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Monument details

HER Number:TR 25 SE 386
Type of record:Listed Building
Name:Park Cottage – House built in Goodnestone Park Estate style

Summary

Red brick, with plain slate roof. Two storeys with projecting wing. Dog-tooth eaves cornice and cast iron rainwater goods. Three pairs of two light Dering windows on south-east elevation; pair of two light Dering windows on north-east elevation all under label drips. Single Dering window to rear of wing (no drip mould). Central rib and stud door on north-east elevation recessed in round headed opening on imposts. Stacks to left and right ends (that on north-east elevation projecting) and centrally over wing. Brick-built lean-to to rear.


Grid Reference:TR 2572 5474
Map Sheet:TR25SE
Parish:GOODNESTONE, DOVER, KENT

Monument Types

Protected Status:Listed Building (II) 1458032: Park Cottage

Full description

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Park cottage – House built in ‘Goodnestone Park Estate style’. Red brick, with plain slate roof. Two storeys with projecting wing. Dog-tooth eaves cornice and cast iron rainwater goods. Three pairs of two light Dering windows on south-east elevation; pair of two light Dering windows on north-east elevation all under label drips. Single Dering window to rear of wing (no drip mould). Central rib and stud door on north-east elevation recessed in round headed opening on imposts. Stacks to left and right ends (that on north-east elevation projecting) and centrally over wing. Brick-built lean-to to rear.

Description based on architects drawings seen by Dover District Council Conservation Officer.

The building was designated a Listed Building in 2018. From the Listed Building record:

"
Summary

An estate cottage, of C18 origin, extended by 1872. .


Reasons for Designation

Park Cottage, an C18 brick estate cottage, with an early or mid-C19 L-wing, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:

Architectural interest:

* as a C18 Goodnestone Park estate cottage with typical moulded brick 'Dering' windows and moulded brick chimneystacks, retaining a significant proportion of original fabric; * for the survival of interior features and fittings including the spine beam, good quality moulded wooden fire surrounds and cupboard doors.

Group value:

* it is part of a group with a number of listed buildings, including estate cottages along The Street, Goodnestone Park, and its associated structures.

.




History

A building is shown in this position on the Mudge 1801 map of Goodnestone. The date 1814 is reported to be chalked on a roof beam in the loft space.

The cottage appears with its current footprint on the 1872 25'' Ordnance Survey sheet and on this and the Second Edition of 1897 the entrance is shown on the north side facing Catsole Hill. Also on the Second Edition sheet an outbuilding to the south-west of the cottage and a well are shown. By the 1907 Third Edition the well no longer appears. .


Details

An estate cottage, of C18 origin, extended by 1872.

MATERIALS: red brick in Flemish bond, part rendered, with a gabled slate roof and moulded brick chimneystacks. Windows are the characteristic estate 'Dering' windows with moulded brick surrounds and hood moulds and round-headed leaded lights.

PLAN: an L-shaped cottage, the main range of two storeys and three bays probably the earliest part, the single bay wing now containing the entrance and staircase and a lean-to in the angle of the 'L'.

EXTERIOR: the south-east elevation facing Goodnestone Park has three two-light windows on each floor. Disturbance to the brickwork below the central ground floor window suggests that there may have been an entrance here formerly.

The north-west elevation has to the east the gable end of the main range, which has a partly projecting brick chimneystack, crow-stepped towards the top and a moulded chimneystack. The L-wing to the west is set back with a two-light window on each floor and a C19 round-headed entrance with impost blocks and a studded door in a four-centred arch.

The north-east elevation has the return of the L-wing, which has a single light window and a rendered lean-to with an entrance with a plank door.

The south-west elevation has the rendered gable to the main range.

INTERIOR: the ground floor of the main range has a central spine beam, partly exposed, and some old floorboards. The larger room has a wide, moulded wooden fire surround with a moulded shelf and the smaller room has a narrower wooden fire surround with a flat shelf.

A C19 dogleg staircase in the wing, with stick balusters and moulded column newels, leads to the upper floor. There are more original wooden fire surrounds on this floor, one room also retaining two cupboards flanking the chimney with ledged plank doors.

SUBSIDIARY BUILDING: to the south-west of the cottage is a later C19 outbuilding in similar style to the cottage. It is a single storey brick outbuilding in Flemish bond with a slate roof with end gables with large stepped kneelers. The south-east, gable-end side is partly open-fronted. The south-west side has a small window opening." (1)


<1> Historic England, National Heritage List for England (Index). SKE29372.

<2> Historic England, 2018, Historic England Designation, Park Cottage, Catsole Hill, Goodnestone (Unpublished document). SKE52362.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
<1>Index: Historic England. National Heritage List for England.
<2>Unpublished document: Historic England. 2018. Historic England Designation, Park Cottage, Catsole Hill, Goodnestone.