History in Structure

The Yat

A Grade II Listed Building in Glascwm, Powys

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.1695 / 52°10'10"N

Longitude: -3.2366 / 3°14'11"W

OS Eastings: 315525

OS Northings: 253075

OS Grid: SO155530

Mapcode National: GBR YW.5HSK

Mapcode Global: VH69W.VQ9R

Plus Code: 9C4R5Q97+Q9

Entry Name: The Yat

Listing Date: 21 September 1962

Last Amended: 20 January 2005

Grade: II

Source: Cadw

Source ID: 8781

Building Class: Domestic

ID on this website: 300008781

Location: On the S side of the road through the village approximately 100m SW of the parish church.

County: Powys

Community: Glascwm (Glasgwm)

Community: Glascwm

Traditional County: Radnorshire

Tagged with: Building

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History

A C17 gentry house, probably originally L-shaped but of which only the parlour wing has survived. The original hall range was probably replaced in the C18 to create a centrally planned house. Later extension of service rooms, completed by the time of the 1837 Tithe map, linked the house to a previously detached C17 or C18 dovecote. The house was known as Glascwm Court from the mid C19 to the 1960s.

Exterior

A house of whitened rubble stone, slate roofs with cusped barge boards, gable stack to the R and 2 lateral stacks to the L-hand gabled bay, all with blue- and yellow-brick shafts. Its front comprises a 2½-storey gabled bay occupying the centre and L, incorporating the entrance and constituting the parlour wing of the C17 house, and 3-storey 2-window C18 extension to the R, the two parts being separated by a vertical joint. Windows are mainly 2-light casements incorporating leaded lights. The gabled bay has a fielded-panel door on its R side, incorporating 2 small glazed panels, and a 2-light window to its L under a hood mould. The upper storey has 2 similar windows but with eroded drip moulds, and 3-light attic window also under a drip mould. On the R side are 2-light windows in the lower and middle storey and 2 similar windows in the upper storey beneath the eaves.

Further R is a lower C19 gabled link, with 2-pane sash window in the lower storey and similar sash to an oriel window above. The former dovecote at the R end has a camber-headed boarded door in the lower storey. Its upper storey is corbelled out and has a small window, under a pyramidal roof. The R side wall of the dovecote, facing the road, has a blocked segmental window, and small-pane window in the lower storey under a flat arch.

Behind the dovecote is a 2-storey C19 service wing with 2-light windows in each storey facing the road, and 2-light windows in its rear gable end. The rear of the main house has a late C20 conservatory, and 2-light upper-storey window. The gable end of the former parlour wing projects forward to the R and has added raked buttresses. It has a 2-light and 1-light window in the lower storey, a 2-light window to the R side of the upper storey, with corresponding blocked window on the L side, and small attic window. The side wall of the gable bay is built into the bank

Interior

The central entrance hall created in the C18 has a dog-leg stair with turned newels. On its R side is an exposed close-studded partition with evidence of a former door head, probably the original partition between hall and parlour and the most convincing evidence of the existence of an earlier hall. The room to the L of the entrance, the original parlour, has an ovolo-moulded spine beam. The room behind it, probably originally a kitchen, has a fireplace with timber lintel. The room to the R of the entrance also has a fireplace with a large timber lintel.

Reasons for Listing

Listed for its special architectural interest as a C17 regional house with significant C18 improvement, of definite quality and character.

External Links

External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.

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