Words from British Listed Buildings with own observations.
Grade II listed inn. Built c.1650, three-storeys and cellar, shallow pitched slate roof with two brick stacks, a six-flue pointed-top blind arcade buttress one to the right rear and a round-top blind arcade buttress type to the left rear. This stack is easily visible from the garden at the rear-left of the main building and has decorative wind-deflection tops.
A three-window range:- Ground floor has a central six-panelled door in a panelled case with moulded architrave and a moulded pediment hood over, two
C20th 12/12 sashes to left and right. The first floor has a central 8/8 sash in a moulded wood architrave flanked by 12/12 sashes in similar settings. the top floor has three 8/8 sashes in similar settings.
Right gable has purlin visible below present pitch.
Right-hand wall of the passage to rear is of rubble with dressed quoins. And a further range to the rear is of rubble and brick, with C20th 8/8 sash to the ground floor, and two blocked openings over. This C18th twin gabled rear range has casements to the 1st and 2nd floors under timber lintels with blocked openings in the gables.
For further information see:- Blue Boar