Exterior
Inn, cut hammer-dressed coursed grey limestone with slate roofs and flat eaves on small stone corbels. Tudor style. Two storeys, two sections, the right section 3-window with large rendered end stacks; the left section two-bay with through arch to yard.
Right section is offset to left, has raised plinth and cut stone quoins to right corner, which is chamfered at ground floor level. 6-pane late C19 sashes with the side panes narrow, the openings with slightly pointed heads, stone voussoirs, stone sills and stone hoodmoulds. Centre Tudor-arched doorway with slate step, stone voussoirs and Tudor arched hoodmould. Double panelled door with blind Y-tracery to overlight. Ground floor right window replaced by canted hipped bay window, broader hoodmould over. Hoodmoulds of first floor centre and both floors right are of squared stone, whereas those to door and all openings to left are made up of small stones to a stepped profile. Mounting block of 3 steps to right of door. S end wall of rubble stone with opening each floor to right.
Left section appears to be added (straight joint) but is probably contemporary, and matching. Right bay has one-window range to match, but with basement window and hoodmould instead of plinth. Left bay (throughway to yard) is fine example of stonework as it is recessed with flanking walls curved in, but arch head and floor above step outwards giving a different junction with curve at each level. Ground floor has full quadrant curve to jambs of through-arch. Lloyd family crest on painted plaque each side, lion to left, wolf with spear in paw to right, possibly C17 or C18. Arch head, set back from main wall-face, is broad Tudor arch carried on big corbels. Cut stone voussoirs, and Tudor-arched hoodmould (of small stones). Upper level is corbelled out on stone corbels at level of window sill, but wall-face still just in from main wall-face. Above corbel table is flat-headed 4-light window with small-paned Tudor-arched timber horizontally sliding lights, with stone voussoirs and hoodmould.
Left end wall projects beyond the Great House and has one small first floor window. Within arch each side are blank large recesses with stone voussoirs into which doors (now lost) opened. Present ground level apparently much raised as lower gate pintle is 18 inches below surface.
Rear wall has varied stonework, boulder stones at first floor, possibly indicating incorporation of an older building, and no division between the two halves. 3 dormers, rendered large wall-face (lateral) stack to left. First floor 2-light mullion-and-transom timber window with small panes to left, then blank wall, then 3-light timber mullion window over through arch and small light to right with slab lintel. Ground floor has through arch to right, similar Tudor arch on corbels over rounded jambs. Door to right. Two-light window to left of arch, then modern flat-roofed addition in angle to SE rear wing. Stone voussoirs to slightly pointed heads, and stone sills.
Low lofted SE wing obscured partly by modern addition. N side ground floor window, two doors, and triple-casement within C20 glazed passage. 1773 date scratched to right of one door. Triple casement to first floor right.