Bewholme Vicarage | |
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Type | House |
Location | Bewholme,East Riding of Yorkshire |
Coordinates | 53°56′00″N0°13′34″W / 53.9332°N 0.226°W /53.9332; -0.226 |
Built | 1859 |
Architect | William Burges |
Architectural style(s) | Gothic Revival |
Governing body | Privately owned |
Listed Building – Grade II | |
Official name | The Old Vicarage, Bewholme |
Designated | 26 November 1985 |
Reference no. | 1249413 |
Bewholme Vicarage, in the village ofBewholme,East Riding of Yorkshire, England, is a former vicarage designed by the architectWilliam Burges in 1859. It is aGrade II listed building and is now a private residence.
Burges designed the vicarage in 1859.[1] His patron appears to be unrecorded.[2][3]Pevsner notes the vicarage is "a somewhat surprising house to find in a smallHolderness village".[1] In the following year, Burges also drew up designs for the parish church but these were not executed.[1] The vicarage is of red brick with a seven-bay frontage.[1] Anthony Jennings describes the building as in Burges's "eccentric Northern French fairytale style".[4] Its interior retains "many original features, including the staircase and a number of fireplaces".[1] The building isGrade II listed.[2]