Listed buildings in Whiston, Merseyside

Whiston is a civil parish in Knowsley, Merseyside, England. It contains nine buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated listed buildings, all of which are listed at Grade II. This grade is the lowest of the three gradings given to listed buildings and is applied to "buildings of national importance and special interest".[1] The parish is partly residential, and partly rural. The listed buildings include farmhouses and farm buildings, houses, structure sat the entrance to a former country house, a church, and a railway bridge.

Name and location Photograph Date Notes
Paddocks and Stables
53°24′09″N 2°48′24″W / 53.40239°N 2.80668°W / 53.40239; -2.80668 (Paddocks and Stables)
1653 Originating as a barn and other farm buildings, these are in stone, with brick at the rear, and have slate roofs. The buildings form a long range, and were remodelled in 1819. There are various openings, including doorways, oculi and square-headed windows, and ventilation holes.[2][3]
Carr House Farmhouse
53°24′08″N 2°48′25″W / 53.40230°N 2.80702°W / 53.40230; -2.80702 (Carr House Farmhouse)
Before 1660 A sandstone farmhouse with a stone roof, built in two phases, and consisting of a main range and a cross-wing. It is in two storeys, and there is a datestone above a blocked doorway. The windows are mullioned.[2][4]
Old Halsnead
53°24′01″N 2°47′30″W / 53.40017°N 2.79178°W / 53.40017; -2.79178 (Old Halsnead)
1680 A stuccoed stone house with a stone roof, in two storeys, with a four-bay front. In the third bay is a two-storey gabled porch. This has a round-arched entrance with a keystone and imposts, above which is a three-light windows and an armorial crest. The other bays all contain a five-light mullioned window on each floor.[2][5]
Sandfield Cottage
53°24′32″N 2°47′20″W / 53.40885°N 2.78894°W / 53.40885; -2.78894 (Sandfield Cottage)
18th century A brick house with a stone roof, in two storeys, and with a symmetrical three-bay front. The central doorway has a fanlight, and a Tuscan porch with a cornice. Flanking the house are two-storey wings, each with a hipped roof. The windows are sashes.[6]
Barn, Snape Gate
53°24′09″N 2°47′12″W / 53.40260°N 2.78667°W / 53.40260; -2.78667 (Barn, Snape Gate)
18th century (probable) The former barn is in stone, with irregular quoins on the corners, and it has a stone roof. On the road side is a cart entrance with a segmental head and a keystone. On the south side are two rows of ventilation slits.[7]
Northeast Lodge,
Halsnead Park
53°24′21″N 2°47′06″W / 53.40589°N 2.78513°W / 53.40589; -2.78513 (Northeast Lodge, Halsnead Park)
Early 19th century The lodge to a former country house, now demolished. It is in Georgian style, built in stone, and with a pyramidal slate roof. The lodge is in a single storey, it has rusticated quoins, and a central round-headed porch before a round-headed doorway. The windows are also round-headed and are mullioned.[2][8]
Gatepiers, Lodge,
Halsnead Park
53°24′22″N 2°47′06″W / 53.40602°N 2.78510°W / 53.40602; -2.78510 (Gatepiers, Lodge, Halsnead Park)
Early 19th century There are four gate piers, all in rusticated stone, with a square plan and topped by a cornice and a ball finial. Two piers are beside the entrance to the drive, and these are flanked by curving walls, at the ends of which are the other piers by the roadside.[2][9]
Roper's Bridge
53°24′49″N 2°47′59″W / 53.41361°N 2.79974°W / 53.41361; -2.79974 (Roper's Bridge)
c. 1829 The bridge carries Dragon Lane over the former Liverpool and Manchester Railway at an angle. It was designed by George Stephenson, and is built in sandstone. It consists of a single segmental arch with voussoirs and projecting keystones and flanked by full-height pilaster strips. The parapet consists of sandstone blocks.[10]
St Nicholas' Church
53°24′25″N 2°48′11″W / 53.40693°N 2.80298°W / 53.40693; -2.80298 (St Nicholas' Church)
1864–68 The church was designed by G. E. Street in Early English style, and is built in sandstone with slate roofs. It consists of a nave with a clerestory, aisles, a chancel with a north organ chamber and a south Lady chapel, and a west vestry. At the southeast corner, and almost detached, is a tower. The stained glass includes windows designed by William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones.[11][12]

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