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In this page: Buildings appearing on the register of English Heritage for the Parish of Madeley - page one of three.

Listed Buildings

  1. Anstice Memorial Institute - Anstice Square

    Commemorative Monument.
    Date:1868.
    Designed by John Johnson of London. Large Italianate red brick building with painted stone dressings and hipped tile roof. Entablature with heavy cornice. Two storeys. 1:5:1 bays. Left and right with brick pilasters. Round-arched windows in pilastered round-arched recesses with panels below. The ground floor has flat-headed 2-light windows. Stringcourse at first floor level. Large central porch with heavy entablature on square piers.

  2. Barn North West of the Old Hall - Church Street

    Timber Framed Barn
    C17
    Timber-frame with red brick infill panels on stone rubble plinth. Long range with plain tile roof with gabled ends. Modern fenestration. Half of the west side to the road is brick faced. The east side has circa early C19 horse engine house projecting on left with open semi-circular front with wooden posts on stone plinth supporting roof.

  3. The Beacon Public House - Ironbridge Road

    Late C18
    Stuccoed Ionic. Hipped tile roof. Parapet with coping, and quoin palisters. Three storeys. Three bays. Sashes with glazing bars and voussoired lintels with keyblocks. Single storey wing to left.

  4. Church of St Michael - Church Street

    Church
    1796
    By Thomas Telford. Ashlar with hopped slate roof. Octagonal on plan. Entablature with finials over the corners. Two tiers of windows with string course between, round-arched windows above square windows. Tower projects at ritual west end (north side), in 4 stages, rusticated bottom stage, pedimented first stage with round arch window, clock face in third stage and round arched bell opening in recess in top stage with bell finials over the corners of the parapet. Square chancel added in 1910 at ritual east end (south) with large Venetian window. Either side of this chancel the 2 upper windows are niches with responds and containing kneeling figures with inscription below:- remains of monument to the Brooke family of Madeley Hall. Interior: galleries on 3 sides with 2 tiers of columns. In the churchyard several early C19 tombs of cast iron, including those of 2 iron-plasters: William Balwin 1822; a large pedestal with columns at the corners surmounted by sarcophagus. And R R Anstice 1853; arched inscription panels flanked by attached columns with pediment over. Also a cast iron tomb chest John Fletcher 1785 immediately east of church.





  5. Churchyard Boundary Wall North of Church of St Michael - Church Street

    Churchyard
    1796
    Ashlar retaining wall to churchyard with 2 pairs of octagonal gate-piers at each end; one at west end is missing.

  6. Coach House and Barn North West of Upper House - Church Street

    Coach House
    C18
    Much altered. Long timber-framed range with red brick infill panels on sandstone plinth. Plain tile roof with gabled ends. Three gables on road front, each with C19 pointed arch window with cast-iron lattice grille. Cart entrance through west end. East end has C18 brick coach house wing at right angles, with arcaded east side with keystones and tablet with date 1765. Plaque on front of bar states "King Charles II hid in this barn 5 September 1651". Used as a local market in C18.

  7. Coach House and Stables North of the Old Hall - Church Street

    Coach House
    C18
    Red brick range with sandstone Ashlar ground floor and stone quoins. Plain tile roof with stepped brick gable ends. Four segmental headed ground floor doorways. Of the 4 first floor doorways 3 are blind. Four diamond-shaped panels of ventilation holes. Brick dentil eaves course. Single storey wing to the north.

  8. Former National School - Church Street

    National School
    1841
    Buff-coloured brick with stone dressings in Tudor style. Fish-scale tile roof with gable ends with stone coping and kneelers. Moulded brick modillion cornice. Two storeys. Three bays. Centre gabled and advanced with plaque in gable inscribed "National School" and date and with plain shield above. Three-light wood mullion windows in chamfered openings with stone dripmoulds; the top lights have diamond panes. Central moulded brick 4-centred arch doorway with dripmould. String course at first floor level. Brick stacks with diagonal shafts over end gables.





  9. Garden Boundary Wall East of The Old Hall - Church Street

    Garden Wall
    Late C18
    High red brick garden wall with plain stone coping on 3 sides of garden. Ramped up to higher south-east corner. Included for group value.

  10. Garden Boundary Wall Immediately North East of Upper House - Church Street

    Garden Wall
    C18
    Sandstone Ashlar and coursed rubble wall with chamfered coping. Included for group value.

  11. Garden Boundary Wall South West of the Old Hall - Church Street

    Garden Wall
    C18/C19
    Sandstone Ashlar. High wall with chamfered coping. Follows curve or road. Included for group value.

  12. Gatepiers West of The Old Vicarage - Church Street

    Gate Pier
    C1700
    Rusticated stone gatepiers painted, with moulded bases and caps and with ball finials. The wrought iron gates are modern.





  13. Gazebo South South East of The Old Hall - Church Street

    Building
    C18
    Small square red brick building. The pyramidal tile roof has collapsed. Two-storeys. One bay sides. Ground floor open with arched entrance. Sash window with glazing bars above. External stairs to first floor at side.

  14. Hall Cottages - Church Street

    House
    C18
    Red brick range of cottages. Plain tile roof, gabled at one end with stone coping, and hipped at the other end. Moulded eaves cornice. Two-storeys and attic. Five window range. Original 2-light casements with leaded panes, ground floor in segmental-headed openings. Two plank doors with rectangular fanlights. Brick string course at first floor level. Three gabled dormers. Brick ridge stack. Contemporary gabled wing at rear forming L-shaped plan.

  15. Hay House Barn - Great Hay Drive

    Telford Golf & Country Club
    1775
    Former stable range. Red brick stable range with hay loft above. Plain tile roof with parapeted gable ends. Segmental-headed ground floor doorways and windows. First floor small modern windows and ventilation holes in diamond and triangular patterns. Circular plaque in end gable 'AD 1775'.

  16. Hay House Farmhouse - Great Hay Drive

    Telford Golf & Country Club
    C17/C18
    Brick, the principal elevations roughcast. Hipped plain tile roof. Two storeys. Five bays, left and right-hand bays projecting. 1:2:3 windows, sashes with glazing bars and voussoired heads and keyblocks. Central modern glazed door and modern conservatory across recess. Side doorway with wooden trellis porch and panelled door. A salient feature is the massive brick chimney stacks with blind round-head arcading. Panelled rooms of c1700 with chimneypieces. John Rose, the founder of Coalport Chinaworks, lived here.





  17. Infant School - Church Street

    Infant School
    1853
    Small classical building in buff coloured brick. Three bay front with moulded stone pediment containing circular opening with cast iron grille. Brick corner pilasters. Round arched windows with glazing bars flanking central pedimented porch with stone plaque above inscribed "Infant School MDCCCLIII". Slate roof. Round-arched side windows.

  18. Railings and Gate Immediately North West of Church - Church Street

    Railings
    Mid C19
    Railings in front of vicarage (which has been rebuilt). Iron railings, the shafts have spear heads and the stanchions have urns. Mounted on low brick wall. Openwork cast iron gatepiers with finials and ornate gate. Included for group value.

  19. Stables and Mounting Block Immediately West of The Old Hall - Church Street

    Stable
    C17
    Timber-framed stable range on ashlar base, and red brick infill panels. Plin tile roof. L-shaped on plan. West side facing road faced in sandstone. South side faced in red brick in C19. Mounting block in the angle on north side, rusticated ashlar.

  20. The Little Haye - Church Street

    Hall House
    Medieval
    Probably a 2-bay medieval hall, with C17 and C18 additions and alterations. Long range at right angles to road. Central part is timber framed with painted brick infill panels. One storey and attic. Large dormer with jettied gable. Two storeyed sucooed timber frame to right with jettied gable with exposed timber framing and plastered panels; C18 canted 2-storey bay window with sashes and modillion cornice. C18 painted brick addition at west end facing road, 2-storeys, stepped brick gable end, and C19 gable; small early C19 bowed shop window to right with entablature and glazing bars and mid C19 pilastered shop to left with splayed window. C18 painted brick addition at opposite (east) end. Interior: the timber-framed range contains cruck trusses to what was probably a hall which has subsequently been floored.

  21. The Old Hall - Church Street

    House.
    Early C18.
    Red brick house. Hipped plain tile roof with heavey modillion eaves cornice. Two-storeys and attic. Five bays. Restored sashes with glazing bars, gauged flat brick arches with keystones. Central moulded doorcase with fielded panel door and rectangular fanlight. Restored plain shell hood over door supported on plain brackets and keystones of door arch below. Three hipped dormers with leaded-pane casements. Large brick end stacks. 2:1:2 bays at rear with hipped roof, centre higher.

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