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Home > Gloucestershire >
Tewkesbury > The Wheatsheaf
The Wheatsheaf
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Date of photo: 1919 |
Picture source: Hania Franek |
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The Wheatsheaf was situated at 132 High
Street. This grade-II* listed pub is
now in residential use. |
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Listed
building details: |
Formerly known as: No.132 Wheatsheaf
Inn High Street.
House in row, with shops, formerly the Wheatsheaf Inn. Early C16, refronted
mid-C17, with C18 extension; over the door lintel the initials J.V. may be
for John Underhill (d 1719). Timber-frame with plaster panels, close-studded
to front; brickwork, tile roofs, brick stacks.
PLAN: A 4-storey narrow frontage property with decorative central gable, on
3 jettied stages, with side-entry to throughway and long 2-storey back wing,
including a later extension or separate property. Frontage block of
double-depth, single-room width plan with central stack towards right-hand
party wall.
EXTERIOR: street front, in 4 storeys with basement, has a canted bay with
mullioned and transomd casements in 1:5:1-lights; at first and second floors
this is continued full-width with 3-light casements. All the lights are
small near-square, with plain glass. The ogee-shaped gable has ogee side
wings, and all the framing and window members have sunk ovolo-mould edges.
Ground floor has a 3-pane C19 shop front with 5-pane overlight, and on a
stall riser; a blank panel to right, and to left, probably brought forward
from its original location, a heavy moulded and stopped door frame with flat
4-centred head, decorative frieze and moulded cornice, on a pair of glazed
doors. The gable has returned sides with framing, and there is a small brick
stack on the front slope, left. The throughway has remains of framing
including a heavy haunched post set back from the doorway, and showing the
earlier position of front wall, with a jetty over. Doors lead from passage
to shop and to rear wing, which includes various casements, including a
large one at ground floor. The rear section is in brickwork with tiled roof
to a central valley and twin hipped ends. In the end wall is a casement
under segmental head under the valley, and a further narrow light to ground
floor; the party wall has a wide casement to a segmental head at first
floor. A cropped brick stack in the rear slope of the front building.
INTERIOR: shop retains 2 walls of C17 panelling, and 2 chamfered beams;
fireplace is concealed. To left a lobby gives to a tight wood spiral
staircase with continuous circular newel, and separate stair descends to
basement, which has stone flank walls at front, concrete floor and chamfered
beams. Back section has brick floor and walls. At ground floor a 6-panelled
door (from Stafford), leads to
lofty rear room with series of beams on heavy posts. At front a large brick
fireplace with brick hood. Beyond a further lofty room with series of very
heavy close-set stopped-chamfer beams, which carry across the side passage,
but with separate stops. Also a large reconstructed brick fireplace, with,
adjoining party wall, evidence for a former tight spiral stair. In rear
wall, set high, a narrow 12-pane light. First-floor front parlour has
4-compartment ceiling with chamfered beams, and brick chimney breast, with
remains of early painting on the return; to right a built-in cupboard
fronted with C17 panelling and doors, with grille above. The square-framed
party walls have important remains of early C17 fresco painting, now
covered; 3 panels have painted trompe-l'oeuil panelling. Very large jetty
posts set in from front wall, and at rear of
room an arched early C19 window with Gothick head; this was brought from a
demolished property in Thornbury. Middle room includes large structural
posts, and a length of C16 moulded beam. Rear unit is subdivided, but there
is a longitudinal plaster moulded beam under the central valley. At
second-floor level the staircase divides, and there are separate stairs to
attic rooms. Front parlour includes heavy
braced tie beams, cupboard by chimney breast with C17 doors, early 3-plank
door, and small C19 grate in the front corner. This, with other rooms, has
very wide early boards. Central room at second floor has plastered ceiling
with plaster moulded beams to centre and all edges. Large casement to the
throughway. Front attic has early roofing, including short king or crown
post to high collar (obscured); a separate narrow room or store to lower
slope beyond the raised gable, on S side. The attic to rear wing, with
separate stair, includes an internal partition with boarding, and the
floors, reputedly for mustard seed storage, were formerly covered with lime
mortar. An exceptionally fine merchant's house, particularly notable for its
magnificent C17 frontage and interior decorative schemes which would repay
further investigation. |
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Other Photos |
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Picture source: Philip Halling |
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