Listed Building: GLENTHORNE INCLUDING ADJOINING GAME LARDER AND COURTYARD WALL (1212846)

Grade II
Authority Historic England
Volume/Map/Item 1549, 4, 18
Date assigned 24 November 1988
Date last amended
Date revoked
COUNTISBURY SS 74 NE 4/18 Glenthorne including adjoining - game larder and courtyard wall GV II Country house. Circa 1829 - 30, for the Reverend Walter Stevenson Halliday, kitchens enlarged in 1839 and library added in 1846 (datestone). Further mid - C19 alterations and additions. Uncoursed stone with limestone ashlar dressings, some painted. Gable-ended slate roofs. Plan: irregular plan; main range with library wing to right and former conservatory (rebuilt probably in the mid C19) to left with service ranges and former to rear. In a Tudor Gothic style. 2 storeys with 1-storey former conservatory and 3-stage service tower. Exterior: moulded plinth, moulded cornice and coped parapets, with finials to apices and various ridge and lateral stacks with single and multiple painted circular and octagonal terracotta shafts. South-east (entrance) front: asymmetrical composition consisting of projecting gabled entrance wing off-centre to left with 1-storey range adjoining to left and larger gable set-back off-centre to right with slightly projecting library wing adjoining to right. Two and 3-light mullioned and transomed wooden windows with octagonal pattern cast-iron and wooden glazing bars (said formerly to have been painted copper), and returned hoodmoulds. Entrance wing has trefoil-headed lancet to attic with moulded cill and hoodmould with carved stops; first-floor canted oriel window of 1:2:1 lights with quatrefoil panels below, corbelled base with alternating carved devices and moulded cornice and parapet with moulded coping; moulded Tudor- arched entrance with returned hoodmould and nail-studded boarded door. One storey range to left formerly a conservatory (see old print); central canted bay of 1:3:1 lights, gable above has lancet with hoodmould; octagonal wooden gothic cupola with tented lead cap and wrought iron finial. Gable-set back to right of wing with attic lancet, 3-light front floor window and ground-floor canted bay of 1:2:1 lights Library wing added to right (see straight joint at break), consisting of central first-floor 3-light window flanked by cross windows and central ground floor canted bay of 1:3:1 lights. Right-hand gable-end with attic lancet, 3-light first-floor window and ground-floor canted bay. Stone dated "Nov 4/1846". Large external stack to rear of library range. Rear wing: north-east (garden) front with hipped dormer, first-floor 3-light casement flanked by cross windows, and French casements with Tudor-arched entrance. Gabled block in angle with attic lancet and 3-light first-floor window and ground- floor canted bay; right-hand return front has first-floor Tudor-arched cast-iron window with small octagonal panes and ogee-tracery in head. Gable end of rear wing with attic lancet, first-floor 3-light window and ground-floor canted bay. Service ranges: to south-west: 3-stage clock tower with 6-panelled door at base, trefoil-headed lancets with hoodmoulds and octagonal wooden Gothic cupola with tented lead cap. Clock on top stage to north-west. Hollow-chamfered Tudor-arched kitchen doorway with carved spandrels, returned hoodmould and boarded door. Carved boar's head above door with Latin inscription, mostly illegible at time of survey (July 1987) but with the dates 4 November 1820 (1829?) and 3 May 1831. Game larder built into hillside to rear of kitchen; pair of 2-light windows with gauze and segmental brick-arched heads, flanking central 6-panelled door with segmental brick- arched head. Gable above with coping and raised stone shield in centre, dated "July/1858". Gabled cupola and pitched roofed link to kitchen. Service courtyard to rear; wall with pair of Tudor-arched openings. Interior: largely complete early C19 fixtures and fittings. 4-panelled Tudor- arched doorways with trefoil-panelled spandrels and moulded architraves. Marble chimneypieces. Moulded cornices throughout. Fine library with curved walls, curved grained doors in each corner, wainscot panelling, window seat and large neo Jacobean panelling. Curving single-flight cantilevered staircase with open string, cut brackets, barleysugar balusters (one per tread), moulded handrail and wreathed newel oval top light with coving and decorative plasterwork. Former conservatory: to left of entrance; much used C17 joinery, including back staircase with turned balusters, moulded handrail and carving; fireplace with C17 ovolo-moulded wooden lintel and C17 fireplace. The Revd. W. S. Halliday acquired the Glenthorne estate in 1829 and began building the house soon afterwards. In the hills above the house there is an inscribed stone marking the location of the Revd. Halliday's decision to build Glenthorne, known locally as the 'decision stone'. It was not located at time of survey (July 1987). He was much influenced in the design of the house, and the designs of other estate buildings, by the buildings illustrated in P. F. Robinson's. Rural Architecture; or a Series of Designs for Ornamental Cottages, published in 1823, his copy of which is still in the possession of the Halliday family (at the time of survey). The house stands in ornamental gardens at the front of the hills which come down to the coast at this point. The estate buildings also include an ice house and lime kilns which are situated over the county boundary in Somerset.and are included on the list for the parish of Oare. Much information supplied by Mr. A. J. B. Halliday and Mr H. Mellor of the National Trust Bo.E, Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600 - 1840 (1978), p. 700; Burkes Landed Gentry 18th Ed. Vol 3 (1972), p. 419. Sources: P F Robinson, Rural Architecture: or a series of designs for Ornamental Cottages (1823); N Pevsner, Buildings of England, North Devon. p.119; Howard Colvin, A BiographicalDictionary of British Architects. 1600-1840 (1978), p.700; Burke's Landed Gentry 18th Ed. Vol.3 (1972), p.419. Much information supplied by Mr A J H Halliday and Mr H Mellor of the National Trust. Listing NGR: SS7987849618

This Exmoor HER designation record includes a list entry description which is Crown Copyright and was provided by Historic England on 15/08/2005 licensed under the Open Government Licence. See link below for up to date list entry data on the National Heritage List for England.

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Map

Location

Grid reference Centred SS 79866 49618 (48m by 29m)
Map sheet SS74NE
Civil Parish COUNTISBURY, NORTH DEVON, DEVON

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)