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Listed buildings in Sleaford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Decorated Gothic interior of St Denys' Church dates to the 14th century.

Sleaford is a market town and civil parish in the North Kesteven district of the non-metropolitan county of Lincolnshire, England. This list includes the 181 listed buildings in the civil parish of Sleaford, which incorporates the village of Quarrington and the hamlet of Holdingham in addition to the town. One is classified by English Heritage as being in Grade I, six in Grade II* and 174 in Grade II.

In the United Kingdom, the term "listed building" refers to a building or other structure officially designated as being of special architectural, historical or cultural significance. These buildings are in three grades: Grade I consists of buildings of outstanding architectural or historical interest; Grade II* includes particularly significant buildings of more than local interest; Grade II consists of buildings of special architectural or historical interest. Buildings in England are listed by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport on recommendations provided by English Heritage, which also determines the grading.[1]

A small number of medieval buildings have survived. St Denys' Church in Sleaford and St Botolph's in Quarrington date to the 12th and 13th centuries respectively, while Sleaford's half-timbered vicarage is 15th-century. Cogglesford Mill is the only remaining watermill in the town and it is a testament to the economic importance of the River Slea from the late Saxon period onwards. By the Norman Conquest, a market was held at Sleaford and it had developed into an estate centre; the Bishops of Lincoln used it as a base, constructing Sleaford Castle, but also as a means of extracting produce and wealth through demesne farming and the granting of limited freedoms to the town. As a result, the oldest parts of the town are the market place and the four roads which meet at it: Northgate, Southgate, Eastgate and Westgate; many of the listed buildings are found in this area.

These buildings date to the 18th and 19th centuries and include William Alvey's fine baroque house on Northgate, the Manor House on Northgate inset with medieval fragments, and Sessions House on the Market Place. The Carre family, who owned the manor in the early modern period, were responsible for the grammar school, the hospital and the almshouses, while the Victorian builders Kirk and Parry constructed or added to numerous public buildings and private residences, including Lafford Terrace and their own houses on Southgate and at Westholme respectively.

During the Industrial Revolution, the Slea was canalised in 1794 and the Sleaford Navigation which managed it constructed its offices and wharves along Carre Street. The canal brought trade to Sleaford, while the new gasworks powered lamps around the town from 1834. Over twenty years later, the railways arrived and the station was built in a Gothic style. Sleaford's agricultural location and its new transport links encouraged seed trading and malting in the late 19th century: the seed merchant Charles Sharpe's house, The Pines, is on Boston Road, while the massive Bass and Co. maltings complex off Mareham Lane is grade II* listed.

Key

Grade Criteria[1]
I Buildings of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important
II* Particularly important buildings of more than special interest
II Buildings of national importance and special interest

Listed buildings

Name Location Image Grade Date Description Ref.
Parish Church of St Denys Market Place
TF 06883 45893
I c. 1180 There has been a church in Sleaford since at least the Norman Conquest, but the oldest parts of St Denys' Church date to c. 1180. It consists of an Early English Gothic tower, with a stone broach spire, a Decorated Gothic nave and aisles, and a north transept. Kirk and Parry restored the church in 1853 and the spire was rebuilt after it was struck by lightning in 1883. The rood screen is medieval and was removed from Lincoln Cathedral. [2]
Carre's Hospital, pump and sun-dial in the forecourt and wall along Carre Street Eastgate
TF 06917 45851
II* 1830 The L-shaped Carre's Hospital is built on the site of the Carre family's house. Designed by H. E. Kendall, the east range of 1830 is 9-bay; the south range, completed between 1841 and 1846, has 7 bays, a large central chapel and a Perpendicular Gothic window overlooking the courtyard. [3]
Church of St Botolph Town Road, Quarrington
TF 05411 44468
II* 13th century A church at Quarrington is recorded in the Domesday Book; however, the 13th-century north arcade is the oldest part of the existing church. Its tower and spire date to the next century and St Botolph's listing reflects the "excellent" 14th-century tracery in two of its windows. The chancel was rebuilt when Charles Kirk restored the church in 1862−3. [4]
Former maltings of Bass Industrial Estate Mareham Lane
TF 07444 45255
II* 1907 Local barley production and the town's railway links made Sleaford desirable for brewing beer. Bass & Co. constructed the maltings in brick between 1892 and 1907. They comprise eight separate pavilions with a four-storey tower in the centre; the total frontage is nearly 1,000 ft. The maltings at Sleaford closed in 1959; vacant since the 2000s, the site has been damaged by fire on several occasions and listed among English Heritage's most "at risk" buildings. [5][6]
Manor House, Rhodes House, wall and gate piers to cobbled yard and garden wall to no. 33 Northgate
TF 06768 46001
II* 16th century Set back from the street and entered across a courtyard, the Manor House is largely 19th-century Gothic, but attached to part of a 16th- or 17th-century building. It also incorporates medieval stonework, including a 14th-century chimney piece from the Old Deanery in Lincoln and masonry from Sleaford Castle. The adjoining Georgian Rhodes House is brick-built and faces onto Northgate. [7][8]
Town Hall (Sessions House) Market Place
TF 06795 45870
II* 1831 Designed by H. E. Kendall, the Gothic Sessions House has two storeys topped with an embattled parapet. Facing onto the Market Place, the ground level is arcaded with six pointed arches; the first floor has six windows, five of which are drip-moulded. The building served as the Magistrates Court for the Sleaford Petty Sessions until the late 20th century and has been a restaurant since 2012. [9]
Vicarage Market Place
TF 06868 45924
II* 15th century A two-storey timber-framed building, the Vicarage is 15th-century, with a late 16th-century chimney-piece and a brick extension of 1868 by Charles Kirk. The ground floor of the earlier wing is rendered, but the first floor is half-timbered and contains a central bay window beneath a large gable with timber oversails. [10]
Garden House at The Pines Boston Road
TF 07112 45598
II c. 1880 A hexagonal, wooden-panelled garden house at the Pines on Boston Road, a house owned by the seed merchant Charles Sharpe in the late 19th century. The exterior and interior are decorated with split branches, and the windows are stained glass. [11]
Old Place. Garden wall to the south of Old Place Boston Road
TF 07597 45878
II Early to Mid-19th century Old Place is a 19th-century Gothic building, erected after 1822, which has a rendered front and slate roof; its garden wall is built from medieval stone fragments. The house occupies the site of the manor house at Old Sleaford, owned by the Hussey family from the early 15th century to the early 16th century, when the Carre family took over the estate. It subsequently became a farm house. [12][13]
The Pines and attached former warehouse and offices Boston Road
TF 07059 45574
II c. 1830 The site was developed by John Sharpe, a seedsman, in the 1830s, but enlarged by his son, Charles, fifty years later. The house is in yellow brick with stone decorations. Of two storeys and five bays, the east front has a central tower with doors fitted between two pairs of Doric pilasters. The 13-bay former warehouse is attached to the south. [14]
Old Place Cottages 1 and 2 Boston Road
TF 07632 45886
II Unknown These coursed-stone cottages with slate roofs have been converted from stables belonging to Old Place. [15]
7–17 Boston Road
TF 06928 45568
II Early 19th century A set of six brick two-storey terraced houses, with one window on each storey. [16]
10 and 12 Boston Road
TF 06918 45543
II 18th century A pair of three-storey brick terraced houses with modern shop fronts. [17]
19 Boston Road
TF 06948 45575
II Early 19th century A two-storey brick building with one window on each floor. [18]
21–25 Boston Road
TF 06958 45580
II Late 18th or early 19th century A set of two-storey brick terraced houses, which have a window on each floor. [19]
27–31 Boston Road
TF 06969 45586
II Early 19th century Three brick, two-storey terraced properties with doors encased in stone pilasters and quoins at the ends of the terrace. [20]
33–37 Boston Road
TF 06987 45595
II Early 19th century A brick two-storey terraced block with three windows on the first floor; Nos. 33 and 35 are rendered and form one property. The latter has a late Victorian shop front. [21]
41 Boston Road
TF 06997 45599
II Early 19th century A brick two-storey building, with an arched passageway to the left side. It has four bays and a wooden doorcase. [22]
Doorway and Wall to premises occupied by W K Morton and Sons Carre Street
TF 06916 45778
II c. 1792 A portico with the inscription "1792 Sleaford Navigation", the doorway has two large stone pilasters under a triangular pediment. [23]
Former office building in centre of yard formerly occupied by Hubbard and Phillips Ltd. Carre Street
TF 06930 45805
II Mid-19th century A stone two-storey building in the Tudor style, it is believed to have housed the offices of the Sleaford Navigation company and bears a carved rendition of that company's armorial bearings above the doorway. [24]
Sleaford Castle Castle Causeway
TF 06514 45626
II c. 1130 The only surviving part of the castle is a small section of masonry, but it has left a clear imprint on the landscape. Constructed by Alexander, Bishop of Lincoln, it was double-moated. [25]
2 Castle Causeway
TF 06364 45568
II Late 18th or early 19th century A one-storey house of two bays and in coursed rubble. [26]
2 Church Lane
TF 06826 45946
II Late 17th century A single-storey stone cottage with a brick gable dating to the 19th century. [27]
2a Church Lane
TF 06818 45948
II 18th century A single-storey cottage in brick with one bay. [28]
Galley Hill Farmhouse The Drove
TF 06586 46146
II Late 17th century A stone, gabled building with two storeys and two bays. The building was altered in the 19th century, from when the roof dates. [29]
Coggesford Mill Farmhouse Eastgate
TF 07450 46149
II Mid-18th century This brick farmhouse is single-storey with a gabled roof. [30]
Cogglesford Mill, Mill Race and Bridge Eastgate
TF 07459 46128
II [31]
Entrance to Gas Works Eastgate
TF 07567 46262
II 1839 The Sleaford Gas Light Company was founded in 1838 and its gas works opened the following year. Probably designed by H. E. Kendall, the entrance is in stone and has two two-storey pavilions at its ends connected by lower two-storey links to a central archway with angled buttresses and a crow-stepped gable. The buildings were extended to the rear in the 1890s, but these additions were demolished in 1966–1968 after gas production ceased at Sleaford. [32][33]
Lafford Terrace Eastgate
TF 07097 45919
II 1856 This Italianate yellow brick and stone terrace has one three-storey pavilion in the centre and two at each end connected by two-storey links. Although initially residential, the building was purchased by Kesteven County Council in 1934 and serves as North Kesteven District Council's headquarters. [34][35]
Lock to the south of Cogglesford Mill Farm Eastgate
TF 07461 46122
II Late 18th century Made of brick with some 20th-century concrete additions, this lock incorporates stone gate recesses, although the gates have been removed. [36]
Premises adjoining Sleaford Maternity Home to the west Eastgate
TF 06974 45937
II Early 19th century A two-storey brick building with three bays and a garden wall. [37]
Stables, Loose Box, Workshop, Wash House and Store at Cogglesford Mill Farm Eastgate
TF 07466 46151
II Late 18th century A brick, two-storey building with seven bays and a stable door on the front and adjoining 19th-century loose boxes, wagon hovel and workshop. [38]
1 Eastgate
TF 06921 45913
II 17th century A one-storey building (with a gabled attic) in coarse rubble. On the street front is a 19th-century shop-front with three windows and a door beneath an oriel window. The church-facing front to the rear is 18th-century and spans two storeys and three bays with a 19th-century extension in brick across three bays. [39]
2 Eastgate
TF 06922 45870
II Late 18th century A two-storey brick building spanning two bays with a door and window on the ground floor. [40]
3 Eastgate
TF 06932 45902
II Late 18th century This three-storey brick building has two windows on the second floor, one on the first and a late 19th-century shop-front on the ground level. [41]
The Old House, including malthouse and adjoining outbuildings, garden gateway and archway 4 Eastgate
TF 06962 45878
II Early 17th century A rubble two-storey building with stone gables and Georgian brick extensions. The street front consists of four windows on the first floor and three on the ground floor; the eastern gable includes a three-light stone window, c. 17th century. There are adjoining outbuildings and malthouses and the stonework incorporates 15th-century material from Sleaford Castle. [42]
5 and 7 Eastgate
TF 06939 45904
II Late 18th or early 19th century A three-storey painted brick building with three bays and a modern shop front. [43]
6 and 8 Eastgate
TF 06977 45900
II Early 19th century A red brick building split into two cottages (formerly three) of two storeys. The whole block spans five bays. [44]
9 Eastgate
TF 06946 45908
II Late 18th century A three-storey brick building with two bays and a wooden doorcase. [45]
11 Eastgate
TF 06952 45911
II 18th century A two-storey brick building across four bays with a carriage entrance beneath the first floor on the right. [46]
13 and 15 Eastgate
TF 06965 45916
II 18th century No. 13 was the Waggon and Horses Public House, and the brick building occupies three storeys across three bays. No. 15 has two storeys and two bays. [47]
23 Eastgate
TF 07018 45935
II 18th century A two-storey building in coursed rubble; rendered on the street front. The building has a datestone of 1788. [48]
29 Eastgate
TF 07037 45940
II Early 19th century A two-storey brick building with a slate roof and three bays; there is a centre passage on the ground-floor. [49]
37 Eastgate
TF 07052 45947
II 18th century A brick building spanning three bays and two storeys. [50]
43–47 Eastgate
TF 07070 45977
II Early 19th century All of these terraced properties are brick with one window on the ground floor and all but No. 47 have doorways with pilasters. [51]
49–55 Eastgate
TF 07075 45991
II Early 19th century Two-storey terraced buildings in brick, with each plot spanning two bays with one window on the ground floor. [52]
57 and 59 Eastgate
TF 07077 46002
II Early 19th century Two-storey brick terraced buildings. No. 57 has two windows and No. 59 has one on the first floor; both have Tuscan doorways on the ground floor. [53]
61 Eastgate
TF 07079 46009
II Early 19th century A two-storey rendered building. [54]
63 and 65 Eastgate
TF 07082 46016
II 1849 An ashlar-fronted two-storey building with four stone two-light windows on the first floor and paired entrance doors on the ground floor. [55]
Sleaford East Signal Box Grantham Road
TF 06878 45398
II c. 1882 This brick and wood two-storey signal box was constructed for the Great Northern and Great Eastern Joint Railway. It has a slate roof and ornate barge boards. [56]
The school and schoolhouse 17 Grantham Road
TF 06737 45270
II 1867 Built and designed by Charles Kirk, the former school-house and chapel once served Quarrington as a primary school. It was built in 1867 following the growth of New Quarrington. The school was extended in 1898, the 1960s and 1980s. In 2002, the school moved to another site, leaving the premises vacant. The original building is single-storey in coursed stone and adopts a Gothic Revival style, with mullioned windows. The Grantham Road front has six windows and a central gable supporting a school bell; the rear has a doorway between two gables. [57][58]
Anna House Farmhouse Holdingham
TF 05648 47308
II 17th or early 18th century A rubble two-storey farmhouse with a gabled roof and slate tiling. There are two windows on each storey and a rear extension in brick to the rear. [59]
Holdingham Farmhouse Holdingham
TF 08862 47995
II Late 18th century A two-storey red brick and partly rendered house. [60]
Outbuildings to the north of Anna House Farmhouse Holdingham
TF 05629 47372
II A set of coursed-rubble outbuildings with pantile roofs. [61]
1 Holdingham
TF 05889 47144
II 17th or early 18th century A single-storey cottage made of rubble with brick sides and two windows. Extensions and outbuildings are included in the listing. [62]
12 Holdingham
TF 05810 47186
II 18th century A one-storey coursed-rubble building with three windows and brick gable ends. [63]
13 and 14 Holdingham
TF 06150 47126
II Mid-18th century Two rubble cottages of one storey (with attics) and five bays. [64]
Mill buildings to Holdingham Farm Holdingham Lane
TF 08870 47966
II 19th century A brick building in two parts with an octagonal toll-house for the lock-keeper. [65]
Schoolroom annexe to Kesteven and Sleaford High School 19 Jermyn Street
TF 06745 45607
II c. 1870 Probably built by Kirk and Parry, this coursed-stone office building with Gothic Revival details has been converted into an annexe for Kesteven and Sleaford High School. It consists of one storey and an attic, and the layout follows an L-shape. The eastern corner of the street front has a gabled plinth. It likely served as an office for Kirk and Parry's architectural practice, which was based on Jermyn Street. [66]
20 and 21, Jermyn Street (and store adjacent to 20 to the west)
TF 06703 45618
II 18th century A pair of two-storey brick houses across four bays. [67]
22 and 23 Jermyn Street
TF 06720 45622
II Early or mid-19th century A pair of two-storey coursed-stone houses with four bays and paired doorways. [68]
24 Jermyn Street
TF 06730 45626
II c. 18th century A two-storey stone building with an attic of two bays; the ground floor has two 19th-century canted windows. [69]
25 Jermyn Street
TF 06738 45629
II Early or mid-19th century A two-storey coursed-stone building with two windows on either floor, the windows on the left have one light, those on the right have three. [70]
26 Jermyn Street
TF 06753 45634
II 18th century A brick building of two storeys and an attic, spanning three bays at irregular heights. [71]
1–6 Kingston Terrace
TF 07095 46058
II 1857 Built by Marmaduke Bennison, this group of brick fronted terraced houses are fronted in ashlar and follow a Jacobean style. There is a central gable between six dormer windows. Each of the six entrance doors are paired and the windows are stone mullioned. [72]
Former lodge to Westholme Leicester Street
TF 06521 45888
II Mid-19th century A two-storey building in small coursed stone with a steep roof. The building has two three-light mullioned windows on the first floor and two six-light windows on the ground level. [73]
Former stables to Westholme Leicester Street
TF 06550 45896
II Mid-19th century This L-shaped stone building has a slate roof and, on the right side, a central gable above an arched carriage entrance. [74]
Garden wall to the rear of former stables to Westholme Leicester Street
TF 06621 45916
II c. 1850 This 100 foot rubble wall contains medieval fragments recycled by Charles Kirk, probably from church restorations he conducted. [75]
Westholme Leicester Street
TF 06477 45920
II c. 1849 Built by Charles Kirk the younger for his business partner Thomas Parry, this stone house is, in Pevsner's words, "an ebullient essay in French 15th century domestic Gothic". Following an irregular layout, the two-storey house incorporates tall chimney stacks, dragon motifs, carved pinnacles, four-arch windows and doorways and steep roofs. [76][77]
Eastern Cartshed to storage depot and stables at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07230 45235
II [78]
Gateways and Walls at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07421 45181
II [79]
Number 1 Mess Room at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07336 45199
II [80]
Number 2 Mess Room at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07392 45191
II [81]
Number 3 Mess Room at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07433 45186
II [82]
Number 4 Mess Room at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07476 45180
II [83]
Number 5 Mess Room at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07534 45172
II [84]
Offices at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07148 45182
II [85]
Redcroft Mareham Lane
TF 07129 45197
II [86]
Storage depot and stables at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07109 45285
II [87]
Weigh offices at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07230 45210
II [88]
Western cartshed to storage depot and stables at Bass Maltings Mareham Lane
TF 07209 45237
II [89]
Bass Maltings Cottages 1 Mareham Lane
TF 07093 45256
II [90]
Bass Maltings Cottages 2 and 3 Mareham Lane
TF 07114 45253
II [91]
Bass Maltings Cottages 4 and 5 Mareham Lane
TF 07135 45250
II [92]
Bass Maltings Cottages 6 and 7 Mareham Lane
TF 07156 45247
II [93]
Bass Maltings Cottages 8 Mareham Lane
TF 07179 45244
II [94]
Bristol Arcade Market Place
TF 06810 45833
II [95]
Drinking Fountain Market Place
TF 06796 45852
II [96]
Lock-up in north-east corner of Churchyard Market Place
TF 06911 45936
II [97]
War Memorial Market Place
TF 06838 45877
II [98]
3 Market Place
TF 06798 45911
II [99]
4 Market Place
TF 06814 45891
II [100]
5 and 6 Market Place
TF 06814 45898
II [101]
Trustee Savings Bank 7 Market Place
TF 06827 45910
II [102]
8 and 9 Market Place
TF 06838 45916
II [103]
10 Market Place
TF 06874 45848
II [104]
11 Market Place
TF 06867 45844
II [105]
12 Market Place
TF 06859 45840
II [106]
17 Market Place
TF 06836 45834
II [107]
20a Market Place
TF 06798 45832
II [108]
21 and 22 Market Place
TF 06788 45830
II [109]
24 Market Place
TF 06767 45837
II [110]
Carre's Charity Northgate
TF 06782 46108
II [111]
Folly 3 metres to the west of numbers 6, 7 and 8 Parry's Court Northgate
TF 06708 45916
II [112]
Northgate House Northgate
TF 06787 46034
II [113]
Parry's Court 1 and 2 Northgate
TF 06747 45920
II [114]
1, 3 and 3a Northgate
TF 06765 45873
II [115]
Lloyds Bank 2 Northgate
TF 06792 45879
II Late 17th century and 19th century All in stone, the southern part dates to the late 17th century, c. 1700, and was a house for William Alvey. Described by Pevsner and his colleagues as "the most remarkable house in the town", it is Baroque with two-storeys of three bays encased in bolection frames and a central tall doorway with a segmental porch. In 1803, the Peacock, Handley and Kirton Bank took over the premises; the company was purchased by Lloyds Bank in 1912. The two-storey northern part is neo-Baroque, grander than the southern section, and was completed by W. Watkins and Son in 1905. It has a broken pediment over a door surrounded by two rusticated blocked Ionic pillars and armorial bearings above each of the three tall windows to its left. [116][117][118][119]
Parry's Court 3, 4 and 5, Northgate
TF 06727 45921
II [120]
National Westminster Bank 4 Northgate
TF 06785 45905
II [121]
5 Northgate
TF 06764 45887
II [122]
6 and 8 Northgate
TF 06782 45917
II [123]
Parry's Court 6, 7 and 8 Northgate
TF 06715 45923
II [124]
Lion Hotel 7 Northgate
TF 06763 45898
II [125]
10 and 12 Northgate
TF 06781 45927
II [126]
18, 19a, 19b and 19c Northgate
TF 06788 45946
II [127]
19 Northgate
TF 06760 45920
II [128]
The Lafford Restaurant 21 Northgate
TF 06758 45927
II [129]
23 Northgate
TF 06761 45941
II [130]
The Marquis of Granby public house and attached outbuildings 24 Northgate
TF 06788 46016
II c. 1700 [131]
27–29 and attached gateway to 25, 27–29 Northgate
TF 06768 45958
II [132]
31 Northgate
TF 06769 45971
II [133]
35 Northgate
TF 06762 46045
II [134]
37–41 Northgate
TF 06758 46062
II [135]
Carre's Grammar School 40 Northgate
TF 06758 46140
II [136]
43 Northgate
TF 06756 46073
II [137]
51 and 53 Northgate
TF 06749 46096
II [138]
Handley Memorial Southgate
TF 06889 45553
II [139]
7 Southgate
TF 06789 45804
II [140]
9 Southgate
TF 06790 45793
II [141]
10 and 12 Southgate
TF 06771 45784
II [142]
11 Southgate
TF 06792 45784
II [143]
19 Southgate
TF 06814 45746
II [144]
23–27 Southgate
TF 06828 45719
II [145]
28 and 30 Southgate
TF 06808 45703
II [146]
29 Southgate
TF 06833 45708
II [147]
31 Southgate
TF 06837 45700
II [148]
White Hart Hotel 32 Southgate
TF 06812 45692
II [149]
34 Southgate
TF 06817 45681
II [150]
44 Southgate
TF 06832 45645
II [151]
Former windmill in yard to rear of 43 Southgate 43 Southgate
TF 06894 45685
II [152]
Black Bull Inn 50 Southgate
TF 06839 45627
II [153]
The Grapes public house 51 Southgate
TF 06863 45643
II [154]
52 and 54 Southgate
TF 06845 45615
II Early 18th century [155]
53 and 53a Southgate
TF 06866 45635
II [156]
55 and 57 Southgate
TF 06869 45627
II [157]
58 Southgate
TF 06851 45599
II Early 19th century [158]
59 and 61 Southgate
TF 06874 45618
II [159]
60 Southgate
TF 06855 45591
II Early 19th century (probable) [160]
Kesteven and Sleaford High School 62 Southgate
TF 06860 45581
II Before 1850 [161]
63 and 65 Southgate
TF 06881 45608
II [162]
The Nag's Head public house 64 Southgate
TF 06867 45562
II 18th century [163]
Sleaford railway station Station Road
TF 06794 45427
II [164]
Bristol Farmhouse Town Road, Quarrington
TF 05578 44391
II Late 17th century [165]
Manor House and garden wall Town Road, Quarrington
TF 05721 44474
II Late 17th century [166]
Outbuildings to north of Bristol Farmhouse Town Road
TF 05589 44423
II Early 19th century [167]
22 and 24 Town Road, Quarrington
TF 05418 44419
II Mid-19th century [168]
32 and 34 Town Road, Quarrington
TF 05504 44430
II [169]
Former Rose and Crown public house Water Gate
TF 06701 45849
II [170]
Rose and Crown public house (No. 2 Water Gate) 2–10 Water Gate
TF 06709 45815
II Mid-18th century [171]
15 Water Gate
TF 06718 45850
II Early 19th century [172]
17 Water Gate
TF 06708 45850
II [173]
23 Water Gate
TF 06655 45840
II 18th century [174]
Westgate House 25 Water Gate
TF 06638 45832
II [175]
2 Westgate
TF 06757 45866
II [176]
4 Westgate
TF 06753 45865
II [177]
6 Westgate
TF 06746 45867
II Late 18th century [178]
8 Westgate
TF 06737 45866
II [179]
10 Westgate
TF 06730 45865
II [180]
12 and 14 Westgate
TF 06720 45863
II [181]
16 and 18 Westgate
TF 06710 45864
II [182]
20 Westgate
TF 06700 45864
II [183]
20b Westgate
TF 06694 45865
II [184]
22 Westgate
TF 06687 45912
II [185]
28 Westgate
TF 06673 45863
II [186]
30 and 32 Westgate
TF 06663 45861
II [187]
34 Westgate
TF 06652 45859
II [188]
38 Westgate
TF 06642 45858
II [189]
40 and 42 Westgate
TF 06633 45857
II [190]
54 Westgate
TF 06569 45842
II [191]

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Bibliography

This page was last edited on 23 November 2023, at 18:02
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