At the heart of this building is a 16th-century two-roomed house with a cross-passage behind the left-hand doorway.
This is a mid to late 17th-century house with contemporary attic windows in the twin gables.
A deed of 1608 records that this house had been recently rebuilt by John Collier (died 1634), keeper of the George Inn, who incorporated it into th
Both these buildings probably began as 17th-century stone cottages. No.
No. 127 contains probably 15th-century remains, notably an internal 2-centred archway at the back of the shop and a nearby rear-facing window.
A vicarage house stood on part of this site from the Middle Ages, and a surviving medieval range at the rear may be part of it.
The earliest feature is a stone Caernarvon archway in the right-hand front room, with the characteristic ‘shoulders’ of the late 13th century.
At No. 94, now called Christmas Court, the canopy with supporting columns, the boxed shopfront, and the bay windows are all 19th-century.
This extensive corner site was assembled from three separate narrow properties in 1839–41, by the linen draper William G. Westrope.
Though substantially remodelled both buildings are of medieval origin, and were apparently of moderately high status.