Meathop and Ulpha is a former civil parish, now in the parish of Witherslack, Meathop and Ulpha, in the South Lakeland district of Cumbria, England. It contained four listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. All the listed buildings are designated at Grade II, the lowest of the three grades, which is applied to "buildings of national importance and special interest".[1] Much of the parish was salt marsh, and the listed buildings consisted of three bridges and a house.
Buildings
editName and location | Photograph | Date | Notes |
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Meathop Hall and cottage 54°13′11″N 2°51′48″W / 54.21972°N 2.86320°W |
Late 17th century | Originally one house, later divided into a house and a cottage, it is in stone with slate roofs. There are two storeys with attics, four bays, lower two-storey two-bay extensions on each side, and at the rear is an outshut and a small gabled wing. In the attic are three gabled dormers each with three lights, the middle light higher. The gables have decorative bargeboards. In the upper floor the windows are mullioned and in the ground floor they are mullioned and transomed. The doorway has an embattled lintel. Both extensions have gabled porches, the windows in the left extension are fixed with opening lights, and in the right extension they are casements.[2][3] | |
Wilson House Bridge 54°13′14″N 2°52′57″W / 54.22059°N 2.88243°W |
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Late 18th or early 19th century | The bridge carries a road over River Winster. It is in stone, and consists of a single segmental arch with a keystone, a band, and a coped parapet.[4] |
Bridge near Cragg Cottage 54°13′13″N 2°49′56″W / 54.22034°N 2.83213°W |
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Early 19th century | The bridge carries a path over a former drainage ditch, now silted up. It is in stone, and consists of three segmental arches. The arches have cutwaters with slots for sluices. Above the arches are a straight band and parapets.[5] |
Bridge over drainage ditch 54°13′22″N 2°50′44″W / 54.22271°N 2.84551°W |
Early 19th century | The bridge carries a road over a drainage ditch. It is in stone and consists of a single elliptical arch, above which are three bands, and plain parapets.[6] |
References
editCitations
editSources
edit- Historic England, "Meathop Hall and cottage, Meathop and Ulpha (1087133)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 19 April 2017
- Historic England, "Wilson House Bridge, Meathop and Ulpha (1225718)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 19 April 2017
- Historic England, "Bridge approximately 60 metres to north-east of Cragg Cottage, Meathop and Ulpha (1335809)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 19 April 2017
- Historic England, "Bridge over drainage ditch at SD 449 811, Meathop and Ulpha (1205115)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 19 April 2017
- Historic England, Listed Buildings, retrieved 19 April 2017
- Hyde, Matthew; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2010) [1967], Cumbria, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-12663-1