Interior
The doorway leads into the original cross-passage, with two-bay hall (latterly the kitchen) to its left. Post-and-panel passage partition is complete, and includes a disused doorway with ogee head, and plank-door with reed moulding. Present doorway also has arched head, but is a later insertion. Hall has large fire-place at upper gable, with massive timber bressumer, and ceiling beam against the chimney. Cupboard with fielded panelled door to left of fireplace. Heavily framed ceiling with broad stop-chamfered joists, divided laterally by stop-chamfered cross beam, puzzlingly morticed as if for another partition. On the passage side of this cross-beam, the ceiling also has longitudinal beams, centrally and against the walls, all enriched by continuous roll-moulding, and with counter-changing joists. This decorative scheme is repeated in the cross-passage. Fragments of a further partition on the lower side of the cross-passage visible behind the staircase, which is of dog-leg form, with square newels, moulded rail, and turned balusters. It rises through two storeys to the attic. Lintel of probable former rear doorway visible in wall behind staircase.
Parlour wing has two-room plan, and appears at some time (and perhaps originally) to have had a central hall (a tiled nineteenth century floor survives). The larger room has little surviving detail, but the smaller parlour retains substantial elements of its original eighteenth century decorative scheme: the fireplace wall is fully panelled, with lying panels below a dado, large panels above (all raised; fielded and jointed), with modilion cornice. Integral cupboard to right of the (later) fine Adam style fire-place. Probably contemporary round-arched niche cupboard in east wall, with reeded framing to architrave, to one side of a recessed, canted alcove, at the back of which, the earlier post-and-panel partition can still be seen. Panelling in alcove is not consistent, suggesting some alteration at this end of the room. West and north walls have horizontal boarded panelling of later nineteenth century character.
At first floor, the original layout of the early range has been altered, but in the central bay, a ceiling of early type, with chamfered joists survives, as does part of a post and panel partition separating this bay from the eastern-most room. (The partition has been interrupted to the north in this room, and a 3-bay C18 press inserted). Archway with moulded plaster-work divides the early range from the later parlour block. One bedroom in this range retains another fine Adam-style fireplace.
In the attic storey, most of the early roof structure of the hall-range is visible: one fine arch-braced collar truss, moulded and ornately cusped, aligned over the partition between hall and passage, and wind-bracing in the central bay. The truss beyond (over the centre of the hall) is of simpler type, and the first-floor partition appears to be pegged into it. End bay not visible. In the parlour wing, the original roof is also visible: 3 bays with heavy collar-trusses (modified to front slope in nineteenth century), and post and panel partitions.