,-2.008858 55.767544,-2.008835 55.767583,-2.008689 55.767626,-2.008679 55.767614,-2.008588 55.767587,-2.008570 55.767649,-2.008583 55.767662,-2.008466 55.767697,-2.008450 55.767678,-2.008331 55.767645,-2.008330 55.767714,-2.008346 55.767730,-2.008208 55.767770,-2.008192 55.767753,-2.008068 55.767734,-2.008047 55.767808,-2.008056 55.767818,-2.007922 55.767858,-2.007908 55.767845,-2.007808 55.767825,-2.007786 55.767887,-2.007791 55.767894,-2.007631 55.767942,-2.007516 55.767915,-2.007488 55.767977,-2.007495 55.767983,-2.007309 55.768039,-2.007299 55.768027,-2.007185 55.768012,-2.007152 55.768071,-2.007165 55.768084,-2.006981 55.768138,-2.006969 55.768127,-2.006836 55.768110,-2.006810 55.768177,-2.006820 55.768186,-2.006567 55.768267,-2.006559 55.768259,-2.006412 55.768235,-2.006392 55.768310,-2.006402 55.768319,-2.006184 55.768385,-2.006171 55.768375,-2.006039 55.768416,-2.005997 55.768416,-2.005993 55.768428,-2.006008 55.768434,-2.006043 55.768491,-2.006101 55.768484))) 1. 840 Berwick Bridge (formerly listed as The Old Bridge Bridge End) NT 9952E 9/255 1.8.52. NU 9952 11/255 I 2. 1611-34. 15 arches with cutwaters having columns and busts. 1164 feet long, 17 feet wide, the arches increasing in height up to 45 feet high on North end. 1 of the finest bridges in the country. AM. , 1971-05-26 1952-08-01
1041696 Wall Of Berwick Castle To North Of The Ruins Of Constable Tower 1041696 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.010945 55.773631,-2.011038 55.773403,-2.011025 55.773393,-2.010929 55.773627,-2.010945 55.773631))) 1. 840 Wall of Berwick Castle to North of the ruins of Constable Tower NT 9953E 10/172 I 2. Ruined wall to North of the ruins of Constable Tower. AM. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041697 The Magazine, Including Enclosing Wall And Entrance To The Magazine 1041697 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.999046 55.769384,-1.999054 55.769382,-1.999091 55.769163,-1.998515 55.769130,-1.998476 55.769349,-1.999046 55.769384),(-1.999080 55.769171,-1.999043 55.769375,-1.998489 55.769341,-1.998530 55.769137,-1.999080 55.769171)),((-1.998862 55.769317,-1.998886 55.769318,-1.998889 55.769300,-1.998911 55.769301,-1.998925 55.769231,-1.998904 55.769230,-1.998907 55.769211,-1.998884 55.769210,-1.998880 55.769228,-1.998841 55.769225,-1.998845 55.769208,-1.998819 55.769206,-1.998816 55.769224,-1.998768 55.769221,-1.998771 55.769203,-1.998747 55.769201,-1.998743 55.769219,-1.998705 55.769216,-1.998708 55.769199,-1.998685 55.769197,-1.998681 55.769215,-1.998650 55.769213,-1.998637 55.769285,-1.998665 55.769287,-1.998662 55.769304,-1.998686 55.769306,-1.998689 55.769288,-1.998727 55.769290,-1.998724 55.769309,-1.998748 55.769310,-1.998752 55.769292,-1.998801 55.769295,-1.998797 55.769313,-1.998822 55.769314,-1.998825 55.769296,-1.998865 55.769299,-1.998862 55.769317))) 1. 840 The Magazine, including enclosing wall and Entrance to the Magazine NU 0052 11/264 II* 2. Early C18. An oblong stone building with 4 very heavy buttresses on each side, heavy moulded copings to its gables, a door with pediment. Enclosed all round by a stone wall, with a pedimented round-arched doorway on side facing ramparts. , 1971-05-26 1971-05-26
1041698 Pier And Lighthouse 1041698 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.992834 55.767840,-1.992912 55.767823,-1.991326 55.765789,-1.988411 55.765200,-1.987347 55.765059,-1.985610 55.764843,-1.984293 55.764764,-1.984159 55.764726,-1.984084 55.764746,-1.984064 55.764764,-1.984056 55.764788,-1.984075 55.764827,-1.984097 55.764841,-1.984132 55.764849,-1.985570 55.764938,-1.987496 55.765179,-1.988390 55.765300,-1.991199 55.765846,-1.991242 55.765873,-1.992412 55.767330,-1.992840 55.767885,-1.992864 55.767878,-1.992834 55.767840))) Pier and Lighthouse (formerly known as Pier). Pier 1810-1825 by John Rennie, and lighthouse, 1826 to the designs of Joseph Nelson. MATERIALS: sandstone, iron, concrete. PLAN: the pier extends from the north side of the River Tweed into the harbour mouth for about half a mile (880m) with a distinct change of angle half way along its length. Rock-faced battered sandstone walls formed of large blocks of slightly convex squared stone. The outer face comprises six courses below a prominent roll-moulding, above which there is a vertical prapet or shelter wall three to four courses high. The latter is stepped on the inside. The stone surface of the pier is partly coated in asphalt concrete and concrete, but beyond the change of angle, the western edge retains the original stone surface with evidence of lewis holes. Along the length of the pier iron mooring features are set into its surface and at the landward end, there are two concrete anti-tank cubes. At the easternmost end of the pier, the shelter wall curves around to enclose an ashlar-built circular lighthouse, now painted; this is slightly tapering, and of three stages separated by projecting bands, with a conical roof. There is an entrance in the south side and a small recessed window opening in the western side; the seaward, eastern side has a large recessed window opening, and above this a glazed lantern with external gallery. Adjoining the inner face of the pier immediately before its change of angle , there is a roughly semi-circular flat-topped stone-built platform. HISTORY: Berwick Harbour was transferred by Act of Parliament on 9th June 1808 from Berwick Corporation to The Berwick Harbour Commissioners with a brief which included the improvement of the harbour by the construction of a new pier on the Berwick side of the harbour to designs by John Rennie. Construction on the new pier began in 1808, in part on what is thought were the foundations of the Elizabethan pier. The foundation stone was laid on 27th February 1810 amid great celebration. Stone was derived from local quarries near Spittal and was shipped across from the south side of the Tweed to the pier workings. The pier was complete in 1825 and had cost #61,536. The foundation stone for a lighthouse at the end of the pier was laid on 15th February 1826, and the structure was completed later that year to designs of Joseph Nelson who had also been responsible for lights on Inner Farne (1809-10) and Longstone (1826). Other harbour works were completed but the much anticipated rise in the port's fortune did not occur. This is thought to be because of a mixture of increased harbour dues to pay for the works and the decline in the salmon catch, partly due to the size of the harbour mouth being reduced by the construction of the new pier, which discouraged salmon from entering. The pier is depicted on all Ordnance Survey editions; the second edition of 1898 also depicts a semi-circular structure adjoining its inner side marked as 'Batt'; the date and function of this structure is unknown. REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: This early C19 pier by John Rennie and lighthouse by Joseph Nelson are designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons: * Designers: John Rennie is considered to be one of the two greatest civil engineers of the day and Joseph Nelson was a prolific designer for Trinity House; both have a number of listed examples to their name. * Engineering: with a length of 880m, this pier is an impressive feat of early C19 engineering. 2011-02-22 1971-05-26
1041699 Lady Jerningham Monument 1041699 MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.007289 55.770206,-2.007265 55.770214,-2.007280 55.770228,-2.007304 55.770219,-2.007289 55.770206))) Summary of Building Statue, erected in 1908, designed by Hubert Jerningham and Walter Ingram, sculpted by O P Penachini. Reasons for Designation This statue to Lady Jerningham, erected 1908, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons: Architectural interest: * a fine and life-like composition of a seated female and two dogs in white marble, by known sculptors; * a life-size monument of high aesthetic quality in scale and detailing and which displays considerable sculptural merit; * it occupies its original location, visible from the subject's home, where it forms a prominent public work of art. Group value: * it benefits from a spatial group value with a number of listed buildings and the scheduled remains of the medieval and post-medieval fortifications of Berwick upon Tweed. History Annie, Lady Jerningham (1850-1902) was married to first Charles Mather of Longridge Towers, Berwick and then to Hubert Jerningham, a British diplomat and Member of Parliament for Berwick (1881-1885). The latter became Governor of Mauritius, then Trinidad and Tobago, and was knighted for services in a cyclone in Trinidad and Tobago. Lady Jerningham died on 9 October 1902, and her death was marked locally by the closing of shops and the lowering of blinds. Sir Hubert designed the monument in commemoration of his late wife with drawings by sculptor Walter Ingram. The latter of London and Brussels, had 38 exhibits at the Royal Academy between 1862 and 1894 (portrait busts). He died before completion, and the statue was sculpted by O P Pennacchini in Ealing, London, who exhibited once at the Royal Academy. It was erected in Berwick in 1908 on a spot where at certain times of the year it could be seen from the subject's and Sir Hubert's home at Longridge Towers. At its unveiling the Mayor of Berwick spoke of Lady Jerningham's philanthropy: 'Generous and kindly she ever was'. Details Statue, erected in 1908, designed by Hubert Jerningham and Walter Ingram, sculpted by O P Penachini. MATERIALS: white marble statue on a grey granite base. DESCRIPTION: situated within the scheduled medieval and post-medieval fortifications at Berwick upon Tweed (National Heritage List for England: 1015968), in an elevated position above the River Tweed. A life-size statue comprising a seated female with two dogs set upon a tapering rusticated base. The woman is resting on a rock. She wears simplified Edwardian dress and has a single rose pinned to her chest. There are two dogs at her side, the largest looking up at her with its paw resting on her knee, and the smallest at her side with her hand resting on its back. The front face bears the inscription in black lead letters: ANNIE/LADY JERNINGHAM/OF LONGRIDGE TOWERS, BERWICK UPON TWEED/ OBIT 9 OCT. 1902/PRESENTED TO THE TOWN OF BERWICK UPON TWEED BY/ SIR HUBERT JERNINGHAM, K.C.M.G./LATE AND LAST MEMBER FOR THE BOROUGH. The north face has a metal panel with raised lettering reading: THIS MEMORIAL WAS OFFERED TO AND ACCEPTED BY /THE TOWN COUNCIL/OF BERWICK UPON TWEED. / 1903/ G.F. STEVEN, ESQ, MAYOR/ G WEATHERSTON ESQ, SHERIFF/ AND ERECTED /1908, FRANK EDMINSON ESQ MAYOR/ JAMES LESLIE ESQ SHERIFF. A metal panel on the south face reads: YET IN THESE EARS TILL HEARING DIES/ONE SLOW BELL WILL SEEM TO TOLL/THE PASSING OF THE SWEETEST SOUL/THAT EVER LOOKED WITH HUMAN EYES/TENNYSON: IN MEMORIAM. The rear of the statue base reads: DESIGNED BY HUBERT JERNINGHAM 1903/ SKETCHED BY WALTER INGRAM 1904/EXECUTED BY O. P. PENACHINI 1906. Books and journals Grundy, J, McCombie, G, Ryder, P, Welfare, H, The Buildings of England: Northumberland, (2002), 181 Usherwood, P, Beach, J, Morris, C, Public Sculpture of North-East England, (2000), 14-15 2020-10-14 1971-05-26
1041700 44, Castle Street 1041700 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.611636 55.346602,-1.611631 55.346644,-1.611839 55.346648,-1.611872 55.346554,-1.611638 55.346547,-1.611636 55.346602))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (East side) 22/270 No. 44 31.12.69 GV II House, early C19. Front wall rebuilt 1987 in facsimile. Front ashlar, returns rendered, rear brick with stone dressings; Welsh slate roof with brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays. Plinth. Right-of-centre 6-panel door with overlight, in raised surround with pilasters and cambered lintel. To right vertical-panelled double doors in segmental carriage arch. Renewed 12-pane sash windows, with slightly-projecting sills. Moulded eaves cornice. Coped gables; end stacks rebuilt C20, right on old base. Rear elevation shows 1st floor 12-pane sashes with wedge lintels, and late C19 roof dormer. Included for group value. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1041701 47, Castle Street 1041701 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.611796 55.346326,-1.611778 55.346326,-1.611777 55.346364,-1.611907 55.346364,-1.611909 55.346260,-1.611798 55.346261,-1.611796 55.346326))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (East side) 22/272 No. 47 31.12.69 GV II House, late C18. Squared stone; C20 pantile roof with brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays. Right-of-centre renewed door with trompe l'oeil window above; 12-pane sashes (lower on right) renewed in end bays. Coped left end gable on moulded kneeler, with rebuilt brick end stack; roof hipped to right. 1-bay right return, to Castle Terrace, shows 12-pane sashes and coped end gable with rebuilt stack. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1041702 Castlegate House 1041702 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612288 55.346135,-1.612288 55.346118,-1.612149 55.346116,-1.612141 55.346191,-1.612286 55.346194,-1.612288 55.346135))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (West side) 22/273 No. 1 (Castlegate House) GV II House, formerly Queen's Head Inn. Late C18 incorporating C17 or earlier fabric; top floor removed and replaced by parapet in later C19. Front rendered and colourwashed; cut stone dressings and parapet; left return large roughly-squared stone. Flat felted roof; one rendered and one yellow brick stack. 2 storeys, 3 bays, slightly irregular. Right-of-centre renewed panelled door in stone surround, with stone gabled hood on cusped brackets. 4-pane sash windows with tooled lintels and slightly-projecting sills. Tall projecting parapet with roll-moulded base and stepped moulded coping; rendered right end stack and small C20 left end stack. Left return shows masonry of several dates; earlier right part has chamfered plinth. C19 three-light mullioned- and-transomed window in alternating-block surround. Interior: Largely altered but old brick-vaulted cellar. Rendered rear wing is not of special interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041703 4a, Castle Street 1041703 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612207 55.346455,-1.612114 55.346453,-1.612105 55.346537,-1.612200 55.346539,-1.612207 55.346455))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (West side) 22/275 No. 4a GV II House. Early C19 altered in late C19. Close-jointed squared stone; Welsh slate roof with C20 yellow brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays, slightly irregular. 3 steps up to central altered fielded-panel door with 2-pane overlight. Ground floor has 4-pane sash windows with slightly-projecting sills; upper floor has late C19 flat-topped oriels with small window between; all have sashes with small-paned upper leaves and plain lower. Rebuilt end stacks. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041704 Coach House And Stable To Rear Of Number 5 1041704 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612304 55.346588,-1.612302 55.346629,-1.612372 55.346629,-1.612372 55.346542,-1.612307 55.346540,-1.612304 55.346588))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (West side) 22/277 Coach-house and stable to rear 31.12.69 of No. 5 GV II Coach-house and stable, early C19; stable converted into summerhouse in later C19, then linked to house in early C20. Squared stone to yard, rubble to garden; pantile roof to coach-house and Welsh slates to stable. Elevation to yard: Coach-house shows boarded double doors under elliptical arch; stable door to left with window above. Taller stable to right behind attached rear wing of house. Elevation to garden: Taller stable part to left shows 6 stone steps, with ornamental cast-iron balustrade, up to C19 glazed double doors. Low down to left of steps is a 6-pane sash window under timber lintel. Coped gables. Left return shows 12-pane basement sash. Attached asbestos-roofed bricked outhouse is not of interest. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1041705 5a, Castle Street 1041705 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612256 55.346685,-1.612339 55.346685,-1.612341 55.346649,-1.612213 55.346649,-1.612213 55.346629,-1.612096 55.346627,-1.612090 55.346683,-1.612256 55.346685))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (West side) 22/278 No. 5A GV II House. Early C18, altered. Squared stone; pantile roof with C20 brick stack. 2 storeys, 1 bay. Left end renewed door. 16-pane sash window with paired renewed 12-pane sashes above; slightly-projecting sills. Moulded eaves cornice. Coped right gable and end stack. Rear elevation: Gable end of rear wing shows part-blocked 1st-floor doorway and owl- or pigeon-hole with alighting shelf in reverse-stepped gable; 16-pane Yorkshire sash on inner return. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041706 14, Castle Street 1041706 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612177 55.347186,-1.612224 55.347184,-1.612212 55.347103,-1.612059 55.347112,-1.612087 55.347190,-1.612177 55.347186))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (West side) 22/281 No. 14 GV II House, late C18 or early C19. Close-jointed squared stone; pantile roof with C20 brick stack. 2 storeys, 2 bays. Plinth, 1st-floor band. 4 steps up to central renewed half-glazed door, flanked by 4-pane sashes (left is former 16-pane sash, lost intermediate bars); plain sashes above. Coped right gable and end stack. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041707 Barclays Bank 1041707 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612349 55.347466,-1.612251 55.347471,-1.612243 55.347431,-1.612102 55.347434,-1.612103 55.347521,-1.612362 55.347506,-1.612349 55.347466))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (West side) 21/284 Nos. 18 and 19 (Barclays Bank) GV II Pair of houses, early C19. Front ashlar, return squared stone; Welsh slate roof with stacks rebuilt in white brick on old bases. 2 storeys, 3 bays. Plinth. Left-of-centre paired doors, each of 6 beaded panels with a 3-pane overlight. 12-pane sash windows, some renewed. End stacks. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041708 K6 Telephone Kiosk 10 Metres South Of Pant Outside Number 19 1041708 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.611946 55.347458,-1.611977 55.347460,-1.611979 55.347438,-1.611946 55.347438,-1.611946 55.347458))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH CASTLE STREET (West side) 21/286 K6 telephone kiosk 31.1.88 10 metres south of pant outside No. 19 GV II Telephone kiosk type K6 designed 1935 by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, made by various contractors. Cast iron. Square kiosk with domed roof. Unperforated crowns to top panels. Margined glazing to windows and door. , 1988-01-31 1988-01-31
1041709 Wall And Railings Enclosing Lawn In Front Of Sun Hotel 1041709 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.610813 55.345865,-1.610796 55.345843,-1.610758 55.345868,-1.610750 55.345883,-1.610738 55.345924,-1.610728 55.346019,-1.610750 55.346060,-1.610812 55.346109,-1.610917 55.346145,-1.611024 55.346157,-1.611120 55.346150,-1.610999 55.346070,-1.610935 55.346016,-1.610883 55.345966,-1.610813 55.345865))) NU 2405 WARKWORTH CASTLE TERRACE (East end) 22/290 Wall and railings enclosing lawn in front of Sun Hotel GV II Wall and railings enclosing lawn, probably c.1825. Squared stone with cut dressings; cast iron. Crescent-shaped sloping lawn. Longer downhill side, towards Sun Hotel, has 1.2-metre high retaining wall with chamfered plinth, pitched coping and pilasters; central gateway has rectangular piers, with banded pyramidal caps, flanking 5 steps up to lawn. Upper edge of lawn, towards road, has dwarf wall with chamfered coping carrying railing with open lozenge-shaped tops to bars, between monolithic end piers with gabled caps. Part of railing damaged by road accident at time of listing. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041710 6 And 7, Dial Place 1041710 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612251 55.348204,-1.612289 55.348288,-1.612541 55.348260,-1.612526 55.348229,-1.612456 55.348234,-1.612419 55.348163,-1.612243 55.348181,-1.612251 55.348204))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH DIAL PLACE (West side) 21/294 Nos. 6 and 7 31.12.69 GV II Pair of houses, c.1820. Tooled stone of near-ashlar quality; gables rendered. No. 6 has purple slate roof, No. 7 blue slates. 3 storeys, 4 bays, symmetrical. Chamfered plinth. Central pair of 8-panel doors with patterned overlights, in moulded surrounds. 12-pane sash to right; shop window to left is 12-pane upper sash with plain lower leaf. 12-pane sashes to 1st floor and 9-pane short sashes to 2nd floor. All windows with slightly-projecting sills. Bold moulded eaves cornice. Coped gables; stepped-and-banded end stacks, the left rendered. Left return shows 9-pane sash on 2nd floor; right return shows 12- pane sashes to lower floors and 9-pane trompe l'oeil window above. Rear elevation shows similar fenestration except for pair of arched stair windows in 1st-floor centre bays, holding 15-pane sashes with intersecting heads. Formerly known as Durham House. , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1041711 The Vicarage 1041711 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612458 55.348482,-1.612509 55.348577,-1.612602 55.348560,-1.612563 55.348488,-1.612547 55.348490,-1.612528 55.348450,-1.612446 55.348459,-1.612458 55.348482))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH DIAL PLACE (West side) 21/295 No. 11 (The Vicarage) GV II House, C18. Squared stone with cut dressings; C20 pantile roof with brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays. Central top-glazed door. Plain sash windows with short upper leaves and slightly-projecting sills. All openings in block surrounds. Raised reverse-stepped gable copings; banded end stacks, the left rebuilt in C20. Interior: Doors mostly of 4 fielded panels, on H hinges; one 2-panel door. Closed-string stair with stick balusters. Included for group value. Rear wing and extension are altered and not of special interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041712 16, Dial Place 1041712 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612871 55.348813,-1.613023 55.348782,-1.612963 55.348661,-1.612793 55.348688,-1.612871 55.348813))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH DIAL PLACE (West side) 21/297 No. 16 GV II House, formerly service wing of vicarage. Probably C18 altered c.1820. Squared stone except for rubble return; purple slate roof with yellow brick stack. 2 storeys, 2 narrow bays. Original door in right bay now blocked, with small window above; 12-pane sash windows in left bay. Coped left gable, left end stack. Rear (west) elevation shows renewed door on ground floor with two 12-pane sashes above, and C20 roof dormer. Included for group value. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041713 Front Wall And Gate Screen 1041713 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612659 55.348852,-1.612671 55.348870,-1.612720 55.348893,-1.612729 55.348910,-1.612716 55.348940,-1.612723 55.348956,-1.612763 55.349035,-1.612791 55.349035,-1.612748 55.348941,-1.612761 55.348909,-1.612748 55.348884,-1.612697 55.348859,-1.612683 55.348844,-1.612666 55.348844,-1.612659 55.348852))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH DIAL PLACE (West side) 21/299 Front wall and gate screen to No. 17 GV II Front wall with gate screen, probably c.1820. Squared stone with cut dressings. Gate piers have plinth and banded domed caps; quadrant walls, with low arched coping, run to similar outer piers; similar front wall. Included for group value. C20 gates and rails are not of special interest. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041714 Bullock And Fawcus Tombs 6 Metres South Of South Of Church Of St Lawrence 1041714 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612178 55.348940,-1.612236 55.348932,-1.612232 55.348924,-1.612154 55.348932,-1.612156 55.348943,-1.612178 55.348940))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH DIAL PLACE (North end) 21/301 Bullock and Fawcus tombs 6 metres south of Church of St. Lawrence GV II Pair of tombs, late C17 and C18. Cut sandstone. Table tomb has 6 round pillars, with moulded caps and bases, carrying slab with moulded edge and inscription to John Fawcus of Hope House d.1772, and family. Box tomb to west has fielded-panel sides and top slab inscribed Robert Bullock 1698 freehold of amble Phillice his wife 1717'. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041715 Dodsworth Tomb 14 Metres North East Of South Churchyard Gate 1041715 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.612046 55.348738,-1.612051 55.348747,-1.612119 55.348735,-1.612115 55.348726,-1.612046 55.348738))) WARKWORTH DIAL PLACE NU 2406 (North end ) 21/303 Dodsworth tomb 14 metres north- east of south churchyard gate GV II Table tomb, 1630. Cut sandstone. Simple stone tomb with broad chamfered plinth and very worn top slab which may have originally been an effigy. Renewed slab on north side shows shield with 3 hunting horns and inscription 'Here lyeth the Body of Edward Dodsworth of East Chevington Huntsman to King James Who Departed to the Mercy of God the 30 of May anno Domini 1630'. , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01
1041716 20, Dial Place 1041716 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.611833 55.348321,-1.611868 55.348402,-1.611935 55.348393,-1.611912 55.348346,-1.611954 55.348341,-1.611940 55.348303,-1.611833 55.348321))) NU 2406 WARKWORTH DIAL PLACE (East side) 21/306 No. 20 31.12.69 GV II House. Later C18 extended second quarter of C20. Old part squared stone, extension tooled stone; Welsh slate roof with brick stacks. 2 storeys, 3 bays. 1st-floor band. Central arched doorway holds 6-panel door with beaded mouldings in moulded timber surround under painted imitation fanlight; stone gabled hood on consoles. 12-pane sash windows with slightly-projecting sills, except ground-floor left which has projecting flat-roofed extension with plinth, 6-panel door, overlight, and paired 12-pane sashes. Coped gables, that to left with moulded kneeler; end stacks, left on old brick base. Extension appears coeval with, and probably part of, adjacent Co-op building (q.v.). , 1969-12-31 1969-12-31
1041717 Old Gate Piers To East Of Gloster Hill Farmhouse 1041717 MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.593944 55.334042,-1.593965 55.334032,-1.593966 55.333963,-1.593927 55.333954,-1.593908 55.333963,-1.593908 55.334032,-1.593944 55.334042))) NU 20 SE WARKWORTH GLOSTER HILL 13/308 Old gate piers to east of Gloster Hill Farmhouse II Gatepiers, C17. Cut sandstone. Two square piers with attached scroll-topped jambs. Faces of piers have panels with worn carving; pulvinated frieze and moulded cornice below finial formed from four diagonally-set scrolly brackets with fruit and flower designs. Inner (west) faces of piers have domed niches with keystones. This was the main entrance to Gloster Hill, a substantial C17 house demolished in 1939; many architectural features were re-used at Dunstan Hall in Craster parish (q.v.). , 1988-09-01 1988-09-01

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