Description | There is no description of this building in the folder. However, there are a few photographs that are accompanied by a short note, which were both received from the Leeds City Council Department of Planning in 1991. From the photographs, the stone built house appears to be of 18th century date. The house is symmetrical, with two storeys and three bays of windows. It also has two chimneys to the ridge, one on either gable. The windows are mainly 16 pane sashes, with narrower panes to the middle bay. These features all support an 18th century date of construction. A 12 bay sash window has been inserted into an earlier central doorway on the road side front. The cruciform window to the right of this opening has also been inserted at a later date. The note, initialled PEHW and dated 1991, that accompanies the photographs mentions that this right hand bay was at sometime used as a bakery, at the same time that the ‘unusual’ cruciform window was inserted. The note then goes on to say that ‘the building seems largely unaltered and the attached side walls give it great presence in the street’ (PEHW, 1991). |