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词条 Listed buildings in Neston
释义

  1. Key

  2. Buildings

  3. References

Neston is a civil parish in Cheshire West and Chester, England. It contains 76 buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated listed buildings. Of these, five are listed at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II. In addition to the village of Neston, it contains the settlements of Parkgate, Little Neston, and Ness. Outside the villages, the parish is rural. Most of the listed buildings are houses, or related to farming. The other listed buildings include churches and associated structures, a public house, a converted windmill, a former school and its chapel, a bridge over a disused railway, a war memorial, and a telephone kiosk.

Key

{{GeoGroupTemplate}}
Grade Criteria[1]
II* Particularly important buildings of more than special interest.
II Buildings of national importance and special interest.

Buildings

Name and locationPhotographDateNotesGrade
{{coord>53.2892|-3.0643|type:landmark|name=St Mary's and St Helen's Church}}{{sort|1350|14th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|pp=501–502|ps=}}{{sfnp|Richards|1947|pp=255–259|ps=}}[2]{{sort|b|II*}}
{{coord>53.2835|-3.0516|type:landmark|name=Hawthorne Cottage}}—}}{{sort|1650|17th century}}The cottage, which has had later alterations and additions, is in sandstone with a slate roof, and has a painted brick extension. It is in a single storey, and has a four-bay front. Most of the windows are casements with some sliding sash windows at the rear.[3]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2758|-3.0484|type:landmark|name=Goldstraw Farmhouse}}{{sort|1650|17th century}}This originated as Ness Manor, subsequently a farmhouse. It is built in brick on a stone plinth with a roof of concrete tiles. The house is in two storeys and an attic, with a two-bay gabled front. The windows are sashes. The attached farm building is in sandstone and brick with a slate roof. It is also in two storeys, and has small windows with heavy stone lintels.[4]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2828|-3.0524|type:landmark|name=The Rocklands}}—}}{{sort|1650|17th century}}This was originally a farm building and a farmhouse, which were later converted into a single dwelling. The stone farm building dates from the 17th century and the brick farmhouse from the middle of the 18th century. The roofs are slated. The former farmhouse has two storeys and a three-bay front, with a central single-storey gabled porch. A single-storey extension connects this to the former farm building. The windows are sashes.[5]{{sort|c|II}}
Leighton Hall
{{coord>53.3064|-3.0727|type:landmark|name=Farm building, Leighton Hall}}
—}}1665This possibly originated as a combined farmhouse and farm building. It is built in brick on a sandstone plinth with sandstone dressings and a slate roof. On the roof are stone copings and ball and pedestal finials. It has two storeys and is in five bays. The windows are mullioned, and there are ventilation slits in the shape of crosses.[6]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2909|-3.0647|type:landmark|name=The Barn}}{{sort|1675|Late 17th century}}This originated as a farm building, it was altered in the 19th century and used as a store. It stands on sandstone bedrock, and is constructed in sandstone, with a slate roof. It is in a single storey and has three bays. The windows are blocked.[7]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2996|-3.0872|type:landmark|name=Pengwern}}{{sort|1700|Late 17th or early 18th century}}The house is in stuccoed brick with slate roofs. The main part has three storeys and two bays, with a two-storey, single-bay extension to right. The windows are sashes. The garden is enclosed on three sides by a sandstone wall with a steep coping; the wall is included in the listing.[8]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2899|-3.0650|type:landmark|name=Old Bank Housen}}1702This originated as a town house, later converted into two shops and a flat. It is roughcast with a slate roof, it has two storeys with attics, and is in four bays. In the ground floor are shop fronts. The windows in the upper floor are sashes, and in the attic are two gabled dormers. To the left is a sandstone arched gateway, which is included in the listing.[9]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2906|-3.0686|type:landmark|name=Elmhurst}}1717Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[10]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2898|-3.0651|type:landmark|name=Greenland Fishery Hotel}}{{sort|1722|c. 1722}}This building originated as three houses. By 1822 two houses had been converted into two separate inns, and in 1892 these were joined as one inn. The three buildings were combined into a hotel in 1990. They are built in roughcast brick with stone dressings and have Welsh slate roofs. The building is in two storeys with attics.[11]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2767|-3.0477|type:landmark|name=Laburnum Farmhouse}}{{sort|1725|Early 18th century}}The farmhouse was altered in the 20th century. It is built in brick with a slate roof. The house is in two storeys, and has a four-bay front. The windows were inserted in the 20th century. Included in the listing are the sandstone garden walls.[12]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.3055|-3.0717|type:landmark|name=Leighton House}}—}}{{sort|1725|Early 18th century}}The country house possibly has earlier origins, and was extended and altered later, dividing it into two dwellings. It is built in rendered brick on a stone plinth and has a slate roof. It has two storeys, and an entrance front of five bays, plus a three-bay extension. The windows are a mix of sashes and casements.[13]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2907|-3.0698|type:landmark|name=Moorside House}}—}}{{sort|1725|Early 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[14]{{sort|b|II*}}
{{coord>53.2929|-3.0807|type:landmark|name=Nelson Cottage and Dover Cottage}}{{sort|1725|Early 18th century}}A pair of houses, later altered. They are in roughcast brick with slate roofs. The houses have three storeys, and each house has a two-bay front. Nelson Cottage has a canted bay window and a pointed oriel window. The other windows are sashes.[15]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2932|-3.0813|type:landmark|name=Prospect House}}{{sort|1725|Early 18th century}}A roughcast brick house with a slate roof and stone copings. It has three storeys and a two-bay front, with five steps leading up to the entrance. The door has a fanlight in a round-headed doorcase with a vermiculated keystone. This is flanked by full-height canted bays containing sash windows.[16]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2957|-3.0835|type:landmark|name=Seven Steps, Butcher's Shop and Teal Cottage}}{{sort|1725|Early 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=524|ps=}}[17]{{sort|b|II*}}
Little Neston
{{coord>53.2840|-3.0511|type:landmark|name=26 and 28 The Green}}
—}}1731Originating as a house, it was later converted into two dwellings. The building is in roughcast stone with slate roofs and stone-coped gables. It has two storeys and a three-bay front. In the centre is a timber half-glazed porch flanked by canted bay windows. The windows are sashes.[18]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2836|-3.0524|type:landmark|name=The White House}}—}}1732This was originally a farmhouse, and has been altered. It is built in sandstone and has an extension in painted brick. The roofs are slated with terracotta ridges. The original part is in two storeys with an attic, and has a two-bay front; the extension has two storeys and one bay. The windows in the original part of sliding sashes, and in the extension they are casements. Inside the house is an inglenook.[19]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.28991|-3.06532|type:landmark|name=Gittins Building}}1744This originated as a house. It was altered in the 20th century and used as a restaurant. The building is in brick with a slate roof. It has two storeys and an attic, with a one-bay gabled front facing the road. The windows in the lower storeys are sashes, and in the attic is a casement window.[20]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2904|-3.0663|type:landmark|name=Outbuildings, Vine House}}—}}1747The outbuildings originated as a stable block. They are in brick with a slate roof, and consist of a single storey with a loft, the building extending for six bays. It contains three wide openings, windows of various types, two circular pitch holes, and five rows of dove holes.[21]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.3073|-3.0575|type:landmark|name=Ashfield farmhouse}}—}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}The farmhouse is in brick on a stone plinth, with a rendered front, a roughcast rear, and a slate roof. It has two storeys, a basement and an attic, and a four-bay front. The windows are sashes. The attached farm building is in brick with an asbestos cement steel roof. It is in a single storey with a loft, and extends for four bays. Its features include round pitch holes, and ventilators in a diamond pattern.[22]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29297|-3.08086|type:landmark|name=Barnoon}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}A house that was later altered. It is built in rendered brick on a stone plinth with painted window surrounds and dressings, and a slate roof with stone copings. The house has three storeys and a two-bay front. The windows are sashes.[23]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2892|-3.0630|type:landmark|name=Church House Chambers}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}This was built as a town house, and converted later for use as a shop and offices. It is built in brick and has a slate roof. The building is in three storeys and has a three-bay front. It has an inserted shop front, the other windows being sashes. At the top of the building is a cornice and a plain parapet. At the sides are piers, one containing a sundial, the other a panel.[24]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2906|-3.0688|type:landmark|name=Elm Grove House}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[25]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29697|-3.08458|type:landmark|name=Maplewood}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}A roughcast house with painted window surrounds and quoins, and a concrete tile roof. It has two storeys, a two-bay front, and a gabled porch. One window is mullioned and transomed; all windows contain casements.[26]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2969|-3.0847|type:landmark|name=Overdee and Grey Walls}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}Originating as a single house, the building has been converted into two dwellings. It is built in roughcast brick with painted window surrounds and quoins, and has a slate roof with stone copings. The building has two storeys and attics, with three bays on the street front, two bays on the right side, and a two-storey two-bay extension beyond. The attics have casement windows in gabled dormers; the windows elsewhere are sashes.[27]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29446|-3.08226|type:landmark|name=South Cottage}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}A small house in roughcast brick on a stone plinth with painted dressings and a slate roof with coped gables. It has three storeys and a single-bay front, with two bays on the right side. Most of the windows are casements.[28]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2893|-3.0739|type:landmark|name=Spring Vale}}—}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}The house was subsequently extended and altered. It is built in brick on a stone plinth with a slate roof. The house has two storeys plus and attic, the gable end facing the road. On the right of this face is a polygonal bay window with a hipped roof. The windows are sashes. On the right side are two gabled dormers containing sliding sash windows.[29]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2931|-3.0812|type:landmark|name=Talbot House}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}The house incorporates an earlier rear wing and has subsequently been altered. It is in roughcast brick on a stone plinth, and has an L-shaped plan. The house is in two storeys with four bays facing the road, and the doorway on the right side. The windows are sashes, and there is a single dormer.[30]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2902|-3.0664|type:landmark|name=Vine House}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[31]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29405|-3.06771|type:landmark|name=Windmill}}—}}{{sort|1750|Mid 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[32]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29298|-3.08057|type:landmark|name=14 Station Road, Parkgate}}{{sort|1751|18th century}}A house that was altered in the 19th century. It is built in stuccoed brick with a slate roof. The house has three storeys and a two-bay front. The windows are sashes.[33]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2944|-3.0821|type:landmark|name=16–19 The Parade, Parkgate}}{{sort|1751|18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=523|ps=}}[34]{{sort|c|II}}
Vine House
{{coord>53.29027|-3.06613|type:landmark|name=Vine House}}
—}}{{sort|1751|18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[35]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2895|-3.0661|type:landmark|name=Holly Tree House}}{{sort|1751|18th century}}The house is stuccoed with a slate roof. It has three storeys and a two-bay front, which is flanked by single-storey screen walls with ball finials. The windows on the ground and first floors are sashes; those in the top floor are casements.[36]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2863|-3.0609|type:landmark|name=Newstead House}}{{sort|1765|1760s}}The house, which was later altered, is built in roughcast brick, with painted stone dressings, and has a roof of concrete tiles. The house has a square plan, is in two storeys with a basement, and has a front of three bays. It is in Georgian style, having sash windows with wedge lintels.[37]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2972|-3.0831|type:landmark|name=Banastre Cottage}}—}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=524|ps=}}[38]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2946|-3.0823|type:landmark|name=Balcony House}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|pp=523–524|ps=}}[39]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2971|-3.0828|type:landmark|name=Brockleigh}}—}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}The house was extended in the early 19th century. It is built in brick with a slate roof, and has two storeys. The original part is in three bays, with a single-bay extension to the right. The doorway has a round-arched doorcase and a fanlight. The windows are sashes.[40]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.3040|-3.0435|type:landmark|name=Cherry Farmhouse}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}The farmhouse has subsequently been altered and extended. It is built in sandstone with a slate roof and stone copings. The farmhouse has two storeys, a three-bay front, and a single-storey porch. The windows are sashes.[41]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2974|-3.0831|type:landmark|name=Leighton Banastre}}—}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=524|ps=}}[42]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2896|-3.0736|type:landmark|name=Moor End}}—}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}Originally a farmhouse, it was later altered. It is built in roughcast brick on a stone plinth with stucco dressings and a slate roof. The house is in three storeys, with a two-bay front. The right bay contains a two-storey canted bay window. The windows are sashes.[43]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2968|-3.0829|type:landmark|name=Mostyn Cottage}}—}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}The cottage is built in roughcast brick with a slate roof. It is in two storeys, and has a three-bay front. The windows are sashes.[44]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2997|-3.0873|type:landmark|name=Sawyers Cottage}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}The house has subsequently been altered and remodelled. It is roughcast with a Welsh slate roof. The house has two storeys with attics, and has a two-bay front. The windows are a mix of sashes and casements.[45]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2902|-3.0666|type:landmark|name=Sea View}}—}}{{sort|1775|Late 18th century}}A brick house with a slate roof, later altered. It has three storeys, and a two-bay front. The windows are sashes.[46]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.28899|-3.06452|type:landmark|name=Sundial}}1777Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=502|ps=}}[47]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29299|-3.08050|type:landmark|name=13 Station Road, Parkgate}}{{sort|1825|Early 19th century}}The cottage was altered in the 20th century. It is stuccoed, and has a slate roof. The cottage is in two storeys, and has a narrow, single-bay front.[48]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2762|-3.0483|type:landmark|name=Lloyd's Cottages}}—}}{{sort|1825|Early 19th century}}A row of three sandstone cottages with slate roofs. They are in two storeys, and each cottage has a single bay, the end cottages projecting forward. The windows are sashes.[49]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2891|-3.0664|type:landmark|name=The Hermitage}}—}}{{sort|1825|Early 19th century}}A villa in roughcast brick with a hipped slate roof. It consists of a ground floor and a half-basement, and has fronts of three bays. The windows are sashes. At the rear is a verandah.[50]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.3098|-3.0519|type:landmark|name=Yew Tree House}}—}}{{sort|1825|Early 19th century}}The house is built in brick with a pyramidal roof of slates and tiles. It has two storeys and a semi-basement, and a three-bay front. Eight steps lead up to a doorway with a porch of fluted columns and a dentilled cornice hood. The windows are sashes.[51]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2821|-3.0534|type:landmark|name=Glenton House}}—}}{{sort|1835|Early to mid 19th century}}A sandstone house with a slate roof and a terracotta ridge. It has two storeys, and a three-bay front. There is a central porch flanked by Tuscan columns, and with an entablature. The windows are sashes.[52]{{sort|c|II}}
St Winifrede's Church
{{coord>53.28504|-3.05920|type:landmark|name=Presbytery}}
—}}1840Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=502|ps=}}[53]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2962|-3.0832|type:landmark|name=St Thomas' Church}}1843Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=523|ps=}}[54]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2905|-3.0681|type:landmark|name=Beech House}}—}}1847The house is roughcast with a slate roof. It has two storeys, and a right-angled entrance front of three bays, with a single-storey flat-roofed porch in the angle. Elsewhere are single-storey canted bay windows. The other windows are sashes.[55]{{sort|c|II}}
Little Neston
{{coord>53.2836|-3.0520|type:landmark|name=1–6 Victoria Road}}
—}}{{sort|1850|Mid 19th century}}A row of three sandstone semi-detached houses. Nos. 5 and 6 have slate roofs; the others have concrete tiles. The houses have two storeys and single-bay fronts. The windows are sashes.[56]{{sort|c|II}}
Little Neston
{{coord>53.2839|-3.0518|type:landmark|name=20 The Green}}
—}}{{sort|1850|Mid 19th century}}Originating as a shop and a house, the building was later extended and converted into a house. It is in roughcast stone with a slate roof. It has two storeys, and consists of a main two-bay section and a single-bay extension. The windows are casements.[57]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.3082|-3.0859|type:landmark|name=Backwood Hall}}{{sort|1850|Mid 19th century}}A mansion built in red brick with slate roofs in Jacobean style. It is in two storeys with a basement, and extends for five bays, the three central bays projecting forward. The entrance is flanked by Tuscan columns, with an entablature, above which is a balustrade. The windows are sashes, above which are three shaped gables.[58]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2891|-3.0660|type:landmark|name=Springfield}}{{sort|1850|Mid 19th century}}The house is built in roughcast brick on a plinth, and has rusticated quoins and slate roofs. Around the ground floor main fronts is a glass-roofed verandah. The gables have bargeboards, some of which are decorated, and others are plain. The house has a roughly cruciform plan, and is in two storeys. The windows are sashes.[59]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29301|-3.08038|type:landmark|name=11 Station Road}}{{sort|1851|19th century}}A cottage with earlier origins, and later alterations. It is built in roughcast brick on a rendered plinth with a slate roof. The cottage has two storeys, with the gable end facing the street, and the entrance on the left side.[60]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29301|-3.08046|type:landmark|name=12 Station Road}}{{sort|1851|19th century}}A cottage with alterations in the 20th century. It is stuccoed with a slate roof. The cottage has two storeys, and us set back from the adjoining properties. The windows are casements.[61]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2838|-3.0521|type:landmark|name=Hope Cottages}}1853Originally a row of six cottages, later two combined into one. They are built in sandstone with slate roofs. One cottage has one storey, the others have two; each has a two-bay front. They were modernised in the 20th century, with new windows and the addition of porches.[62]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2937|-3.0816|type:landmark|name=Mostyn House School}}1855Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=523|ps=}}[63]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2982|-3.0437|type:landmark|name=Hinderton Hall}}1856Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=400|ps=}}{{sfnp|de Figueiredo|Treuherz|1988|p=242|ps=}}[64][65]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29918|-3.04682|type:landmark|name=Lodge, Hinderton Hall}}{{sort|1856|c. 1856}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=400|ps=}}[66]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29866|-3.04086|type:landmark|name=Back Lodge}}{{sort|1856|c. 1856}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=400|ps=}}[67]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.29578|-3.03821|type:landmark|name=Quarry Lodge}}{{sort|1856|c. 1856}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=400|ps=}}[68]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.28925|-3.06471|type:landmark|name=Hearse house}}{{sort|1875|c. 1875}}Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=502|ps=}}[69]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2910|-3.0329|type:landmark|name=Windle Hall}}—}}{{sort|1876|Late 19th century}}A house in sandstone with a slate roof and a blue tiled ridge. It is in two storeys, with a two-bay centre range flanked by gabled cross-wings. On the right side is a tower with a lancet window. The other windows are sashes.[70]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.28773|-3.06408|type:landmark|name=Church Lane Bridge}}{{sort|1886|c. 1886}}The bridge was built to carry Church Lane over the Parkgate branch of the Birkenhead, Lancs and Cheshire Junction Railway, now closed; it now crosses the footpath of the Wirral Way. It is built in engineering brick faced with sandstone. It consists of a single semicircular arch of voussoirs springing from imposts on abutments.[71]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2945|-3.0411|type:landmark|name=The Towers}}—}}1890A country house designed by William Pritchard. It is built in sandstone with a slate roof and red tiles on the ridge. The house has a complex plan, and is in two and three storeys. Its features include coped gables, steps leading up to the entrance porch, a turret with a crow-stepped crenellated parapet, oriel windows, and bay windows.[72]{{sort|c|II}}
Mostyn House School
{{coord>53.2936|-3.0811|type:landmark|name=Chapel, Mostyn House School}}
—}}1895Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=523|ps=}}[73]{{sort|b|II*}}
{{coord>53.2899|-3.0649|type:landmark|name=Jackson's Tower}}1895Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[74]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2910|-3.0710|type:landmark|name=Manse}}—}}1899Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=503|ps=}}[75]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.2994|-3.0867|type:landmark|name=Brooke House}}—}}1904Hartwell|Hyde|Hubbard|Pevsner|2011|p=524|ps=}}[76]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.28940|-3.06413|type:landmark|name=War Memorial}}19205|m}} high. The memorial consists of a base of three square steps, a tapering plinth, and a wheel-head cross. The front is carved with a crown of thorns around the head, rosebuds on the arms of the cross, and on the shaft is intertwining foliage. On the plinth are inscriptions relating to both World War, and a plaque referring to the Falklands War.[77]{{sort|c|II}}
{{coord>53.27653|-3.04832|type:landmark|name=Telephone kiosk}}1935A K6 type telephone kiosk, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott. It is constructed in cast iron, with a square plan and domed roof. In the panels around the top are three unperforated crowns.[78]{{sort|c|II}}

References

Citations
1. ^{{citation|url=http://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/what-is-designation/listed-buildings/|title=Listed Buildings|publisher=Historic England|accessdate=1 April 2015}}
2. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387671|desc= Church of St Mary and St Helen, Neston|accessdate= 12 August 2013|mode=cs2}}
3. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387798|desc= Hawthorne Cottage, Little Neston|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
4. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387699|desc= Goldstraw Farmhouse and attached farm building to north-west, Ness|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
5. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387842|desc= The Rocklands, Little Neston|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
6. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387675|desc= Farm building to Leighton Hall, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
7. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387674|desc= The Barn, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
8. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387791|desc= Pengwern and attached garden walls, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
9. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387708|desc= Old Bank House and attached gateway at left, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
10. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387714|desc= Elmhurst, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
11. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387705|desc= The Greenland Fishery Hotel, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
12. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387680|desc= Laburnum Farmhouse and garden walls attached at front, Ness|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
13. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387676|desc= Leighton House, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
14. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387716|desc= Moorside House and attached railings, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
15. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387733|desc= Nelson Cottage (No.15) and Dover Cottage (No.16), Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
16. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387792|desc= Prospect House and attached railings to front steps, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
17. ^{{NHLE |num= 1061375|desc= Seven Steps, Butchers Shop and Teal Cottage, Parkgate|accessdate= 12 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
18. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387737|desc= 26 and 28 The Green, Little Neston|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
19. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387799|desc= The White House, Little Neston|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
20. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387715|desc= Gittins Building, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
21. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387711|desc= Outbuildings of Vine House, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
22. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387650|desc= Ashfield Farmhouse and attached farm building to north-east, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
23. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387783|desc= Barnoon, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
24. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387669|desc= Church House Chambers, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
25. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387713|desc= Elm Grove House, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
26. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387789|desc= Maplewood, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
27. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387790|desc= Overdee and Grey Walls, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
28. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387794|desc= South Cottage, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
29. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387691|desc= Spring Vale, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
30. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387795|desc= Talbot House, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
31. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387709|desc= Vine House, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
32. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387677|desc= Old Windmill, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
33. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387732|desc= 14 Station Road, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
34. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387780|desc= 16–19 The Parade, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
35. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387710|desc= Garden Walls of Vine House, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
36. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387660|desc= Holly Tree House, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
37. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387645|desc= Newstead House, Neston|accessdate= 12 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
38. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387782|desc= Banastre Cottage, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
39. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387781|desc= Nos.1 and 2 Balcony House and attached railings to front steps, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
40. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387721|desc= Brockleigh, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
41. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387796|desc= Cherry Farmhouse, Neston|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
42. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387788|desc= Leighton Banastre, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
43. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387690|desc= Moor End, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
44. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387724|desc= Mostyn Cottage, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
45. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387793|desc= Sawyers Cottage, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
46. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387689|desc= Sea View, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
47. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387672|desc= Churchyard Sundial west of Church of St Mary and St Helen, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
48. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387731|desc= 13 Station Road, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
49. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387697|desc= Lloyd's Cottages, Ness |accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
50. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387662|desc= The Hermitage, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
51. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387678|desc= Yew Tree House, Thornton Hough|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
52. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387644|desc= Glenton House, Neston|accessdate= 12 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
53. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387647|desc= Presbytery to Church of St Winefride, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
54. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387722|desc= Church of St Thomas, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
55. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387712|desc= Beech House, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
56. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387797|desc= 1–6 Victoria Road, Little Neston|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
57. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387736|desc= 20 The Green, Little Neston|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
58. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387641|desc= Backwood Hall, Parkgate|accessdate= 12 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
59. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387661|desc= Springfield, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
60. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387729|desc= 11 Station Road, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
61. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387730|desc= 12 Station Road, Parkgate|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
62. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387735|desc= Hope Cottages, Little Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
63. ^{{NHLE |num= 1401335|desc= Mostyn House School, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
64. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387654|desc= Hinderton Hall|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
65. ^{{Citation | url = http://www.hindertonhallestate.co.uk/index-1.html| title = Hinderton Hall| accessdate = 13 August 2013| publisher = Hinderton Hall}}
66. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387657|desc= Lodge approximately 250m to north-west of Hinderton Hall|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
67. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387652|desc= Back Lodge, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
68. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387720|desc= Quarry Lodge, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
69. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387673|desc= Hearse house north-west of Church of St Mary and St Helen, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
70. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387668|desc= Windle Hall, Hinderton |accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
71. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387659|desc= Church Lane Bridge, Neston|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
72. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387658|desc= The Towers, Hinderton|accessdate= 13 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
73. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387786|desc= Chapel of Mostyn House School, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
74. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387707|desc= The Tower, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
75. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387717|desc= The Manse, Neston|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
76. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387784|desc= Brooke House, Parkgate|accessdate= 15 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
77. ^{{NHLE |num= 1451520|desc= Neston War Memorial|accessdate= 12 January 2018|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
78. ^{{NHLE |num= 1387701|desc= K6 Telephone Kiosk in forecourt of Post Office, Ness|accessdate= 14 August 2013|mode=cs2|fewer-links=yes}}
Sources{{Refbegin}}
  • {{Citation | last = de Figueiredo| first = Peter | author-link = | last2 = Treuherz | first2 = Julian | author2-link = | publication-date = | date = | year = 1988 | title = Cheshire Country Houses |publication-place = Chichester | publisher = Phillimore | isbn = 0-85033-655-4 }}
  • {{Citation | last = Hartwell | first = Clare |last2 = Hyde | first2 = Matthew |last3 = Hubbard | first3 = Edward | author3-link=Edward Hubbard | last4 =Pevsner | first4 =Nikolaus | author4-link =Nikolaus Pevsner | series= The Buildings of England| title = Cheshire |edition= | publisher =Yale University Press| year =2011| origyear=1971| location =New Haven and London| pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn =978-0-300-17043-6 }}
  • {{Citation | last =Richards | first =Raymond | title =Old Cheshire Churches | publisher =Batsford | year =1947 | location =London | pages =| oclc =719918}}
{{Refend}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Neston}}

3 : Listed buildings in Cheshire West and Chester|Lists of listed buildings in Cheshire|Neston

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