The Old Vicarage, Cubbington
A two storey vicarage which was built during the Imperial period of red brick. It is situated 150m north of the church, Cubbington.
1 Built in 1821 at a cost of £1,200. Red brick with low pitched slate roof with hipped ends and wide projecting eaves. Two storeys. Square on plan but with later addition in same style to east. Entrance on west elevation, consists of portico with pair Tuscan Doric columns and pair of attached Doric pilasters supporting entablature. Four panel door under ornate rectangular fanlight. Sashes with glazing bars and rendered cills, those on south elevation are in moulded architraves. The one bay later addition which projects forward has a tripartite sash window to ground floor and sash above, both in moulded architraves.
2 Illustration.
3 The vicarage is at present unoccupied, and will presently be converted to flats.
- For the sources of these notes, see the
- Timetrail record
- produced by the Historic Environment Record.
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