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Annex 4 Cranleigh Buildings of Local Merit record sheets

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Page 1: Annex 4 - Waverley

Annex 4

Cranleigh Buildings of Local Merit record sheets

Page 2: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061389

1 and 2 Jubilee Cottages Horsham Road Cranleigh GU6 8DN

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Pair of gable ended 2 storey semi-detached cottages. Late C19 (1897 was Diamond Jubilee year) or early C20. Modern extensions to rear of both cottages and side of No 1. Painted brickwork. Slate roof. Four flue brick chimney with stepped cap in front centre roof slope. One window to each cottage. No 1 (right hand) has 2 pane double-hung sliding sashes, possibly original. Modern windows to No 2. Modern porches to both cottages, gabled to No 1 and flat roofed to No 2. Group value with Cherries to west.

Page 3: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ061389

1 & 2 Brookmead Cottages Horsham Road Cranleigh GU6 8DJ

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Pair of 2 storey terraced cottages on the south side of Horsham road facing Lucks Green. About 1860. Red brick with scallop tile hanging to first floor and slate roof. Two 12 pane leaded double casements to each cottage, with open gabled porch at centre. End chimneys. In the 1870's the occupant of No.1 was employed as a gardener to the adjoining Brookmead House [MM].

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Page 4: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ050393

1-12 Parkgate Cottages The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SG

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Two linked rows of 6 two storey cottages on south side of common. Late C19. Ground floors red brick. Gabled porches to paired entrance doors/side passages, in painted timber with trefoil motifs in spandrels. First floors tile hung over brick modillion course, with alternate scalloped courses to tiling. Six windows to each row, 4 pane double hung sashes, centre pairs with gablets over and end windows with full gables. Tiled roofs. Brick chimneys with stepped heads and string bands, paired at centre of each row and at the centre of the whole row. [SW125, wrongly captioned as Parkhouse Cottages, which are in Ewhurst Road]. The name Parkgate probably derives from an entrance to Knowle Park here as shown on the 1842 Tithe map.

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Page 5: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ051393

1 to 3 Laundry Cottages The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SQ

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Group of 3 linked 2 storey cottages on the south side of the common. No 1 (Oakdene) is probably an early C17 timber framed house in origin. It has modern applied stonework to the ground floor and red brickwork in Flemish bond above, with a separating brick modillion course. Two casement windows, with the entrance under the left hand window. Tiled roof, hipped at the west end. No 2 (possibly late C18) projects from No 1 and has a mainly tiled façade with gable ended roof to the east, and a painted brick extension under a half hipped roof on that side. No 3 (late C19) is a plain brick gable ended building with a 3 window painted brick front to the south. The building was used as a public house (the Railway Hotel) in the C19 and until 1910. It then became a laundry and 2 cottages. There are possible remains of fixtures for a pub sign on the upper floor of No 1. [JE17]

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Page 6: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ051395

Tilehurst The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NR

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Row of three 2 storey cottages on west side of common. Mid to late C19. Red brick ground floor in Flemish bond with random blue headers to ground floor. Tile hanging to first floor with darker scalloped alternate courses above brick modillion course. Gabled projecting bays with multi-pane double hung sash windows on ground and first floors to end houses. Left house has open timber gabled porch to left of bay. Centre house has window and gabled porch, with gablet to first floor window. Right house has porch to right of projecting bay. Brick segmental arches to ground floor windows. Gable ended tiled roof. Two step headed brick chimneys at ridge, either side of centre house. Red brick boundary wall with half round brick coping to front. Left cottage has modern 2 storey side extension in matching style, right cottage has similar single storey extension.

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Page 7: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061391

1 to 4 Lades Cottages Ewhurst Road Cranleigh GU6 7AE

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Two pairs of 2 storey semi-detached cottages on north-west side of Ewhurst Road. Mid C19 [JE39]. Built in rat-trap red brickwork, Nos 1 and 2 with tiled roof and Nos 3 and 4 with slate roof. Chimneys at end gables. Nos 1 and 2 each have 2 windows with cemented splayed lintels and modern casements, and central entrance doors (No 1 with open gabled porch). Nos 3 and 4 similar, but one window each, and paired entrance doors and blank window recess above. One- brick boundary wall to front (not original). [SW61]

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Page 8: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ056392

1 to 4 Rowland Road Cranleigh GU6 8SW

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: This is a nice group of two pairs of brick and tile two storey semi-detached houses with dormers, now each converted into flats. They have characteristics of the “Queen Anne” style, with rubbed voussoirs and keystones to the arched entrances, tile hanging to the spandrels of the half-hexagonal window bays, moulded cornices at the first floor, leaded lights and prominent gabled dormers. They date probably from before the First World War, and appear to be largely in their original condition. They are well worth inclusion on the List.

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Page 9: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ057393

1-6 Bank Buildings + 141 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8BB

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Row of 6 three storey shops with flats over, and later bank building at east end, on north side of High Street. Built in the 1890s in typical “turn of the century” style. Brick first floors and tiled roof. Projecting window bays to first floor of each shop unit with jettied gables over, half timbered with rendered infill. Left 2 units have 3 light rectangular bays, remainder have paired semi-octagonal bays with scallop tiled or rendered spandrels and swept lead roofs, and between them paired 3 light windows and flat headed 3 light dormers in roof over. Bank has brick ground floor with stone dressings to 4 light window and doorway at right, stone string course and recessed brick first floor, and steep gable to east. [SW51,63]

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Page 10: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061390

1-6 Legion Court Ewhurst Road Cranleigh GU6 7HX

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Multi-purpose building on south side of Ewhurst Road, dating probably from the late C19. A staircase leads from the road between 2 Dutch gabled lock-up shops in painted brickwork, up to the red brick gable end of the upper floor. That floor was used as the village hall until the new hall in the High Street was built in 1933. There is a brick modillion cornice to the eaves of the gable, and the original entrance to the hall is headed by a segmental brick arch with a blind shallow pointed relieving arch and vertical slit window above. The east side of the upper floor is marked by a glazed conservatory or belvedere with a pyramidal tiled roof, flanked by tile hung gables. Similar gables on west side. The lower floor of the building was first used partly as a shop and partly to house a manual fire engine, then as a club room by the Royal British Legion from the mid C20 until a new club room was built in Parsonage Road in 199* Apart from the shops, the whole building is now converted to flats known as Legion Court, with garages at the south end of the lower floor. [SW94,95]

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Page 11: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ062390

5 Mead Road Cranleigh GU6 7BG

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Two storey cottage on north side of Mead Road. Red brick front in Flemish bond under tiled roof. Probably mid C19, but could be re-fronting of earlier timber framed cottage, as Bay Tree Cottage (qv). Two casement windows under segmental arches, 2 light to left and 3 light to right. Right ground floor window replaced by modern projecting 4 light splayed bay. Six panel entrance door in centre (the top panels glazed), also under segmental arch with flat hood on corbels over. Boundary fence in rat-trap brickwork with half round coping.

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Page 12: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ062391

7 & 9 Mead Road Cranleigh GU6 7BG

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Semi-detached pair of 2 storey cottages, end on to road. Red brick in Flemish bond with tiled roofs and tiled gable end. Possibly C18. Rear part has blue headers and slightly higher ridge line, and may be later than front part. Tiled pentices over front and side entrances to No 7, gabled side entrance porch to No 9 with tiled roof. Modern windows generally with timber lintels, but brick soldier arch to front first floor window. One brick boundary wall in Flemish bond to front, with half round coping and blue headers. 1913 OS plan in CLT shows the building divided into 4 cottages.

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Page 13: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ050395

Apple Tree Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NS

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Tile hung and tile roofed cottage on west side of common. C18/C19. Modern windows and front walling, rendered extension attached left. Rear part an “L”-shaped barn converted to residential use. Once used as a tea room. [SW114,115]

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Page 14: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ060390

Cranleigh Arts Centre 1 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AS

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Former National School on north side of High Street, between Church Lane and Ewhurst Road (closed in 1964 and since used as arts centre) [JE45]. Original 2 classrooms in centre of frontage date from 1847, built in stone in Tudor style with gable ends and 2 semi-octagonal window bays with gables over and slate roof. Bell turret to east gable. Side wings added in stone in 1872, with gothic windows in Decorated style to end gables and 2 gabled side bays, and tiled roof. Modern glazed entrance porch at front and assembly hall at rear. [SW22-24, LT47-74]

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Page 15: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ055392

Baltic House The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SL

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Two storey house on north side of common. Mid C20. “L”-shaped plan. Red brick in stretcher bond. Ground floor leaded light window bays to front and east side. Half timbered jettied front to first floor with brick infill and projecting hipped 4 leaded light window bay. Leaded corner light to first floor of rear wing. Hipped tiled roofs, with small gablet to front. Half brick wall to front boundary with half-round clay pot capping and brick piers to entrance gates.

Built by local firm of Warrens in characteristic style. Contains a number of original bespoke features.

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Page 16: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ053393

Baptist Chapel High Street Cranleigh GU6 8RT

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Built 1889. Single gable ended cell oriented north to south, with gallery to north and baptistery and dais to south. Red brick with plum/grey brick dressings to windows and quoins, and in string bands to north elevation, with blind gothic arch in apex of gable. Steep pitched gabled porch. Tall gothic windows either side of porch, and 2 gothic windows to side elevations with gablets over. Vestry rooms to south. [JE19] New larger church built 2007 on adjoining car park land to west, with glazed link to original building.

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Page 17: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061390

Bay Tree Cottage 1 Mead Road Cranleigh GU6 7BG

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Two storey timber framed cottage on north side of road. Two bay open hall house with many original features. Early C16, reclad in 1842 [JE39]. Brick in Flemish bond under tiled roof. Two windows, 3 light casements, the ground floor windows under segmental brick arches. Open gabled porch in centre. Chimney to right gable and at left rear. [SW61]

Studied in detail by DBRG and dendro-dated to 1541. From its structure it appears to be transitional between an open hall and a smoke bay was added at inception possibly as an afterthought by the owner. Diagonal mullion holes are visible in the end wall. In the outer cladding a brick was found with date 1826 inscribed in it before firing. Possible candidate for Grade II list

Page 18: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ050394

Bendbrook The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NR

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Two storey semi-detached cottages on west side of common. Mid to late C19. Rendered ground floor and scallop tile hanging to first floor. Gable ended slate roof with red ridge tiles. Modern multi-pane casement windows, 4 light to left ground floor (Bendbrook), 2 light and 2 light in rectangular bay (former doorway?) to right (Brook Cottage), 3 light windows to first floor of each cottage. Step headed brick chimney with blue headers to centre of front roof slope. Bendbrook with paved hardstanding and lean-to entrance port at left. Picket fence and gate to Brook Cottage right. Extension to rear.

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Page 19: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ056374

Boy and Donkey Knowle Lane Cranleigh GU6 8JW

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: A “T”-shaped brick and tile two storey house, gabled ended to each wing, and with “chalet” style hipped roof extension with dormer to the rear. Built as a private dwelling in the early to mid 19th century, it became a popular public house in the latter part of that century, but has now reverted to residential status. It is undistinguished architecturally, but is worth inclusion for its local historic interest. (AC 62)

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Page 20: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ053394

Briarfield The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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Two storey house on east side of common. Gable ended to front. C20 inter-war (Wade/Warren) left with later extension right. Left side half timbered with red brick infill, herring-bone pattern to jettied first floor and jettied spandrel of gable. Five light leaded windows to each floor. Tiled roof. Step headed chimney to left side. Hipped roofed 2 storey extension right, with brick ground floor and scallop tile hanging to first floor. Once home to P B H May, captain of England and Surrey CC

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Page 21: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ050394

Brook Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NR

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Two storey semi-detached cottages on west side of common. Mid to late C19. Rendered ground floor and scallop tile hanging to first floor. Gable ended slate roof with red ridge tiles. Modern multi-pane casement windows, 4 light to left ground floor (Bendbrook), 2 light and 2 light in rectangular bay (former doorway?) to right (Brook Cottage), 3 light windows to first floor of each cottage. Step headed brick chimney with blue headers to centre of front roof slope. Bendbrook with paved hardstanding and lean-to entrance port at left. Picket fence and gate to Brook Cottage right. Extension to rear.

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Page 22: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ061389

Brookmead Horsham Road Cranleigh GU6 8DJ

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Two storey house on the south-east corner of the junction between side of Horsham Road and Overford Drive. About 1880. Red brick with yellow brick window jambs, and whitened shallow window arches with incised motifs and keystones. Four paned double hung sashes. Hipped roofed semi octagonal window bay left and 4 paired windows right, brick entrance porch with shallow arched doorway left of centre. Four windows to first floor. Two end gables with 2 gablets between to north elevation, with scalloped tile hanging to spandrels. Tiled roof. Multi flue step headed chimneys at ridge, one at the east gable and one left of west gable. Two storey extension in similar style to south-west. Now used as a Veterinary Surgery.

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Page 23: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ060390

Bullimores House Church Lane Cranleigh GU6 8AR

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Two storey offices facing south behind Arts Centre. Built in 1885 by Sir Herbert Peek (MP for Mid Surrey 1868-1874, Bt 1874) in memory of his wife, Margaret Maria née Edgar, who died at their home in Rousdon House, Devon, in 1884*. The building was used for community purposes for 100 years under the terms of the endowment. It was known as the Lady Peek Institute, and until 1985 it housed a men’s club, and latterly the Citizens Advice Bureau and the Library. Brick ground floor and tile hung first floor, with alternating plain and scallop courses over brick modillion course. Tiled roof with gables to front and rear at right, and further gable in centre. Arched double entrance doors at centre with two light windows either side, all under curved braces and tiled head. Four light window to right, and three light windows in gables. Gabled single storey extension with brick buttresses to lane and attic room over at rear. [SW22] *details from Newsletter Number Six of Society of Edgar families, Melbourne, Australia

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Page 24: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ056391

Caryll House The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SL

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Two storey house on north side of common. Built 1832. [Visible in photo of 1887 in SW67] Late Georgian character. Red brick, hipped slate roof, with half hexagonal hipped window bays either side of entrance. Step headed brick chimneys left and right. Entrance doorcase with Tuscan pilasters and flat hood on consoles, fanlight over multipane door. Windows 6 pane double hung sliding sashes with wide centre panes, flat arches with voussoirs over.

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Page 25: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ061389

Cherries Horsham Road Cranleigh GU6 BDJ

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Two storey house on south side of Horsham Road facing Lucks Green. C18. Red brick in Flemish bond under slate roof with red ridge tiles. Three 16 pane double hung sash windows with blue brick shallow arched heads. Later gabled entrance porch in similar style at centre, and hipped tiled roofed extension left, built as shop in 1920s in the ownership of Mr and Mrs Elsey [MM], and now used as a garage. End chimneys.

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Page 26: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ052396

Common House The Common Cranleigh GU6 8QA

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Two storey house on east side of common. Farmhouse, possibly C17, until about 1900 [JE7]. Now much altered. Rendered hipped slate roofed extension to front. Tiled first floor. Hipped tiled roof. Originally 3 multi-paned double hung sliding sash windows, now additional window bay at left, part of adjoining house at High Hollicks. Ground floor with paired windows either side of entrance door. Step headed rough cast chimneys to right and at ridge to left. Brick boundary wall with half round coping to front. [SW58,60]

c.1920

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Page 27: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ057390

Devon House 74 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AH

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Devon House comprises two adjoining shops but the left hand portion is later and of inferior quality. Only the right hand portion (Cranleigh Fish) is considered worthy of listing. Two storeys with attic. Built 1920/30 in style typical of local firm Warrens. Upper floors with half-timbered effect. Tiled roof, gabled and stepping forward at attic level. Four leaded light windows to centre of first floor and two light attic window in gable. Shopfront to right probably original, with 3 panelled splayed 3⁄4 height multipaned folding doors left, recessed multipaned entrance right, and consoles to fascia.

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Page 28: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ051395

Drinking Fountain The Common Cranleigh

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Red brick drum on circular brick and stone base, with faucets to north and south. Two line inscription on stone band: 1887. - Huncce fontem Victoriae D.G. Mag. Brit. Et Hib. Regin. Ind. Imp. Cum annum Lmum jam regnasset scholae Cranleighiensis alumni dicaverunt (now almost indecipherable). Four stone shields above that, and then conical cap in carved stone. The inscription may be translated as ”Old boys of Cranleigh School dedicated this fountain to Victoria - by the grace of God Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India - in the fiftieth year of her reign.“ Erected to commemorate Queen Victoria’s silver jubilee, and designed by Henry Woodyer. (Date of design given in Henry Woodyer: Gentleman Architect, edited by John Elliott & John Pritchard, University of Reading, 1995, from list of drawings from Woodyer’s office, now in the RIBA.) Account of dedication given in History of Cranleigh School, M Payne.

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Page 29: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ050394

Elm Tree Cottages The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NS

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Two pairs of two storey gable ended linked cottages, red brick ground floors, tile hung first floors and slate roofs with red ridge tiles. Mid to late C19. Left pair have double side hung multi-pane casements, brick segmental arches to ground floor. Projecting open gabled porch at centre with scooped bargeboard. Tile hanging with scalloped alternate courses. Brick chimneys with blue brick headers and modillion course to receding stepped head in centre front and back of roof slopes. Similar but lower and probably earlier, pair of cottages right, with gabled porches on either side and one window each at centre, plain tiling to upper floor and shallower roof slope with catslide at rear. Chimney (without blue headers) at centre of ridge.

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Page 30: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ062389

Englefield Bridge Road Cranleigh GU6 7HH

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: A substantial two storey house built in 1902 by local builder J H Holden & Sons for the Rev’d Allan, Headmaster of Cranleigh School. The entrance is from Bridge Road, although the house fronts on to Horsham Road, where there is access across the stream by a footbridge with lattice work sides. This frontage elevation is nice and symmetrical, with two splayed window bays with moulded cornices on each floor, oversailing gables and a central chimney. Even the rainwater pipes make a symmetrical pattern. The major building material is local red brick and the vertical tiling extends from the first floor up to apex of the gables. An outshot to the east covers a recently glazed in verandah terminating the long catslide roof above it. Internally the entrance lobby has a gothic style window with diamond glazing. In the entrance hall is a fine staircase in Oregon Pine with bespoke turned banisters with cricket ball style adornments. In the sitting room the inglenook fireplace opening is framed in Oregon Pine pilasters with vertical chasings. To the rear and west side of the house are the converted servants quarters and in the kitchen the original bell pull system is still in working order. The house was later occupied by a Major Bourne and his two daughters who ran the local Girls Friendly Society from here. From the 1950’s the owner was Mrs Hooper, until the 1980’s when the present owners took over.

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Page 31: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ061388

Flagstones 22 Horsham Road Cranleigh GU6 8DW

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Two storey brown and red brick mid C20 detached house. Half-hipped tiled roof. Projecting porch and staircase block under catslide gable with diaper patterned brickwork in upper spandrel, recessed entrance to left and sexpartite stair window in centre. Further 2 storey gabled projection in similar style to left with ranges of service windows on each floor. Brick chimney with stepped cap to left of this gable. Half-hipped 2 casement dormer in roof to right. All windows leaded. Detached brick garage to front. Idiosyncratic style with Arts & Crafts resonances.

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Page 32: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ055392

Laurel Cottage, Forge Cottage and Maple Leaf Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SJ

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Terrace of 3 two storey gable ended cottages on north side of common. Late C19. Red brick ground floor and scallop tile hanging to first floor over brick modillion course. Gabled timber open entrance porches. Four main casement windows, 3 light with segmental arches to ground floor and 2 light with gablets to first floor. Additional 4 light leaded window over porch to left hand cottage (Laurel Cottage). Two brick step headed chimneys to front of roof slope and cluster at ridge, left of centre. Half brick wall to front boundary with half-round clay pot capping. The right hand end terrace is known to be later (mid C20) but blends well with the earlier structure. In the later part of the C19 it was home to the Trussler family who were one of the village blacksmiths.

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Page 33: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ052409

Four Elms Cottage Smithwood Common Cranleigh GU6 8QP

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Former public house (for some 200 years), now a detached dwelling, in row of detached and semi-detached houses in former Alderbrook estate. Main house of early nineteenth century appearance, double pile, two storeys with rendered ground floor, tile hung first floor, tiled roof gable-ended to right, and hipped roofed two-storey part to left. Central chimney to front pile. Victorian flat roofed ground floor extension at front with slated hipped surrounds, and further extensions at the side and rear. Original house dates from 1645, and some original timbers remain in the south-west corner, together with an early roof structure.

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Page 34: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ063391

Hastie Cottage Ewhurst Road Cranleigh GU6 7AG

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Two storey brick and tile cottage on south-east side of Ewhurst Road. Left half of semi-detached pair. Possibly C17 [DBRG], in Flemish bond with blue headers. Modern windows. Gablet with tiled spandrel to left hand first floor window. Chimney to left gable.

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Page 35: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ059359

1 to 6 Hazelwood Cottages Knowle Lane Cranleigh GU6 8JP

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: An outlying row of 4 cottages and a semi-detached pair, built in the late nineteenth century to accommodate workers at the nearby Hazelwood Brickworks (now closed). The row of four in red brickwork in Flemish bond, with gault modillion and string course at first floor level, cambered window heads in gauged red brick, and steep tiled roof with two chimney stacks in panelled brickwork and modillion coursed head. The semi-detached pair gable-ended to the street with two storey extension at right angles to the rear. Built in paler brickwork laid in English bond, wide cambered window openings with splayed brick reveals, elaborate 3-course string courses at first floor and roof level, and brick “pilaster” marking the party wall end at the centre of the roof gable. Probably of mid nineteenth century date, with later porch and other additions. Included for local historic interest, and for examples of decorative brickwork.

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Page 36: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ059360

The Hazelwood Mission Room c/o Osier Wood Knowle Lane Cranleigh GU6 8JP

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Built by St Nicolas' Church in 1900 to serve the Hazelwood District of Cranleigh. The foundation stone bears the inscription “Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us/ But unto Thy Name be the praise”. The Room is a simple red brick structure, gable ended with pitched tiled roof and projecting door pentices at each end, and is of the same plan as a room given by Mr Ramsden to the parish of Shamley Green. It was able to seat 70 comfortably, with a harmonium to provide musical accompaniment. Weekly services were held to begin with, but this reduced to alternate weeks in the inter-war period. Attendance declined after the Second World War, and it was closed in June 1975. The room is now used as bed sitting rooms in conjunction with the adjoining house, Osier Wood, on whose land it was originally built. The structure nevertheless remains in its original condition, and although relatively undistinguished architecturally it is worth inclusion on the list for its local historic interest.

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Page 37: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ052395

High Gables The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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Right half with Wakehurst (qv) of pair of 2 storey houses with attics on east side of common. Late C19. Brick ground floor, scalloped tile hanging to first floor and attic. Open gabled porch left with window over. Attic window and steep gable over to right, carved bargeboards to gable and end gable. Modern window bays to front and side and modern conservatory to side. Two storey extension to rear. Concrete tile roof with brick upstand and urn to kneeler left. Brick boundary wall with stone cappings and hedge over to front. [SW59,77] First owner was George Bruford, owner of the local brewery.

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Page 38: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ064382

High Park Cottage 100 Horsham Road Cranleigh GU6 8DY

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Two storey cottage set back from the south side of Horsham Road. Possibly mid C17. Brick with tile hanging to the first floor. Tiled roof with tiled gable end, alternate plain and scalloped courses. Chimney to right hand end. Lean-to extensions to left and right. Two latticed casement windows to first floor, one 3 light and one 2 light, and single light in left gable end. In the C19 it was the home of the Nightingale family who farmed the land to the south east [MM]. Small garage at roadside, timber framed with decorative brick infills, probably of more recent construction.

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Page 39: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ057390

Kent House 75-81High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AU

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Two storey house on north side of High Street now used as shops. Probably originally end C16 or early C17 [JE50]. Original house front recessed at first floor centre, rendered with 2 12-pane double hung sliding sash windows, and 3 light quadrant window at high level between. Slate roof. C19 projecting tiled roofed gabled wings to left and right, part rendered, part pebble-dashed to left, rendered to right with tile hanging to first floor side elevation. Ground floor row of late C20 shopfronts with brick plinth and continuous fascia divided by consoles and modillioned cornice over. Original timbers internally, including substantial moulded beams in original entrance, suggesting former use as institutional building. Left hand end was once Frank Winsers Tea Rooms [AC30] [SW44] [Note: Curiously, this building does not appear on the versions of the Ordnance Survey plans of 1891 and 1913 that are printed in Cranleigh Life and Times published in 1999.]

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Page 40: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ057390

Kent House 83 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AU

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Two storey shop on north side of High Street. Built 1920/30. Half timbered with red brick infill, parts in herring bone pattern in side elevation in the Warren style. Gables to front and side, jettied over 4 light window bays with latticed leaded lights. Tiled roof. Projecting canopy to ground floor with arched timber framing, over semi-circular windows with brick plinths either side of entrance. Lower half hipped extension to rear with scalloped tile hanging to upper floor. Now a charity shop but used as bakery from mid to late C20 when it was known as Hibbs. It incorporated a tea room on the first floor. Built on site of Winser’s coal merchants [SW44]. May incorporate older buildings at rear.

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Page 41: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ056385

Knowle Lodge Knowle Lane Cranleigh GU6 8JL

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Two storey cottage in cream painted brickwork with tiled roof, gable ended to right and with tall gable to 4-light first floor window, 2 pairs of heavy headed chimney stacks on diagonal to rear roof slope and semi-hexagonal bay to ground floor right. Projecting porch centre front with swept copper roof and shuttered 2-light windows to either side. Heavy batter to end of front wall at right. Single storey extension at rear. Originally part of Knowle Park Estate, one of the original Cranleigh Manor Houses. The house itself was rebuilt in 1823, and is now used as a nursing home. The lodge is illustrated in a mid nineteenth century book in an article concerning “Knoll, or Knowle, in Cranley Parish”, where it is shown with a half-hipped gable to the full width of the front, an open gabled porch, decorative bargeboards to the gables, and hooded windows with lattice casements

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Page 42: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ055392

Laurel Cottage, Forge Cottage and Maple Leaf Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SJ

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Terrace of 3 two storey gable ended cottages on north side of common. Late C19. Red brick ground floor and scallop tile hanging to first floor over brick modillion course. Gabled timber open entrance porches. Four main casement windows, 3 light with segmental arches to ground floor and 2 light with gablets to first floor. Additional 4 light leaded window over porch to left hand cottage (Laurel Cottage). Two brick step headed chimneys to front of roof slope and cluster at ridge, left of centre. Half brick wall to front boundary with half-round clay pot capping. The right hand end terrace is known to be later (mid C20) but blends well with the earlier structure. In the later part of the C19 it was home to the Trussler family who were one of the village blacksmiths.

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Page 43: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ061390

Little Causey Ewhurst Road Cranleigh GU6 7EA

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Two storey house on north side of Ewhurst Road, on triangular island site between the road, a green adjoining the Arts Centre on the west side, and a public footpath on the north side. “L”-shaped gable ended plan with half timbered elevations infilled in red brickwork in stretcher bond and windows with leaded lights. North-west gable jettied at first floor. Built in the 1920s by local firm Warrens in characteristic style. The brick workshop building used as garage on the west side of the site was James Cheesman’s paint shop in the early C20 [SW29]. [Contrary to the impression given in the caption to SW29, it has not yet been pulled down.] It is not shown in a photograph of 1902 [CLT89], but is marked as “Fire Station” on the 1913 Ordnance Survey plan [CLT88], but this cannot be confirmed. A photograph of 1913 shows glazed double doors to the street, now partly bricked up [AC38]. One and a half brick boundary wall of that period with rounded brick coping on footpath side of site, matching similar wall to The Causey on the north side of the footpath.

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Page 44: Annex 4 - Waverley
Page 45: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061390

Lucks Green Cottage Lucks Green Cranleigh GU6 8DP

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White painted gable ended 2 storey brick cottage set back from the north side of the green. Slate roof extending in catslide form over single storey rear addition. C 1776 [MM]. Three casement windows with modern multi-paned casements under segmental arches. [SW146 at extreme right]

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Page 46: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061392

Lych Gate The Cemetery Dewlands Lane Cranleigh

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Open gabled timber structure built by the Parish Council in 1901, with four braced king post trusses, part stone, brick and rendered sides, timber double gateway, brick floor and tiled roof. Included for local interest.

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Page 47: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ057390

Manns of Cranleigh 101-105 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AY

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Two storey frontage building to hardware and furnishings store, and converted cottage to right. Main building originally 3 shops (one a post office) of mid C19 date, with evidence of a much earlier building. Opened by David Mann as furniture store from 1887, with ground floor shopfront rebuilt in 1900. Later lean-to extension on west side with arched red brick end and parapet above. First floor tile hung with alternate bands of plain and scalloped tiles. End gables fronting street. Tiled roof. Converted cottage at right was Cromwell Cottage, probably mid C16. Ground floor modern bowed shopfront between red brick walling. Scalloped tile hanging to gable above, with central gothic arched latticed window and ornately carved bargeboard. Similar details to return of first floor on east side. [JE52, SW45,46, CLT26]

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Page 48: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ055392

Laurel Cottage, Forge Cottage and Maple Leaf Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SJ

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Terrace of 3 two storey gable ended cottages on north side of common. Late C19. Red brick ground floor and scallop tile hanging to first floor over brick modillion course. Gabled timber open entrance porches. Four main casement windows, 3 light with segmental arches to ground floor and 2 light with gablets to first floor. Additional 4 light leaded window over porch to left hand cottage (Laurel Cottage). Two brick step headed chimneys to front of roof slope and cluster at ridge, left of centre. Half brick wall to front boundary with half-round clay pot capping. The right hand end terrace is known to be later (mid C20) but blends well with the earlier structure. In the later part of the C19 it was home to the Trussler family who were one of the village blacksmiths.

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Page 49: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ048395

March House The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NS

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Two storey house on north side of common. Mid C19. Painted brick with tiled roof, brick string course to first floor. Three windows, 4 pane double hung sashes, with segmental brick arches over. Gabled projecting centre bay with open metalwork porch roofed in ogee leadwork. Step headed brick chimneys at gable ends. Modern extension to right.

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Page 50: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ055391

The Methodist Church 188 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8RL

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Gable ended to south side of the High Street, with open gabled porch to east side. Built 1904. Bargate stonework in random rubble with ashlar quoins and window surrounds. Prominent arched latticed window in centre of gable end, with tracery in Decorated style, including a Star of David at the head. Overhanging eaves above, with projecting purlins and openwork timber ‘gallery’ at the apex. Slate roof surmounted by tower with weather vane. For more information on the history of the church see “The Methodist Church Cranleigh 1904-2004” by Geoff King.

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Page 51: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ059391

Moat Lodge Parsonage Road Cranleigh GU6 7UB

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Built as Rectory for Archdeacon Sapte in 1863 on moated site to north of former Georgian Rectory [SW14] (which is now the site of the present Rectory). Used, with extensions to west, as sheltered accommodation from 1977. Designed by Henry Woodyer, who also designed extensions to St Nicolas’ Church and the original buildings of Cranleigh School. Red brick 2 pile form with gable ends to east and west, and tile hung gable to attic storey with 5 light window bay in centre of south front. Hipped bay to ground floor below with angled brick corner buttresses and centre buttress. Windows in form of grouped lancets in stone surrounds, 4 light to ground floor (divided by buttress in bay) and 3 light to side windows to first floor, with run of 8 lancets (2 blank) in centre. Large open gabled porch to east side. Tiled roofs. Original oak dresser from kitchen now installed in dining room of present Rectory. [JE47]

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Page 52: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ054391

Tudor House/Northampton House 190 to 196 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8RL

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Pair of shops with living accommodation above on south side of High Street, each with white pebble dashed first floors and 2 projecting gables over, the spandrels also pebble dashed. Early C20. pair of shops. End gables over 4 light curved window bays with leaded lights. Centre gables slightly recessed over 3 light window bays. Decorative carved oak shop front framing, with flat entrances at either end under blocked fascia. Modern shop fonts, that at Tudor House being timber framed with shallow curved glass windows.

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Page 53: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ064392

Okehurst New Park Road Cranleigh GU6 7HJ

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Late C19 villa at east corner of junction with Ewhurst Road. 1897 [MM] Two storeys with some attic rooms, one in turret with scalloped tiling and half timbered window panelling under pyramidal roof at west corner. Red brick with tiled roof. Gables with rendered spandrels, scallop tiled at apex, to north-west and south-west, the gable on the south-west side jettied over semi-hexagonal window bay. Lean-to open entrance porch to ground floor on south-west side. Windows with decorative brick aprons under brick voussoirs with stone keystones, to south-west double hung sliding sashes with 8 panes to upper sash, to north-west three light casements in similar style. Decorative brick panel to first floor on north-west side. Decorative ridge tiling. Elaborate chimneys to north-east and south-east. This was one of the first houses to be built on the New Park estate when the value of the building had to be at least £1000. After the war it was the home of author Arthur Calder-Marshall and his daughter the actress Anna Calder-Marshall

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Page 54: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ056391

Old Bank Building 137 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AU

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Three storey building with splayed corner entrance at north-east corner of High Street and Rowland Road. Built as London and County Bank c1890-1900, now shop. Ground floor painted stone with shallow pilasters and cornice over. Shopfront to High Street replaces original 2 shallow arched windows (3 still present on side elevation). Flat hood carried on consoles over entrance. Upper floors red brick with stone surrounds to leaded light windows. Two similar bays to side elevation, then lower extension in “Arts and Crafts” style with brick ground floor and rendered upper floors. Stonework carried up as gables to front, splayed corner and first bay of return elevation. Hipped tiled roof. [SW51]

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Page 55: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ062390

Old Barn Cottage 3 Mead Road Cranleigh GU6 7BG

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Two storey “L”-shaped cottage with gables to west and south on north side of road. Mainly early to mid C20, but right hand part may be older. Ground floors red brick to west wing and random stone with brick quoins to south wing. First floors and gables tile hung with continuous scalloped band at window height and in diamond patterns to gables. Modern casement windows and entrance door.

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Page 56: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ060390

The Old Court Church Lane Cranleigh GU6 8AR

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“U”-shaped 2 storey house behind Arts Centre, formed in 1920s from C17 buildings used as a dray yard and bottle store for the nearby Brufords Brewery [MM]. Red brick with weather-boarding to first floor of end gable to left and spandrel of gable to centre of side elevation of that wing. Half hipped tiled roofs. Brick screen wall with arched opening and round headed plank door to courtyard and plank entrance door to right wing. Latticed leaded lights and substantial brick chimneys. Partly shown on the front jacket of SW. Old timbers for the conversion possibly taken from the old windmill demolished in 1917 [MM]. The conversion was reported in Country Life of July 19th 1919 and Small Country Houses of Today Ch XXXI Pg 143.

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Page 57: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ058390

Primrose Cottage 31 & 33 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AS

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Pair of mid C19 semi-detached cottages set back on north side of High Street. Projecting twin gables at centre with brick ground floor and banded plain and scalloped tile hanging to first floor and roof. One window to each, 12-pane double hung sliding sashes, the ground floor windows with segmental brick arches and the first floor windows with splayed tile hoods over. Gabled timber open porches to left and right. Gable ended roof with multiform brick chimney stack at centre of ridge. Brick boundary wall with random blue headers and half round coping to front. [SW41,42]

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Page 58: Annex 4 - Waverley
Page 59: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ056390

Richmond House 122 - 130 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8RE

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Row of 3 two storey shop units with attics used as jewellers, building society offices and chemists. Early C20. First floors rendered with 2 double hung sash windows with 4 pane heading to upper sashes, attics tiled with 3 gables and single 3 light double hung sash windows (2 light to right). Slate roofs. Modern shopfronts. Two storey extension to left with brick ground floor, rendered first floor and half hipped attic, used as restaurant. Double hung sash windows. Single storey shop infill on street corner. Site of right hand lodge to Knowle House. Corner shop was used as the village post office from 1911 to 1959. [SW55, CLT27]

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Page 60: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061390

Rosedene Lucks Green Cranleigh GU6 8DP

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Two storey 2 pile C18 cottage on the north side of the green, with attached garage on west side. Pale grey painted brickwork. Ground floor has glass roofed lean-to verandah, with central entrance door and 3 light casement windows on either side. Three windows with white window surrounds to first floor, 4 pane double hung sliding sashes. Moulded cornice with egg and dart moulding and parapet with 4 ball finials. Flanking chimneys. Garage front in white painted brickwork in similar style to main building with further ball finial. Rear pile shows tiled spandrel to gable end of pitched slate roof. Associated with Blanch and Walder families [JE34]. Former grade III listed before grade abolished in 1970.

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Page 61: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ052395

Southfold The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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Linked 2 storey houses. Early C20. Brick ground floors, scallop tile hanging above brick modillion course over. Projecting gabled bays left and right. Southfold (left) has with hipped roofed semi-octagonal window bay left and right of gabled entrance porch. Bucklers (right) has hipped roofed rectangular window to projecting bay, and 2 storey gabled extensions in matching style to right. Step headed brick chimneys to left and right of main structure. [SW77]

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Page 62: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ595390

Street Memorial Cross St Nicholas’s Churchyard Cranleigh GU6 8AS

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Erected by the architect G E Street RA in memory of his first wife, Jessie Mary Anne, who died within 2 months of their marriage in 1876. (Her body was interred in Cranleigh Churchyard, but in 1879 it was removed to St Mary’s Church, Holmbury St Mary, built by Street at his own expense and incorporating a canopied tomb containing her coffin, which is on the outside south wall of the chapel on the north side of the church.) [RR79, NP315] Narrowing octagonal stone shaft on multi-stage plinth. Battlemented circlet with patera frieze at head, surmounted by hooded and bracketed Latin cross, facing east and west. The north side of the plinth incorporates a plaque in the form of a tabernacle, inscribed with the dates of Jessie Mary Anne’s birth, marriage and death and the mottos “Jesus IHS Mercy”, and “They that sow in tears shall reap in love”.

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Page 63: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ059390

Sundial House 20 to 24 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AE

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Two storey half timbered and “L”-shaped building with tiled roof on south side of High Street. Mock Tudor style, with whitened infills and rendered east elevations. Projecting one storey bay with 4 light latticed window bay left, projecting 2 storey gabled wing right with shop front formed of bowed 4 light latticed windows with entrance at centre. Two storey entrance porch, open at ground floor, at angle of the “L” with gablet over. Four latticed windows to first floor, the right hand window in projecting frame and with jettied spandrel to the gable over. Gibbet sign in forecourt from earlier use as a tea rooms, but now used as 2 shops.

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Page 64: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ048395

The Chestnuts The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NS

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Two storey house on north side of common. ?Mid C19. Rendered with projecting stone (?Coad stone) quoins and hipped slate roof. Hipped 5 bay conservatory style projecting porch to centre of ground floor, half glazed double entrance doors. Hipped semi-octagonal window bays to either side. Five 4 pane double hung sash windows to first floor. Scalloped modillion courses to eaves of window bays and to first floor. Chimney right with similar styled head. Matching rendered hipped roofed single storey extension right and attached brick garage left.

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Page 65: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ058390

The Coach House 25 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AS

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Former coach house to The Rectory, now Moat Lodge (qv), now used as a private house. Late C19. Brick with tiled roof, and tiled end to gable ended centre section with banded plain and scallop tile hanging. Half hipped single storey extensions at each end, that at the south end having an end garage opening and gabled side windows. Segmental arches to ground floor windows of two storey side elevation, coach wheel decoration over. Brick boundary wall with half round coping to front. The tiling pattern to the gabled centre section is repeated on the side gable and front walls of the adjoining houses, Primrose Cottage and Little Cottage (qv), creating an interesting architectural composition. Include for local historic interest.

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Page 66: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ054393

The Coach House The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SN

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Former coach house to Stonewall (now Whiteoaks) on opposite (west) side of private drive (which also leads to Little Stonewall and Stonewall Farm House to the north). Built in the mid to late nineteenth century, of two storeys of brick and tile construction. Main elevation marked by a central arched opening (now a pair of half glazed doors) and three gabled dormers to the upper floor, the centre gable being larger than those to south and north with hoist entry, cantilevered cornice, and dove or pigeon loft above. This may have been a hay loft. Roof hipped to either end. Much altered and extended, but an interesting survival. Include for local historic interest.

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Page 67: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ055392

The Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SJ

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Two storey late C19 house on the north side of the Common. Red brick and slate roof. In two parts, the right hand part 2 windows wide in Flemish bond, with hipped roof and hipped brick and slate open porch at ground floor left, and hipped splayed bay window right; the left half a later addition in stretcher bond, slightly recessed and gable ended with plain bargeboard, one window wide with hipped splayed bay at ground floor, and modern extension at the rear. The porch also later, in paler brickwork and framing a 5 panel door and semi-circular fanlight in arched doorcase. The windows all 12 pane sliding sashes with “margin lights”, the first floor windows with segmental arches and brick voussoirs. Frontage may have had two entrances to enable owner to avoid paying the toll, which was sited directly opposite.

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Page 68: Annex 4 - Waverley
Page 69: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ053394

The Covers The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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Two storey house on east side of common. Built 1920s by Mr F Warren for Mrs S L Warren. Half timbered with red brick infill. Jettied gable left over splayed first floor window bay. Recessed ground floor right. Four light windows with leaded lights. Hipped tiled roof with end gablets and step headed brick chimney at ridge centre. Two storey rear extension in matching style with catslide to hipped roofed garage left. Formerly Lavender Cottage.

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Page 70: Annex 4 - Waverley
Page 71: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ051393

The Cranley Hotel High Street Cranleigh GU6 8SQ

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Public house on south side of road opposite cricket green. Early C20 but built around earlier structure. Two storeys with attic. Red brick with blue headers. Three stunted “Dutch” gables to north and one to east elevation of front wing. Tiled roof. Two storey hipped roof wing to rear and hipped roof attic space at centre. Three brick chimneys with brick cornices and string courses. Lean-to extension to north and lean-to entrance porch in rear wing. Single storey extensions to right. Name preserves old spelling of Cranleigh. [see JE17, SW140]

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Page 72: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ048395

The Gabled Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8NS

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Two storey cottage on north side of common. Rendered front, tiled roof. C15 [DBRG] Probably originally pair of semi-detached cottages with half hipped roofs and gablets to 2 first floor windows, tiled in upper spandrels. Now with 2 bay gable ended 2 storey extension to left with 2 additional similar gablets, and further single storey modern red brick extension to left. Three light casement windows with top hung vents to centre lights. Step headed chimney at ridge to right hand pair, at centre of left hand pair, and at extreme right. Hipped ground floor extension to front of original building masks gabled porch to right hand cottage.

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Page 73: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ056390

The Gate House Knowle Lane Cranleigh GU6 8RD

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Two storey detached house, painted brick, “L”-shaped plan with slate roof, gabled to left side and right front and rear, hipped porch in angle at front, long single storey lean-to extension to left. One window under brick cambered arch to each bay, modernised. C 1865 [MM]. Was gate-keeper’s house for railway level crossing.

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Page 74: Annex 4 - Waverley
Page 75: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ058390

The Little Cottage 31 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AS

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Pair of mid C19 semi-detached cottages set back on north side of High Street. Projecting twin gables at centre with brick ground floor and banded plain and scalloped tile hanging to first floor and roof. One window to each, 12-pane double hung sliding sashes, the ground floor windows with segmental brick arches and the first floor windows with splayed tile hoods over. Gabled timber open porches to left and right. Gable ended roof with multiform brick chimney stack at centre of ridge. Brick boundary wall with random blue headers and half round coping to front. [SW41,42]

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Page 76: Annex 4 - Waverley
Page 77: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ053394

Old Baptist Chapel The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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Former chapel on east side of common, set back behind frontage cottages. Red brick in English bond, with modillion course to end gables and eaves, and later gabled entrance proch with carved bargeboard to south elevation. Vestries in extension to west under catslide roof. Round arched windows to either side of entrance and to south elevation of extension. Further half round blocked window at centre of gable above porch, with further small arched opening above. The Baptist chapel and the adjoining burial ground were opened in 1828, and was the first nonconformist church in Cranleigh. The pastor was George Holden. The chapel grounds were subject to a two thousand-year lease, which commenced in 1603 or 1613. The payment for this lease was one red rose per year. Prior to this, Pear Tree Cottage on the common was used for Baptist or Anabaptist services. [SW19, JE5] After the new Baptist Church was built in 1889 the chapel was used as a storeroom and meeting place. It became disused in the 1970s, and was then used by the Cranleigh Youth Band as a bandroom until the new bandroom was opened in 1986 in Village Way. It has now been converted to a dwelling.

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Page 78: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ061390

Cranleigh Forge Mead Road Cranleigh GU6 7BG

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A red brick gable ended workshop with concrete tile roof. Built around 1875 in side road between Mead Road and Lucks Green, on site of C19 smithy [JE36]. No architectural features of interest but hearth has recently been restored and forge is now in working order. Opposite the forge in the grass verge is the original wheelwright’s rimming plate marked Weyman & Johnson, Guildford. Both the forge and the plate are listed in the Heritage Features of Waverley (Site No. 85 and 86). Also see No.101 in the Industrial History of Waverley published by the Surrey Industrial History Group.

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Page 79: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ060390

The Studio Ewhurst Road Cranleigh GU6 7AA

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Single storey red brick building to east of the obelisk at the junction with the High Street and Horsham Road. Attached shop on east side. Most likely built c1900 when H U Knight opened their photographic studio. Now used as insurance agents’ office and countrymen’s shop. Spandrel of gable end to Ewhurst Road is rendered and has stone plaque in shape of descending dove, lettered “The Studio”. Two 4 pane double hung sash windows with brick segmental arches over under gable, C19 shop window over blackened stall riser with corbelled fascia and blind box left. Flat hood on corbels over entrance door in west side. Rendered upper side wall over brick modillion course above and to right of door, with gabled window bay on bowed rendered spandrel. Then multipaned window and return gable to south-east. Hipped tiled roofs with decorative ridge tiles and finials.

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Page 80: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ060390

The Three Horseshoes PH 4 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AE

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Two storeys with half timbered gable to left, 4 bay range with tile hanging to upper floor, hipped roofed dormers and half hipped tiled roof right. Ground floor and infills rendered. Open gabled porch left, hipped projecting bay to ground floor left of centre of 4-bay range. Windows leaded casements. Attic window to left gable. Stepped cap chimneys to left and right, plain chimney at ridge, front centre of 4-bay range. Mid C20 front to late C17 timber structure. Original front illustrated by E Hassell, 1830. Was connected with adjoining smithy, later tied to adjoining steam brewery [JE29].

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Page 81: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ056391

The War Memorial The Common Cranleigh

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Erected on the common in 1920, to commemorate those villagers who died in active service during the war. Designed by Waterhouse and erected by Thorpes the local builder. Built in the style of the Cenotaph (after Lutyens). It was consecrated by the Rector, The Rev’d P Cunningham, on 5 December 1920. The names of those who died in the second world war were added after 1945. A recently added plaque commemorates Major S Birchall, who died in the conflict in Afghanistan. One name erased (Steadman) as later found to have survived.

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Page 82: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ062391

The White Hart Ewhurst Road Cranleigh GU6 7AE

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Two storey building on south-east side of Ewhurst Road. At least 1867 [JE38]. Ground floor white painted brick, first floor and end gables tile hung in alternate plain and scalloped courses. Slate roof. Lean-to at centre of ground floor, with range of 6 arched windows and arched entrances either side, and with projecting tiled gables over the entrances and the 2 centre windows. One further window each side, and dray entrance at left. Six first floor windows, 6 pane double hung sashes, in recessed reveals.

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Page 83: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ054392

The White House The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SJ

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Two storey house on the north side of the common. About 1800. White painted stucco, with hipped slate roof. Original house 3 windows, 4 pane double hung sashes with louvred shutters. Central 4 panel entrance door, under flat hood carried on plain pilasters, consoles and cornice moulding. Later hipped roofed 2 window side wings recessed in matching style, with shallow conservatory projecting to left and garage door to right. Second pile at rear [see SW67]. Step headed chimneys at gable ends of original house. Built by James Puttock, a wheelwright [JE3].

Former grade III listed building before grade was abolished in 1970.

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Page 84: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ54392

Tring House High Street Cranleigh GU6 8RL

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Two storey house with attic on south side of High Street. Early C20. Panelled stucco to ground and first floors, scalloped tile hanging in gable above with decorative bargeboard. Slate roof with red ridge tiles and finials. Projecting entrance bay left with carved ornamental brackets and highly decorated wrought iron balcony railing over. Balcony door under segmental red brick arch at first floor. Projecting red brick bay at right, also with tile hung gable and decorative bargeboard. String course of rosettes in faience work at first floor, with pebble dashed panels to spandrels of windows above. Two plain double hung sash windows to projecting bay, with segmental brick arches to ground floor windows. Further narrow windows on returns. Main attic window paired double hung sashes. Small 2 light casement to attic window in bay. West elevation faced with white painted timber cladding framing pebble dashed panels, and continuation of faience string course, painted white. Modern tile hung dormer at attic level.

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Page 85: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ054391

Tudor House/Northampton House 190 to 196 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8RL

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Pair of shops with living accommodation above on south side of High Street, each with white pebble dashed first floors and 2 projecting gables over, the spandrels also pebble dashed. Early C20. pair of shops. End gables over 4 light curved window bays with leaded lights. Centre gables slightly recessed over 3 light window bays. Decorative carved oak shop front framing, with flat entrances at either end under blocked fascia. Modern shop fonts, that at Tudor House being timber framed with shallow curved glass windows.

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Page 86: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ059391

Vault in Churchyard St Nicolas’ Churchyard Cranleigh GU6 8AS

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Above and below ground stone vault in west side of the churchyard. Designed by Henry Woodyer in 1864 as the private vault of the family of the Rev’d Thomas Thurlow, resident at Baynards from 1832 to 1874 and benefactor of the church. The transepts and organ chamber in the church were also designed by Woodyer and were constructed in 1866-7 at Thurlow’s expense. The vault is inscribed only, in a plaque on the east elevation, with the name of Mary Elma Anstruther of Chelsea (d 1893). From Parish Registers, interments are believed to include Thurlow himself and three other members of his family, and four members of the family of his great-nephew, Thomas Hovell Thurlow Cumming-Bruce, the 5th Baron Thurlow (a daughter, the Baron himself, a son, and his widow, Baroness Thurlow). The Barony was created in 1792 for the Rev’d Thomas Thurlow’s uncle, Edward Thurlow, who was Lord Chancellor in 1778. Mary Elma Anstruther was another daughter of the 5th Baron, but was buried elsewhere. Plaques in the church suggest that members of the Waller family, who succeeded the Thurlows at Baynards, were also buried in this vault. The vault is roofed in large stone sloping slabs, with a plain stone cross at the ends of the gables. The west elevation has an arch with a zig-zag pattern, and 2 smaller blank arches on either side. The east elevation is plain. Faculty drawings show the structure extending 3 feet below ground level with columns supporting the roof, and steps down to a central entrance, now blocked up, below the arch on the west side.

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Page 87: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ058389

The Village Hall 36 High Street Cranleigh GU6 8AF

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Set back from south side of High Street. Built in 1933 as a memorial to villagers killed in World War I. Red brick with gabled half timbered front with white painted infill. Apex of gable projects over multipane latticed window. Hipped projecting entrance bay and centre gable over porte cochere, all also half timbered. East elevation of brick panels between buttresses, the upper parts of the 2 end panels with half timbering, the remainder 4 panels having latticed windows, the end 2 windows surmounted by half timbered gablets. The west elevation a modern extension under a catslide roof. Funds were raised by donations and the land was given by a local benefactor. The hall has been at the centre of community functions ever since. On the exterior a metal weather vane surmounts the porch and is dedicated to 21 years of friendship between Cranleigh and Vallendar in Germany. Also on a raised area in front of the building is metal sculpture commemorating the Millennium in 2000. Buried beneath is time capsule with contributions from local organisations

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Page 88: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ052395

Wakehurst The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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Left half with High Gables (qv) of pair of 2 storey houses with attics on east side of common. Late C19. Red brick front with gault dressings. Semi hexagonal 2 storey window bay to left, surmounted by battlemented balustrade in open half round coping bricks in diaper pattern. Semi-circular headed upper windows to bay, with hood mouldings in stone with sculpted keystones and sculpted kneelers to outer sides of left and right windows. Attic window and steep gable over, carved bargeboards to gable, end gable and gable of 2 storey linked outbuilding at rear. Splayed voussoirs to ground floor and attic windows. Modern sashes. Open gabled porch right with window over, but door now a window (entrance in 2 storey rear extension). Concrete tile roof with brick upstand and urn to kneeler right. Site with barn and land at rear formerly used as a coal merchants, then as the ‘Gastonia’ coach business [SW59].

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Page 89: Annex 4 - Waverley
Page 90: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ057369

Waterland Cottage Knowle Lane Cranleigh GU6 8JW

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Two-storey “L”-shaped cottage in white painted brickwork and tiled roof. The central part dates from the early 17th century, with internal timber framing and a possible bread oven. It has a barn-like appearance, with exposed timbers to half-hipped and gableted roof end facing the street, and lower gable-ended extension to left. Later hipped roof lower single storey extension with flat roofed dormer at rear projects forward from the original part. In view of the internal timbering and the bread oven qualifies for Historic Fabric. Former grade III listed building before grade abolished in 1970.

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Page 91: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ056366

Waterland Farmhouse Knowle Lane Cranleigh GU6 8JW

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: A complex building, the original part of two storeys in coursed rubble with brick dressings, a taller two storey projecting gabled ended extension to right with rendered ground floor and patterned tiling to first floor, and a modern single storey extension to left, all with tiled roofs. A prominent feature is the two storey angled window bay with latticed glazing and hipped tiled roof in the centre of the gabled extension, giving it something of a “Queen Anne” styling. Also of interest, in the original part, are the multi-pane metal casements to the three first floor windows, and the wavy barge boards to the gables over the two outer windows. Probably of the early nineteenth century with late nineteenth century and twentieth century extensions. Timber barn on ironstone base to the left of the single storey extension is a grade II listed building, described as of the C17 with C19 alterations.

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Page 92: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ061391

White Cottage Ewhurst Road Cranleigh GU6 7AE

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Two storey cottage on north-west side of Ewhurst Road. Mid C19 [JE40]. White painted weatherboarding to road and white painted brickwork to end gables. Modern lean-to entrance porch. End chimneys. Slate roof. Later extensions at rear. [SW61]

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Page 93: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ053393

Whiteoaks The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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Victorian villa on north side of common. Two storeys and attic in multiple form. Red brick ground floor, tile hanging above with alternate scalloped courses in lighter and darker colours. Tiled roof. Lean-to porch to east side. Steep gables with decorated bargeboards, 2 to south and one lower gable to east. Gabled dormer in roof with decorative ridge finials. Three chimney clusters at centre of main ridge, red brick with blue headers, stepped head and tall hexagonal pots. Further similar single chimney to rear. Rear windows have multipane top lights with a single pane below which was fashionable around 1880. Originally known as Stonewall.

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Page 94: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ054393

Whiteoaks Cottage The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SH

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A timber framed building which was once part of Stonewall Farm. Possibly a barn or cart shed. Oak timbers possibly of C17 date but style was still in use in C19. May be the only building left of the original historic farm.

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Page 95: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh

TQ054393

Whiteoaks Lodge The Common Cranleigh GU6 8SN

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Description, Period, Style, Materials, Original / Current Use, Features, History: Insert notes

Former lodge to Stonewall, now Whiteoaks (qv). Now flats. Two storeys. Late C19. Red brick ground floor, scallop tile hanging above. Steep gables with plain bargeboards, one to west and 2 to south. South gable is later addition in matching style (almost). Tiled roof with decorative finials to ridges. Hipped roofed porch to west and 2 hipped roofed window bays to south. Forms group with Whiteoaks.

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Page 96: Annex 4 - Waverley

Cranleigh TQ061390

Yew Tree House Horsham Road Cranleigh GU6 8DP

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Imposing 3 storey house, now divided into flats, on north side of Horsham Road, to the west of Lucks Green. Red brick with scallop tile hanging to upper floors and gable ended tiled roof. Late C19. Second floor windows with gablets, the centre window in a projecting bay with half timbered spandrel to the gablet. Similar window at head of all brick projecting bay to right. Three windows, double hung sashes to ground and first floors and casements to second floor and to east side of projecting bay. Ground floor and ground and first floor windows under shallow arches with voussoirs, the remainder with moulded surrounds. Tiled pentice over centre door on south elevation. Originally built around 1890 for Mr Stephen Rowland who is said to be one of the founders of modern Cranleigh having laid out the New Park Estate and founded both the water and gas companies [MM]. Attached left is Yew Tree Cottage, a 2 storey, probably earlier, gabled house in similar style, with attached extension on left side under lean-to roof, used as a veterinary surgery. [Visible in background of SW7] The yew tree still standing in front is shown in old photographs with a clipped top in the shape of a cockerel, reflecting the weather cock on the church tower.

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