Monday, November 18, 2019

Listed buildings in Stone, Staffordshire

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Listed buildings in Stone, Staffordshire

Peter I. Vardy: New list


[[Stone, Staffordshire|Stone]] is a [[civil parish]] in the [[Borough of Stafford]], [[Staffordshire]], England. It contains 75 [[Listed building#England and Wales|listed buildings]] that are recorded in the [[National Heritage List for England]]. Of these, six are at Grade II*, the middle of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. Stone is a [[market town]], and most of its listed buddings are houses and cottages, shops, offices, and public houses. The [[Trent and Mersey Canal]] passes through the town, and the listed buildings associated with this are bridges, [[lock (water navigation)|locks]], a warehouse, a milepost and items in the boatyard. The other listed buildings include churches and structures in churchyards, road bridges, former mills, a former hospital, a milestone, a railway station and other buildings associated with the railway, schools, and a war memorial.
__NOTOC__
==Key==

{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Grade
! Criteria
|-
|align="center" |II*
| Particularly important buildings of more than special interest
|-
|align="center" |II
| Buildings of national importance and special interest
|}

==Buildings==
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="width:100%; border:0; text-align:left; line-height:150%;"
|-
! scope="col" style="width:150px" |Name and location
! scope="col" style="width:100px" class="unsortable"|Photograph
! scope="col" style="width:120px" |Date
! scope="col" style="width:650px" class="unsortable"|Notes
! scope="col" style="width:50px" |Grade
|-
|Walton Bridge<br/><small></small>
|[[File:The Old Walton Bridge, Stone - geograph.org.uk - 263870.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The bridge was largely rebuilt in the 17th or 18th century, and was superseded by a new bridge to the west in 1984. The bridge carries a road over the [[River Trent]], and is in stone. It consists of two main arches, with four flood arches to the north and one to the south. The arches have segmental or segmental-pointed heads, and there are four triangular [[cutwater]]s to the east and five to the west. The bridge has a band over the arches, and plain [[parapet]]s. It is about long and wide.
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|-
|Walton House and walls,<br/>71 Stafford Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house was later altered, and a rear wing was added in the 19th century. It has a [[timber framed]] core, cladding in red brick with stone dressings, on a stone [[plinth]], with a [[belt course|sill band]], a top [[cornice]], and a roof of [[slate]] and tile. The house is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has three storeys, a double depth plan, and a front range of four [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and at the rear is a timber framed stair wing and two other wings. The doorway has [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] [[pilaster]]s, an [[entablature]],and a [[pediment]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]]; in the outer bays of the ground floor they are tripartite with Tuscan [[colonette]]s, a [[frieze]] and a cornice. The other window in the ground floor and those in the middle floor have wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintel]] with [[ogee]] shaping, scrolls and [[Acanthus (ornament)|acanthus]] decoration. Inside, there is exposed timber framing, and attached to the house are two stone-[[coping (architecture)|coped]] walls.
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|-
|Crompton Tomb<br/><small></small>
|[[File:The tomb of Sir Thomas Crompton and his wife - geograph.org.uk - 962499.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The tomb of William Crompton and his wife is in the churchyard of St Michael's Church. It is a chest tomb, with [[architrave]]d panels and [[armorial]] motifs on the sides. On the top are the effigies of a man in armour and a woman in a dress, and the tomb is enclosed by [[cast iron]] railings.
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|-
|Three Crowns Public House<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Three Crowns, Stone.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The original part of the public house is [[timber framed]] with plaster cladding and a thatched roof. There is one storey and an attic, a two-[[bay (architecture)|bay]] range and a cross-wing, an outshut to the right, and two rear [[gable]]d wings. The windows are [[casement window|casements]], there is an [[oriel window]], and two eyebrow [[dormer]]s. Inside, there is exposed timber framing. At the rear is a large 20th-century extension.
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|-
|Cumberland House,<br/>8 High Street<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Cumberland House, Stone - geograph.org.uk - 962519.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|A house, later used for other purposes, it is [[stucco]]ed on a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[plinth]], with [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] end [[pilaster]]s, a top [[entablature]] with a [[pulvinated frieze]], and a tile roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, with three storeys, a double depth plan, a symmetrical front of five [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and two rear wings with [[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[gable]]s. In the centre is a porch that has [[Doric order|Doric]] half-columns with [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[capital (architecture)|capitals]] and an [[Ionic order|Ionic]] entablature, and the doorway has a rectangular [[fanlight]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]].
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|-
|The Priory,<br/>8 Lichfield Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house, which is built on the site of a previous [[priory]], was altered and extended in the 19th century, and it incorporates a 13th–14th century [[undercroft]]. The house has a [[timber framed]] core, external walls in [[stucco]]ed brick, and a [[hipped roof]]. There are three storeys, an L-shaped plan, and a front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. Steps flanked by [[parapet]]s ending in panelled [[pier (architecture)|piers]] lead up to the central doorway that has a porch with [[Doric order|Doric]] columns. To its left is a [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]], the other windows are [[sash window|sashes]], the window in the right bay of the the ground floor being tripartite. Inside the house is exposed timber framing, and the undercroft is [[rib vault]]ed.
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|-
|Coppice Mill<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Coppice Mill - geograph.org.uk - 551568.jpg|70px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|Originally a paper mill, it was converted into a flint mill in about 1840, and is in brick with some stone dressings, a [[modillion]]ed [[cornice]], and a tile roof. The mill has a single storey, and a [[waterwheel]] on the right return. The left part of the front is open with a brick [[pier (architecture)|pier]], and to the right is a segmental-headed entrance.
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|-
|Sundial<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The [[sundial]] is in the churchyard of St Michael's Church, and was restored in 1958. It is in stone and consists of a [[baluster]] on two round steps, with a round cap showing signs of a round plate and an inscription.
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|-
|Wall east of St Michael's Church<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The wall is a rebuild of an earlier wall and was altered later. It is in brick and stone, and encloses the churchyard on its east side.
|align="center" |
|-
|Wall and gatepier north and northwest of St Michael's Church<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The wall is a rebuild of an earlier wall and was altered later. It is mainly in brick with some stone footings and [[coping (architecture)|coping]], and encloses the churchyard on its north and northwest sides. To the north of the church tower is a round-headed entrance with a [[cornice]] and the base of an urn. The gate [[pier (architecture)|pier]] to the left of the west entrance to the churchyard is in stone and dates from the 19th century. It has [[chamfer]]ed angles, a [[cornice]] with [[acanthus (ornament)|acanthus]] [[molding (architecture)|moulding]], and a cap with a pine [[finial]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Wall south and southwest of St Michael's Church<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The wall is a rebuild of an earlier wall and was altered later. The wall to the south of the churchyard is mainly in stone, and elsewhere, including where it runs along the boundaries of The Priory and Mansion House, it is mainly in brick.
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|-
|Former Warehouse<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The warehouse, formerly serving the [[Trent and Mersey Canal]], and later converted for residential use, is in brick with [[modillion]]ed [[eaves]] and [[slate]] roofs. It consists of two parallel three-storey ranges, and a square extension to the east with a pyramidal roof. The front facing the canal contains segmental-headed boat holes, and the other openings include loading doors, segmental-headed windows, and a roundel.
|align="center" |
|-
|St Michael's Church<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Stone - Church - geograph.org.uk - 1194553.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1758
|The [[chancel]] was built in 1887 and is in [[Perpendicular Gothic|Perpendicular]] style, while the rest of the church is early [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]]. The church is built in stone, the chancel roof is tiled, and the rest of the church has a copper clad roof. It consists of a [[nave]], a chancel with a north [[vestry]] and a south organ loft, and a west tower embraced by porches. The tower has four stages, a west doorway with a pointed head, a [[quatrefoil]] window, round clock faces, a top lozenge [[frieze]], and an [[embattled]] [[parapet]] with corner [[pinnacle]]s and [[weathervane]]s. The body of the church also has embattled parapets and [[crocket]]ed corner pinnacles, and there are two tiers of windows along the nave containing Y-[[tracery]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Jervis Mausoleum<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Jervis Mausoleum, Stone.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The mausoleum is in the churchyard of St Michael's Church to the east of the church, and is to the memory of members of the Jervis family. It is in stone with a lead roof, in [[Classical architecture|Classical]] style, and consists of a rectangular [[pediment]]ed call flanked by lower [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] wings with [[cornice]]s. The central doorway has an [[architrave]], a [[keystone (architecture)|keystone]] and a pediment. On the sides of the wings are [[niche (architecture)|niches]].
|align="center" |
|-
|5 and 7 High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of brick shops, [[stucco]]ed on the front, with [[quoin (architecture)|quoins]], a top [[cornice]], and a tile roof with stone [[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[gable]]s. There are three storeys, four [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and two rear [[gable]]d wings. In the ground floor is a 20th-century shop front with [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[pilaster]]s, a [[frieze]] and a cornice, and small-paned windows, and at the right end is a round-headed entry. Two of the windows are [[casement window|casements]] and the others are [[sash window|sashes]], all with [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surrounds.
|align="center" |
|-
|15 High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A brick shop with a top [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[cornice]] and a tile roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has three storeys, five [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a [[gable]]d wing at the rear. In the left bay is a carriage entrance with a [[Tudor arch]], in the right bay is a round-headed entry, and between them is a 20th-century shop front. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surrounds, those in the middle floor with cambered heads, and in the top floor with segmental heads.
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|-
|48 High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A brick shop with a [[modillion]]ed [[cornice]] and a tile roof. There are three storeys and two [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and at the rear is a small wing and a larger later extension. In the ground floor is a 20th-century shop front, and the upper floors contain small-pane [[casement window]]s, in the middle floor with cambered heads, and in the top floor with segmental heads.
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|10, 12 and 16 Stafford Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A row of four brick shops with a top [[cornice]] and a tile roof. There are three storeys and four [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. To the left are two shop fronts, and the doorways to the right have cambered heads. The windows are [[casement window|casements]], most of those in the lower two floors with cambered heads, and those at the rear of the building with round heads.
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|-
|36 High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A [[stucco]]ed shop with [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] end [[pilaster]]s, a top [[cornice]], and a tile roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has three storeys, a double depth plan, and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. In the ground floor is a shop front, and the upper floors contain [[sash window]]s in [[architrave]]s.
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|-
|20 Stafford Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A brick house with plaster dressings, a [[cornice]] over the ground floor, a [[belt course|sill band]], a top cornice, and a [[slate]] roof. There are three storeys and two [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The doorway has a plain surround and a [[fanlight]], and to its left is a [[sash window]] with [[chamfer]]ed [[pilaster]]s and a [[frieze]]. The other windows are [[casement window|casements]] with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|-
|22 ad 22A Stafford Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of houses, later used for other purposes, they are in brick with [[stucco]] dressings, a top [[cornice]], and a [[slate]] roof. There are three storeys, a symmetrical front of two [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a single-storey rear wing. The two doorways have [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[pilaster]], [[frieze]]s, and [[pediment]]s, and between them are two small-paned bowed shop windows under a [[fascia (architecture)|fascia]]. In the middle floor are [[sash window]]s with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]], and the top floor contains two long small-paned workshop-like windows.
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|The Mansion House and wall,<br/>Lichfield Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house, which is at right angles to the street, is in brick, painted on the front, with the ground floor at the front in stone. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has a top [[cornice]] and a tile roof with [[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[gable]]s and kneelers. There are three storeys, a symmetrical front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a lower three-storey rear wing with a porch in the angle. In the ground floor is a [[frieze]] and a cornice, and a central [[Doric order|Doric]] porch with an open [[pediment]] and a doorway with a [[fanlight]]. Flanking this are French windows with [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[pilaster]]s, and the upper floors contain [[sash window]]s with [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]]. In front of the middle floor windows is a full-length decorative [[wrought iron]] balcony. There are also separate balconies in front of the windows facing the street. Attached to the house and running along the street is a brick wall with stone coping.
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|-
|Lock No. 30<br/>(Limekiln Lock)<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Limekiln Lock No. 30.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The [[lock (water navigation)|lock]] on the [[Trent and Mersey Canal]] was designed by [[James Brindley]]. It is in brick with stone dressings, and has double lower gates and a single upper gate, all in timber. At the lower end are steps and a footbridge, and there is an overflow channel to the side.
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|-
|Bridge No. 94<br/>(Workhouse Bridge)<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Trent and Mersey Canal - Bridge 94 - geograph.org.uk - 1539985.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1771–72
|The bridge, designed by [[James Brindley]], carries a road over the [[Trent and Mersey Canal]]. It is in brick with some plaster, and consists of a single elliptical arch. The bridge has a brick band and a brick-[[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[parapet]].
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|-
|Bridge No. 95<br/>(Newcastle Road Bridge) and Lock No. 29<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Bridge No. 95, Trent and Mersey Canal.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1771–72
|The bridge carries Newcastle Road over the [[Trent and Mersey Canal]] and the [[lock (water navigation)|lock]] is to the north; both were designed by [[James Brindley]]. The bridge is in brick with stone dressings and stone-[[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[parapet]]s, and consists of an elliptical arch, with a round-headed tunnel for horses on the west. The lock has double lower gates and a single upper gate, all in timber, and there is a footbridge at the lower end.
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|Lock No. 27<br/>(Star Lock)<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Star Lock No. 27.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1771–72
|The [[lock (water navigation)|lock]] on the [[Trent and Mersey Canal]] was designed by [[James Brindley]]. It is in brick with stone dressings, and has double lower gates and a single upper gate, all in timber. The lock has steps to a footbridge at the lower end.
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|-
|Lock No. 28<br/>(Yard Lock)<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Lock No 28, Trent and Mersey Canal, Stone Staffordshire - geograph.org.uk - 599990.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1771–72
|The [[lock (water navigation)|lock]] on the [[Trent and Mersey Canal]] was designed by [[James Brindley]]. It is in brick with stone dressings, and has double lower gates and a single upper gate, all in steel. The lock has steps to a footbridge at the lower end, and there is a side pound to the northeast.
|align="center" |
|-
|Barge Docks, Boatyard<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Boatyard, Stone.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1772
|The boatyard was extended in the 19th century. There are two dry dock and two wet docks in stone, three of which have sheds in brick iron or timber, with roofs in tile or [[slate]], and some with open sides.
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|-
|Bridge No. 92<br/>(Andre Mills Bridge)<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Andre Mills Bridge, Trent and Mersey Canal, Little Stoke, Staffordshire - geograph.org.uk - 598522.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|An [[accommodation bridge]] over the [[Trent and Mersey Canal]], it is in brick with stone dressings. The bridge consists of a single elliptical arch with stone [[jamb]]s, a [[parapet]] with stone [[coping (architecture)|coping]], and end [[pier (architecture)|piers]].
|align="center" |
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|52 and 54 Newcastle Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of brick houses with a [[modillion]]ed [[cornice]] and a tile roof. There are three storeys, a symmetrical front of two [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a [[gable]]d rear wing. In the centre are two segmental-headed doorways, and the windows are [[casement window|casements]].
|align="center" |
|-
|The Swan Public House<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Swan Inn, Stone.jpg|80px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|A warehouse, later a public house, it is in brick with a top [[cornice]], and a tile roof. It has three storeys and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a four-storey one-bay wing to the right. The doorway has a [[frieze]], a cornice, and a lantern. The windows are [[casement window|casements]], and most have cambered heads.
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|10 High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house was altered in the 1860s, and later used for other purposes. It is in brick with stone dressings, on a stone [[plinth]], with a [[belt course|band]], a top [[cornice]], and a [[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[parapet]]. The ground floor is in [[High Victorian Gothic]] style, and the upper floors are in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style. There are three storeys, four [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a [[gable]]d rear wing with a lantern. The central doorway has a banded surround, shafts, a pointed arched head and a hood, and is flanked by triple [[sash window]]s with similar surrounds and heads. The upper floors also contain sash windows.
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|Former malthouse behind 28&nbsp;High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The former [[malthouse]] is in brick with a tile roof. There are three storeys, a long rectangular plan, four [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a [[gable]] facing the street. The building contains loading doors, [[mullion]]ed windows, some with segmental heads, and a segmental-headed doorway.
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|Crown Hotel,<br/>38 High Street<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Crown Hotel, Stone-geograph.org.uk-1544548.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1778
|The hotel, at one time a [[staging post]] for coaches, was designed by [[Henry Holland (architect)|Henry Holland]] in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style. It is built in brick with stone dressings, a [[belt course|band]], and a top [[cornice]]. There are three storeys, a double depth plan, a symmetrical front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the outer bays bowed, and a later two-storey rear wing on the right. In the centre is an [[Ionic order|Ionic]] porch, above which is a [[wrought iron]] bracket holding a flagpole. The windows on the front are [[sash window|sashes]], those in the bowed bays in the lower two floors being tripartite. The rear wing contains a shop front, and the windows are mostly [[casement window|casements]].
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|50 High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A shop and offices in brick with stone dressings, on a stone [[plinth]], with [[belt course|sill bands]], a top [[modillion]]ed [[cornice]], and a [[hip roof|hipped]] [[slate]] roof. There are three storeys, a symmetrical three [[bay (architecture)|bay]] range on the left, and a slightly projecting two-bay range to the right. The building is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, with a double depth plan, a rear [[gable]]d wing and later additions. The left range has a plastered ground floor, a central [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] porch and a round-headed doorway with a [[fanlight]], flanked by [[bow window]]s containing tripartite [[sash window|sashes]], and above these is a modillioned cornice. The right range has a blocked round-headed doorway to the left, and to the right is a doorway with reeded [[pilaster]]s, a fanlight, and an open [[pediment]]. In the top floor are [[casement window]]s, and elsewhere the windows are sashes.
|align="center" |
|-
|21–27 Lichfield Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A row of four brick houses with [[stucco]] dressings, a top [[cornice]], and a tile roof. They are in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, with a double depth plan, three storeys, five [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and various rear extensions. The round-headed doorways have [[pilaster]]s, [[fanlight]]s, and open [[pediment]]s. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]] that have [[ogee|ogival]] shaping and [[keystone (architecture)|keystones]], and there are two segmental-headed blind windows to the left.
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|-
|Stonefield House<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house, which was altered in the 19th century, is in [[stucco]]ed brick, with a top [[cornice]] and blocking course, and a [[hip roof|hipped]] [[slate]] roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style with two storeys, a double depth plan, and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the outer bays [[cant (architecture)|canted]]. The central round-headed entrance has a [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] porch, [[pilaster]]s with [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] panels, an [[archivolt]], and a [[fanlight]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and at the rear are three [[gable]]s and a gabled wing.
|align="center" |
|-
|Trent Hospital (Main block)<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Former hospital and workhouse, Stone - geograph.org.uk - 668644.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1792–93
|Built as a [[workhouse]], and later used as a hospital, the building was expanded in the 19th century. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and built in brick with dressings in stone and plaster, [[belt course|bands]], [[modillion]] [[frieze]]s and [[cornice]]s, and a [[slate]] M-shaped roof, [[hip roof|hipped]] to the wings. There is an H-shaped plan, with a central block of two storeys and five [[bay (architecture)|bays]] and three-storey cross-wings. In the centre of the main block is a flat-headed doorway, and there are segmental-headed doorways in the middle of the cross wings. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], some of which are tripartite, and some with round-headed lights. In the right return is a tower with angle [[pilaster]]s and a top frieze.
|align="center" |
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|Brassworks Farmhouse<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1794
|The farmhouse is in brick with stone dressings, a top [[cornice]], and a tile roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has three storeys, a symmetrical front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and two [[gable]]d wings and an outshut at the rear. The central doorway has an [[architrave]], a [[frieze]], and a [[pediment]] on [[corbel|consoles]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], those in the lower two floors with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
|align="center" |
|-
|The Mill Restaurant and aqueduct<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Stone Mill, Stone (home of HOVIS) - geograph.org.uk - 668689.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1795
|A former corn [[watermill]], later used as a restaurant, it is in brick with a tile roof. There is a rectangular plan, four storeys, and a front of six [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. In the left bay is a segmental-headed opening, the windows are [[casement window|casements]] with segmental heads, and there is a first-floor loading door with a [[gable]]d [[canopy (building)|canopy]] and a datestone. On the left side at first floor level is an [[aqueduct (bridge)|aqueduct]] leading to the mill [[leat]].
|align="center" |
|-
|1A Church Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A house, later a shop, in brick, mainly painted, with a top [[cornice]] and a tile roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style with three storeys, an L-shaped plan, and two [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The doorway has [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[pilaster]]s, an [[entablature]], and a [[pediment]], to the left is a small-paned [[bow window]] with a [[frieze]] and a cornice, and to the right is a round-headed entry. The upper floors contain [[sash window]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|17 and 19 Lichfield Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of brick houses with [[stucco]] dressings, a [[modillion]]ed [[cornice]], and a tile roof. They are in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, with two storeys, each house has two [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and there is a [[gable]]d rear wing. The doorways have [[architrave]]s. The windows, which are [[casement window|casements]], and the doorway to an entry, have [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|Walton Terrace,<br/>59, 61 and 63 Stafford Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A terrace of three brick houses, partly painted and partly [[stucco]]ed, with stone dressings, and a [[slate]] M-shaped roof. They have three storeys, double depth plans, each house has three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and there are two [[gable]]d rear wings. No.&nbsp;59 has an enclosed porch with [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[pilaster]]s, and a [[frieze]] with rosettes, and to the right is a [[bay window]]. No.&nbsp;61 has a porch with [[Doric order|Doric]] half-columns, a frieze and a [[modillion]] cornice carried over the doorway and flanking [[bow window]]s, and No.&nbsp;63 has an enclosed porch with a top cornice and flanking bow windows. Most of the other windows are [[sash window|sashes]].
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|Outbuilding southwest of The Mill Restaurant<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The outbuilding is in brick with a tile roof. There are two [[gable]]d storeys, and a square plan with an outshut under a catslide roof to the right. On the front is an entrance with a timber [[lintel (architecture)|lintel]], and in the upper floor are two circular windows.
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|Cartwright tomb<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The tomb is in the churchyard of St Michael's Church, and is to the memory of members of the Cartwright family. It is a rectangular chest tomb in stone on a brick base, and has [[chamfer]]ed [[baluster]]s with hollow [[molding (architecture)|mouldings]], octagonal panels, a reeded [[frieze]] with [[patera]]e, and a [[catafalque]] with a [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] frieze with paterae. There are inscriptions on panels and on [[slate]] plaques.
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|62 Newcastle Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A brick house with a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[cornice]] and a [[slate]] roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has two storeys, a double depth plan, a symmetrical front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a lean-to at the rear. The round-headed doorway has [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[pilaster]]s, a [[fanlight]], and an open [[pediment]], and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|Stone Town Council Offices<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Police Station, Stone.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The building, later used as a police station, is in brick with stone dressings on a plastered [[plinth]], with a [[belt course|sill band]], [[modillion]]ed [[eaves]], and a [[hip roof|hipped]] tile roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has two storeys, a double depth plan, five [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the right bay larger and projecting, and an extension to the right with a single storey and an attic, and two bays. The round-headed doorway has [[fluting (architecture)|fluted]] [[pilaster]]s, blocks with [[patera]]e, a [[fanlight]], and an open [[pediment]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and in the extension are two flat-roofed [[dormer]]s. At the rear are [[cant (architecture)|caned]] [[bay window]]s.
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|Stowe House,<br/>2 Uttoxeter Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house is in [[stucco]]ed brick with a tile roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has two storeys, a symmetrical front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and two rear [[gable]]d wings. In the centre is a round-headed doorway with a [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] porch and a [[fanlight]] with radial glazing bars, and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]]. The longer rear wing has a [[modillion]]ed [[cornice]], and contains windows of various types, including a [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]].
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|Milepost south of Stafford Road Bridge<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Milepost near Stafford Road Bridge, Stone.jpg|80px|centre]]
|align="center"|1814
|The milepost is on the towpath of the Trent and Mersey Canal. It is in [[cast iron]] and has a round post, a bowed panel indicating the distances to [[Preston Brook]] and [[Shardlow]], and a small lower plate with the date and initials.
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|75 and 77 Newcastle Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of brick houses with stone dressings and a tile roof. They are in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, with two storeys, three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a rear [[gable]]d wing. The doorways have reeded [[pilaster]]s, [[entablature]]s, and [[pediment]]s, and there is a segmental-headed entry. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|79 and 81 Newcastle Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of brick houses with stone dressings and a [[slate]] roof. They are in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, with two storeys, a symmetrical front of two [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a rear [[gable]]d wing. The two doorways in the centre have segmental heads, and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|Park Lodge, 3 Beech Court<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A house in stone, later plastered, with end [[pilaster]]s, a top [[cornice]], and a [[hip roof|hipped]] tile roof. There are two storeys, a double depth plan, and four [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. In the centre is a [[tetrastyle]] [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] porch, and to the left is a [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]] with a cornice and a [[parapet]]. On the right return is a two-storey [[bow window]] containing four-light windows with reeded pilasters, and the windows elsewhere are [[sash window|sashes]]. At the rear are three hipped [[gable]]s, and a later single-storey extension.
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|16 and 16A High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Two brick shops with stone dressings, a [[belt course|sill band]], a top [[cornice]] and a blocking course, and a [[parapet]]ed roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has three storeys, three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a rear [[gable]]d wing. In the ground floor are two 20th-century shop fronts, and to the left is a round-headed entry with [[stucco]] [[molding (architecture)|moulding]], and [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] stucco above. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|28, 28A, 28D and 30 High Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Four shops and offices in brick with stone dressings, a top [[dentil]]led [[cornice]], and a tile roof. They are in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, with three storeys and a front on High Street with four [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. In the centre is the round-headed entry to Adies Alley which is flanked by two [[gable]]d wings. Two of the shops face High Street and the others are in the alley. On High Street are two 20th-century shop fronts and [[sash window]]s in the upper floor. In the alley are more shop fronts and varied windows.
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|Milestone outside 64 High Street<br/><small></small>
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|align="center"|
|The milestone is in [[ashlar]] stone, and consists of a round-headed flat slab with a metal plate indicating the distances in miles to [[Lichfield]] and to London.
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|7 and 9 Station Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of houses. later used for other purposes, in brick with a tile roof. There are three storeys, and each house has one [[bay (architecture)|bay]]. The round-headed doorways have [[fanlight]]s and [[keystone (architecture)|keystones]]. The window in the ground floor of the left house is in [[plate glass]] with a segmental head, the windows in the top floor are [[casement window|casements]], and the other windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with wedge [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|Former St Mary's Home and wall<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A house, later used for other purposes, it is [[stucco]]ed, and has wide [[modillion]]ed [[eaves]], and a [[hip roof|hipped]] [[slate]] roof. There are two storeys, a double depth plan, and four [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The elliptical-headed doorway has a porch with [[Doric order|Doric]] columns, an [[Ionic order|Ionic]] [[entablature]], and a [[fanlight]]. On the right return, facing the garden, is a porch with elliptical arches, Doric columns a [[cornice]], and a elliptical shell fanlight. Most of the windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and the wall, which is in brick on a stone [[plinth]] with [[chamfer]]ed [[coping (architecture)|coping]], extends to the right for about .
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|Field House, Mount Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A brick house with stone dressings, a [[belt course|sill band]], a top [[cornice]] and blocking course, and a [[hip roof|hipped]] [[slate]] roof. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and has three storeys, and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The round-headed doorway has a [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] surround, and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]]. At the left end is a lantern, and the right return has a ground floor projection, projected further at the far end.
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|Trent Hospital (South Block)<br/><small></small>
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|align="center"|1838–39
|An addition to a [[workhouse]], it was later used as a hospital. It is in [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] style, and built in brick with plaster dressings, on a [[plinth]], with a [[belt course|lintel band]], [[modillion]]ed [[eaves]], and a [[hip roof|hipped]] [[slate]] roof. There is one storey and seven [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the end bays projecting slightly. The windows have round heads and [[voussoir]]s, and those in the end bays are tripartite.
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|Flint kiln, Coppice Mill<br/><small></small>
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|align="center"|
|The [[flint]] [[Calcination|calcining]] [[kiln]] is in brick and has a corrugated iron roof. It is a square structure built into a slope, and there are two round [[niche (architecture)|niches]] in the rear wall.
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|Railway Underbridge No. 113<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1848
|The bridge was built by the [[North Staffordshire Railway]], and carries the railway over Mill Street. It is in brick with stone dressings, and consists of two segmental arches, the arch over the road [[skew arch|skewed]], with [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] [[pier (architecture)|piers]] and arches. The flanking piers and [[abutment]]s sweep forward and down and have end piers. At the top is a brick [[frieze]] and a stone [[cornice]] and blocking course. On the south side is a [[modillion]]ed frieze and date panels.
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|[[Stone railway station]]<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Stone railway station.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1848
|The railway station is in red brick with blue brick [[diapering]] and stone dressings, with [[quoin (architecture)|quoins]], an [[entablature]] above the ground floor, and a tile roof with three shaped [[gable]]s and [[finial]]s. It is in [[Jacobean architecture|Jacobean]] style, and has two storeys and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. In the ground floor is a central [[loggia]] with three round arches. The outer bays contain entrances flanked by [[chamfer]]ed [[mullion]]ed and [[transom (architecture)|transomed]] windows. In the upper floor are windows with five lights in the middle bay and three lights in the outer bays. The outer gables contain [[cartouche (design)|cartouches]].
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|Railway Crossing Gate Keeper's Cottage<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1848–50
|The cottage was built for the [[North Staffordshire Railway]]. It is in brick with stone dressings, and has a tile roof with [[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[gable]]s. The cottage is in [[Tudor architecture|Tudor]] style, and has one storey, an L-shaped plan, and two [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. There is a gabled porch and an inner doorway, both with [[Tudor arch]]ed heads. The windows have [[ogee]]-[[molding (architecture)|moulded]] heads with [[casement window|casements]]. On the front facing the railway is a [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]] with a [[hipped roof]].
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|Crossing House,<br/>Uttoxeter Road<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Crossing House, Stone.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The railway crossing keeper's cottage is in red brick with blue brick [[diapering]], stone dressings, and a tile roof. There is a single storey and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the middle bay projecting slightly and [[gable]]d. The central doorway has a [[four-centred arch]]ed head and flanking [[casement window]]s within its surround. Above is a panel of diapering, and the gable has decorative [[bargeboard]]s, as has the gable on the left return. In the left bay is a two-light casement window with a stone surround.
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|Fourdrinier Monument<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The monument is in the churchyard of St Michael's Church and is to the memory of members of the Fourdrinier family. It is in stone, and has a square base, and consists of a square monument on a [[plinth]], with a [[cornice]] and an urn. There are inscriptions on three sides.
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|Blacksmith's shop, Boatyard<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The blacksmith's shop is in brick with a [[modillion]]ed [[cornice]] and a [[slate]] roof. There is a single storey and a rectangular plan, and it contains a doorway and two two-paned [[casement window]]s.
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|Workshop and office, Boatyard<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The workshop and office are in brick with [[slate]] roofs. The workshop has a single storey and a loft, and contains a doorway and a window, both with segmental heads, and a loading door. The office to the north has a single storey, it is [[gable]]d, and contains [[casement window]]s.
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|Gate pier west of St Michael's Church<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The gate [[pier (architecture)|pier]] to the right of the west entrance to the churchyard is in stone. It has [[chamfer]]ed angles, a [[cornice]] with [[acanthus (ornament)|acanthus]] [[molding (architecture)|moulding]], and a cap with a pine [[finial]].
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|Church of the Immaculate Conception and St Dominic<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Catholic Church, Stone, Staffs - geograph.org.uk - 1542317.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1852–53
|The church was designed by [[Charles Francis Hansom|Charles Hansom]], and was completed by [[Gilbert Blount]] in 1861–63. It is built in stone with a [[slate]] roof, and consists of a [[nave]] with a [[clerestory]], north and south [[aisle#Church architecture|aisles]], north and south [[transept]]s, a [[sanctuary#sanctuary as a sacred place|sanctuary]] with an [[apse]] and an [[ambulatory]], and a small west tower. The window at the west end is in the form of a spherical triangle, and the clerestory contains similar but smaller windows. The apse has an [[embattled]] [[parapet]] and a conical roof.
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|-
|St Anne's Chapel<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1852–53
|A Roman Catholic chapel designed by [[Augustus Pugin|A. W. N. Pugin]] in [[Early English Gothic|Early English]] style. It is in brick with stone dressings and has a tile roof with [[coping (architecture)|coped]] [[gable]]s and apex crosses. The chapel consists of a [[nave]] and a short [[chancel]]. The west doorway has a pointed head, and above it is a [[niche (architecture)|niche]] containing a statue.
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|St Dominic's Convent, Priory School and walls<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1852–58
|The convent and school were designed by Joseph and [[Charles Francis Hansom|Charles Hansom]], they were later extended by Charles Hanson, and further extended in 1861–63 by [[Gilbert Blount]]. The buildings are in brick with stone dressings, [[quoin (architecture)|quoins]], decoration in [[engineering brick]], and a [[slate]] roof. They are arranged around a [[cloister]] attached to the church, and the grounds are enclosed by a high brick wall with stone [[coping (architecture)|copings]], containing arched gateways.
|align="center" |
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|St John's Church<br/><small></small>
|[[File:St John's Church, Stone.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1870
|Originally a [[Congregational Church]], it is in stone with some plastered brick, and has a [[slate]] roof. The church is in [[Decorated Gothic|Decorated]] style, and consists of a [[nave]], a rear [[vestry]], and a northwest [[steeple]]. The steeple has a tower with three stages, a clock face, a top [[cornice]], and a [[broach spire]]. Inside, there is a gallery on all four sides.
|align="center" |
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|Ale stores and stables,<br/>Joule's Brewery<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Trent and Mersey Canal, Stone - geograph.org.uk - 1134904.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1881
|A complex of brewery buildings in red brick with dressings and decoration in blue brick, and tile roofs. The complex consists of a warehouse with stables and a row of cottages. The warehouse has fronts with [[gable]]s and decorative [[finial]]s, and contain openings including windows and loading doors. On the roof are ventilating [[cupola]]s, and other features include inscribed [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]] and a chimney.
|align="center" |
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|Christ Church Schools<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1887
|The schools are in red brick with [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] brick dressings, moulded [[string course]]s, and a tile roof. There is one storey and ten [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The outer bays are [[gable]]d and there are two similar gables in the centre. To the right is an arched doorway with a moulded surround, above which is a moulded inscribed plaque. The windows are small-paned with decorative [[hood mould]]s. On the roof is a wood and lead lantern with an [[ogee]] roof and a spirelet.
|align="center" |
|-
|War memorial<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Stone Cenotaph (geograph 4673246).jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The war memorial stands near a road junction. It is by [[Albert Toft]], and consists of a tall stepped stone [[plinth]] with bronze plaques on the sides. Standing on the plinth is a statue in bronze depicting a soldier leaning on a rifle. On the plaques are the names of those lost in the war.
|align="center" |
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|}

==References==


===Citations===


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[[Category:Lists of listed buildings in Staffordshire]]

November 19, 2019 at 04:37AM

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