Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
84963
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
29/07/2005  
Date of Amendment
29/07/2005  
Name of Property
Alleston  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Pembrokeshire  
Community
Pembroke  
Town
Pembroke  
Locality
Alleston  
Easting
200445  
Northing
200131  
Street Side
 
Location
To the SE of Pembroke at the end of a drive S off Lower Lamphey Road.  

Description


Broad Class
Domestic  
Period
 

History
Substantial farmhouse of earlier to mid C19 ornamental character. Alleston was part of the Orielton estate, offered for sale 1839, when it was called a 'genteel modern built house and farm' which suggests that the house dates from the 1830s. It is marked on the 1841 tithe map as still owned by the Orielton estate, occupied by Henry Phelps with 266 acres. It was bought with Underdown and the Grove Quarry by William Owen, the architect, of Haverfordwest. The site is recorded as Aylwardiston in 1382, was owned occupied by the Webb family, but leased to Sir John Carew in 1605. Edward Webb, gent., was there in 1609, Thomas Webb in 1637. In 1706 Francis, the grandson of Henry Davies of Bangeston was at Alleston. Thomas Poyer of Alleston is recorded later in the C18. The house remained part of the Owen of Withybush estate to the early C20. The present house is a hipped square house with centre chimney and wide sashes of late Georgian type. the gables with bargeboards over the upper windows and doorcase have a Victorian look. Added later C19 gable on left side with similar bargeboards. The type of bargeboards also appeared on Warreston, a gentry house burnt in 1956.  

Exterior
House, painted stucco with hipped deep-eaved roof and centre brick axial chimney, rebuilt in C20. Two storeys, three-window range of broad 16-pane hornless sashes and centre door. Flat eaves soffits. Overhanging gables with fretted bargeboards and finials over upper windows. Six-panel door with flush panels, two glazed in mid C19 timber doorcase with panelled piers, frieze, broken forward over piers, cornice and curved tent top (similar detail to doors of nos 5-6 Westgate Hill). Right end wall has windows to right side, 4-pane above, 16-pane below. Left side has added projecting gable to right, with fretted bargeboards to overhanging verges, paired 6-pane sashes each floor. Bay to left has 4-pane sash over 16-pane sash as on other end wall, and small windows to left in end wall of outshut rear.  

Interior
Not fully inspected. Inner half-glazed door with coloured glass margins and fanlight.  

Reason for designation
Included for its special architectural interest as a substantial late Georgian or early Victorian farmhouse with surviving exterior detail.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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