In contrast to the houses further east, buildings from here to the end of Sheep Street resulted from 16th- and 17th-century development of what was
Behind a remodelled 17th-century façade are remains of another medieval house, documented from 1492 when the guild of the chapel of St Mary in Burf
The ashlar façade is of 1696 (datestone), but masks an earlier building: note the position of the doorway and side passage, squeezed into a corner.
Like the Bay Tree Hotel two centuries later, the 18th-century Lamb Inn comprises an accumulation of several properties.
This small early 14th-century house, though heavily remodelled, may be Burford's earliest surviving domestic building, and is documented from the 1
This notable late-medieval house is comparable to some broadly contemporary examples on High Street.
Until unified as a single shop in the 20th century, these properties were quite distinct.
Like No. 12 (Bull Cottage), No. 14 is documented from the 1390s.
Though apparently rebuilt in the early 19th century, with a smooth ashlar façade and contemporary features, this tall 3-storeyed house shows signs
Like many buildings on this side of Witney Street, these three houses on the far side of Guildenford began as 17th-century cottages. At No.