Paul is a village in the civil parish of Penzance, Cornwall, United Kingdom.
Paul
Name and location | Photograph | Date | Notes | Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cross on Churchyard Wall 50°05′22″N 5°32′46″W / 50.089397°N 5.546033°W |
Medieval | The head of a pierced wheel-head cross. There is a figure of Christ in relief on one side and five bosses on the other.[1] | II | |
Stone cross 100 yards south east of church 50°05′21″N 5°32′42″W / 50.089164°N 5.544914°W |
Medieval | A short shaft and unpierced wheel-head. Greek cross in relief.[2] | II | |
Hutchen's House Mousehole Lane 50°05′23″N 5°32′48″W / 50.089806°N 5.546599°W |
— | 17th/18th century | The two-storied, restored house has a datestone of 1709. The walls are of small coursed rubble with the rear elevation of largely modern, hanging slate. Granite chimney stacks have cap mouldings. There are six windows with restored double-hung sashes on the ground floor and granite mullions on the first floor. The mullions have been removed from the ground floor windows.[3] | II |
Stables immediately north of Hutchen's House 50°05′23″N 5°32′48″W / 50.089817°N 5.546644°W |
— | 18th century | Two storey stables with walls of granite rubble, a loft and slurried slate roof. There are two small openings on the first floor and on the ground floor are two doors and two small flanking windows.[4] | II |
King's Arm Inn 50°05′22″N 5°32′47″W / 50.089352°N 5.546352°W |
18th century | Public house with coursed rubble walls built at right angles to the road with the entrance opposite the church. Windows have double-hung sashes with narrow sidelights and there are two modern glazed doors. The slate roof has gable ends and at the rear the walls are stuccoed with hipped roof.[5] | II | |
Scaddon Villa, Boslandew Lane 50°05′22″N 5°32′49″W / 50.089576°N 5.546967°W |
— | 18th century | House with granite ashlar walls with flat arches to the windows and a slate roof with gable ends. The windows have wide sashes with vertical glazing bars. The recessed doorway has a fielded panel door.[6] | II |
Trungle Farm House 50°05′30″N 5°32′44″W / 50.091584°N 5.545480°W |
— | 18th century | Coursed granite rubble, two storey farmhouse with a datestone (1711) probably from the original building. The slurried slate roof has gable ends and two windows are irregularly spaced with later sashes. The recessed doorway has a narrow rectangular fanlight. Inside is an 18th-century staircase.[7] | II |
Trungle House 50°05′27″N 5°32′49″W / 50.090807°N 5.547032°W |
— | 18th century | Two storey house in a L-shaped plan with coursed granite rubble walls. The slate roof is part slurried, half-hipped and has gabled ends. There is a panelled door in a semi-circular headed doorway with fanlight. [8] | II |
Churchyard Wall 50°05′22″N 5°32′47″W / 50.089467°N 5.546313°W |
18th and 19th century | A 4′ 6″ to 6′ granite rubble wall with chamfered coping. There are three entrances with stone seats on each side and the north-west entrance has three semi-circular steps. [9] | II | |
The Retreat and Lindon Cottage, Mousehole Lane 50°05′23″N 5°32′49″W / 50.089702°N 5.546864°W |
— | Early 19th century | Two cottages with granite rubble walls and a slate roof with gabled and half-hipped ends. There are five windows which have modern casements and sashes without glazing bars. The Retreat has a gabled wooden porch and Lynton Cottage has a modern glazed door.[10] | II |
Little Greystones and Greystone 50°05′22″N 5°32′48″W / 50.089524°N 5.546614°W |
— | Early 19th century | Two cottages with walls of coursed granite and slurried slate, half-hipped roofs. The windows have sashes and most of them have glazing bars. There are two plain doorways at the centre with narrow rectangular fanlights.[11] | II |
The Vicarage 50°05′23″N 5°32′44″W / 50.089586°N 5.545599°W |
— | Early 19th century | Early 19th century vicarage with rendered walls and a slate-hipped roof with wide eaves. There is an open wooden porch with Tuscan columns and entablature on the south elevation. The ground floor windows, on this south elevation have splayed bay windows and two other windows have granite sills, plain architraves in relief and sashes with glazing bars. The east elevation has three windows including a ground floor centre splayed bay window.[12] | II |
References
Citations
- ↑ Historic England & 1143165
- ↑ Historic England & 1327895
- ↑ Historic England & 1219736
- ↑ Historic England & 1143170
- ↑ Historic England & 1143167
- ↑ Historic England & 1327860
- ↑ Historic England & 1210387
- ↑ Historic England & 1290497
- ↑ Historic England & 1143166
- ↑ Historic England & 1143169
- ↑ Historic England & 1143155
- ↑ Historic England & 1327857
Sources
- Historic England, "Cross on Churchyard Wall (1143165)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 29 August 2018
- Historic England, "Stone cross 100 yards south east of church (1327895)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 31 August 2018
- Historic England, "Hutchen's House, Mousehole Lane (1219736)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 November 2019
- Historic England, "Stables adjoining Hutchen's House (1143170)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 28 November 2018
- Historic England, "King's Arm Inn (1143167)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 3 May 2019
- Historic England, "Scaddon Villa, Boslandew Hill (1327860)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 April 2019
- Historic England, "Trungle Farm House (1210387)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 30 August 2019
- Historic England, "Trungle House (1290497)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 26 August 2018
- Historic England, "Churchyard Wall (1143166)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 26 November 2018
- Historic England, "The Retreat and Linton Cottage, Mousehole Lane (1143169)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 8 May 2019
- Historic England, "Little Greystones and Greystones (1143168)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 27 November 2018
- Historic England, "The Vicarage (1327857)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 19 April 2019
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