Public house. C17 with early C19
alterations. Possibly originally timber frame, now painted brick and render
with stucco quoins and dressings, thatched roof with raised brick coped
gables and 2 gable stacks. Single storey with attics, 3 bay front, having
central boarded door in fluted surround with short hood on scrolled
brackets, flanked by single tripartite glazing bar sashes with splayed
rusticated stucco lintels with raised key blocks. Over the door is a niche
containing the figure of a white horse. To the attic are 2 through eaves
dormers with thatched gables and glazing bar sliding sashes and casements.
Hotel, formerly three properties: 17 Market
Street (formerly The Fleece), possibly late medieval origins, re-fronted mid
C18; 15 Market Street, early C19; 13 Market Street (The Green Man Hotel)
late C19. All with later alterations.
Materials: rendered front elevation with brick stacks, Welsh slate roof to
13 Market Street, the rest being pan tiled. Rear elevations mainly obscured,
but rubble limestone to 15 Market Street, brick to the remainder. 17 Market
Street retains evidence of surviving timber framing elements including
wall-posts, tie-beams, rails and wall-plates.
Plan: 17 Market Street appears originally to have been a through-passage
plan with the main stack backing onto the passage. The original stair
position is unknown. The ground floor of the south gable has a wide opening
through to 15 Market Street which has lost its original ground floor plan
form and is linked through to 13 Market Street which has also been largely
opened up on the ground floor.
Exterior: 17 Market Street: two storeys, four bays with a large, tall ridge
stack rising from the second bay from the north, this bay being blind. At
the eaves there is a slightly projecting wall-plate with a simple ovolo
moulding, this plate forming the lintels to the upper windows. All windows
have simple projecting stone sills. The northern-most bay has a sash window
off-set to the south in the place of the original door position, with slight
scaring indicating the former stone door case. To its right (north) is a
narrow sash window. All of the other windows are regularly proportioned and
positioned, being sash windows with exposed sash boxes, set back from the
wall face and fitted with replacement six-over-six pane horned sashes.
Slight scaring below the ground-floor window to the southern-most bay shows
the position of a blocked cellar window shown in early photographs. The
roof’s ridge line is not straight suggesting that the roof structure
(currently (2017) inaccessible internally) could be early in date. Much
altered and extended brick-built rear range is not included in the listing.
15 Market Street: two bays, two storeys with attic, no surviving chimney
stacks. Central to the ground floor is a large, traditionally styled canted
bay window enlarged from a domestic scaled sash window in the mid-C20. To
its right is a large double-doored entrance with a simple doorcase and
projecting canopy dating to after circa 1960. The two regularly positioned
first-floor windows have horned, two-over-two sashes, wedge lintels and
projecting stone cills. Above are two large mid-C20 roof dormers*.
Stone-built to the rear with a stone-built, gabled rear range that is
encased in C20 extensions on the ground floor, these C20 additions not
included in the listing, having an enlarged C20 window* to the gable at
first floor.
13 Market Street: four bays, three stories with a simple attic sill band,
coped gables and end stacks. At first floor level above the entrance is
ironwork for a pub sign, featuring decorative scrolled bracing. Just above,
are two bottonée-cruciform pattress plates (crosses with arms terminating in
clover-leaf shapes) for tie bars set at second floor level. Upper windows
are plate glass horned sashes. The ground floor openings have been
remodelled in a relatively sympathetic manner since circa 1960: a large,
traditionally detailed bow-fronted window has replaced the original central
pair of domestically scaled windows; the entrance door to the right has a
simple timber door case replacing a rounded canopy shown on early
photographs; and to the right of this, the window to the northern-most bay
now has a six-over-six pane sash window in place of the earlier plate glass
sash window. The southern-most bay is occupied by a passage through to the
rear. The much altered and extended brick-built rear range is not included
in the listing.
Interior: 17 Market Street: is the main focus of special interest
internally. This includes the large inglenook fireplace on the ground floor
with stone jambs and rear wall, the reveals being widely chamfered,
incorporating a roll moulding, the base stones for which appearing to be
reused capitals featuring three palm leafs, the moulded stonework possibly
being C12. The bressummer beam is a substantial late medieval moulded
timber, housings to the rear suggesting that it is a reused tie beam. Above
this is a row of re-set C16 timber panels. Within the inglenook is a stone
fireplace with a copper hood and an C18 hour-glass hob grate. The room that
this fireplace serves extends for two full bays, the ceiling having a
substantial beam that is chamfered and supports exposed hardwood joists. The
original entrance passage, at the rear (north) of the inglenook, now forms
toilets*, the modern partitions* and fittings* not being of special
interest. The first floor is divided into two rooms divided by the massive
chimney stack above the inglenook. The only period feature still evident is
a small, C18 fireside cupboard on butterfly hinges within the main room.
15 Market Street: retains an early C19 closed-string staircase, possibly
with surviving stick balusters behind later boarding on the upper floors,
this appearing to have been re-modelled in the early C20 on the ground
floor. Fireplaces and other period features have been lost with some
evidence that room divisions on the upper floors have also been altered,
with C20 or later partitions* not being of special interest. In the south
gable wall, within the attic storey, there is an alcove marking the position
of a former window blocked by the construction of 13 Market Street.
13 Market Street: the interior features* are not of special interest being
largely reconfigured and refitted in the C20. Although the bar areas are
panelled*, including oak joinery*, this is C20 in date. |