Built probably around 1500 for an unknown owner, this must have been quite a grand house, its long rubblestone façade straddling two medieval plots
This narrow cottage (now a shop) occupies a small plot probably severed from No. 67 next door.
The builder of this impressive, late 18th-century 3-storey frontage, with its symmetrical façade of ashlar limestone, is unknown.
The building retains a Tudor-arched fireplace and probably the roof from an earlier structure: the roof’s 'waney' ridge suggests pre-17th-century t
The Bear Inn was established here probably in the late 1640s by Thomas Matthews (died 1680).
The double-gabled smooth stone frontage of c.1903 conceals remains of another medieval house.
See left of photograph
This rubblestone façade would once have been rendered: most of the window surrounds have been pecked to allow render to adhere properly, in an 18th
In 1652 a house here was owned by William Elston and held by William Haynes; by 1685 the owner was William Lenthall esquire (of The Priory), and th
These houses began as a medieval hall-house (history unknown). No. 15 (left) comprised the service end, and No.