This smart façade hides an earlier house, owned in 1685 by Richard Bartholomew.
This intriguing building has an alleged but unproven connection with the clothier Edmund Silvester (died 1569) - see Falkland Hall and Edmund Silve
In origin this is another jettied, timber-framed building with fine carved bargeboards of the late 15th century, built for an unknown owner and inc
This small cottage with its rubblestone front is of 17th-century origin, but has been increased in height.
Image copyright English Heritage
Dominating what is now a narrow side street of small cottages, The Great House is one of three large gentry houses in Burford, and one of the few B
This smart 17th-century façade of neatly squared limestone blocks, with characteristic drip-moulds over the first-floor windows, probably unites tw
The three rubblestone cottages numbered 20, 22 and 24 are probably all of 17th-century origin, and may have once formed a single property: the fron
This prime corner-site was an inn from the 15th to late 18th century, recorded first as the Bear (in 1489), and from 1539 as the Angel.
Although there is a 17th-century rear range, this stylish house was probably built in the 1790s (owner unknown).