This is a list of all listed buildings in Frindsbury and Frindsbury Extra excluding the Upnors.
Site | Number | Grade | Location | Grid Reference | Images and Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tudor Cottage | 1085738 | II | 130, Cooling Road | TQ 73898 70672 | Late 16C timber-framed house. |
Cypress House | 1085739 | II | 227, Frindsbury Hill | TQ 74406 70314 | 17C house, refaced in banded blue and red brick. |
The Manor House | 1085745 | II | Upnor Road | TQ 74755 70055 | Late 16C farmhouse. Refronted mid 18C. |
Boghurst Tomb | 1086415 | II | 2 metres south of south aisle of All Saints Church, Church Green | TQ 74408 69787 | Chest tomb 1750. Inscriptions, urn balusters, railed. |
82 and 82A Frindsbury Road | 1086417 | II | Frindsbury Road | TQ 74028 69868 | Part of a late 18C row of houses. |
Moulding Tomb | 1107873 | II | 20 metres east of All Saints Church, Church Green | TQ 74446 69787 | Chest tomb, 1789. Inscriptions and urn balusters. |
Parish Church of All Saints | 1107886 | II* | Church Green | TQ 74412 69801 | Norman and later parish church. |
Parish Church of St Mary | 1121550 | II* | Vicarage Road | TQ 73874 69521 | Victorian church 1868–9. Listing describes it as "outstanding". "thoroughly convincing ... tautly designed and with an excellent use of materials" [1] |
Brickhouse Farmhouse | 1204311 | II | Stonehouse Lane | TQ 73287 71062 | 1677 timber framed farmhouse. Date on tablet with "I ♥ L". |
Barn 30 yards south west of the manor house | 1204320 | I | Upnor Road | TQ 74694 70041 | Timber framed barn of 1300 [2] or c.1400 [3] originally of 14 bays. Four bays lost to fire in 2003. |
Red House | 1262809 | II | 195, Frindsbury Road | TQ 74270 70145 | Mid 18C house with early 19C front. |
Manor Farm Oast | 1278058 | II | Manor Farm, Upnor Road | TQ 74793 70058 | 1860s oasthouse. Two circular kilns. 5 bay stowage, described in the listing as having "unusually attractive architectural treatment". |
Sole Street Farm House | 1281289 | II | Lower Rochester Road | TQ 73652 71102 | Early 16C timber framed farmhouse, later extended. Weatherboarded. |
80, Frindsbury Road | 1323746 | II | Frindsbury Road | TQ 74023 69858 | Late 18C brick house. |
Group of 12 headstones | 1325194 | II | South of south aisle of All Saints Church, Church Green | TQ 74401 69790 | Various 17C and 18C headstones. |
Miller monument | 1336169 | II | 15 metres south of All Saints Church, Church Green | TQ 74400 69777 | Early 19C sarcophagus monument. Running-dog frieze. |
84, Frindsbury Road | 1336170 | II | Frindsbury Road | TQ 74034 69876 | Late 18C brick house. |
Old Parsonage | 1336172 | II | Parsonage Lane | TQ 74478 69831 | 1700 brick house with painted stucco render over. Originally All Saints Church rectory, |
Stone House Farmhouse | 1336488 | II | Dillywood Lane | TQ 73164 71292 | 18C house. Possibly earlier, possibly timber framed. |
Vine Cottage | 1336489 | II | 229, Frindsbury Hill | TQ 74430 70336 | Late 18C brick cottage. catslide roof to right. |
Roman Catholic Church of the English Martyrs | 1422504 | II | Frindsbury Road | TQ 73949 69841 | Modern (1963-4) fan-shaped church. The design reflects the Second Vatican Council reforms. Brick, concrete and a notable copper covered timber roof. |
Royal Oak public house | 1434926 | II | 53 Cooling Road | TQ 73985 70466 | Late 17C timber-framed house. From mid 18C used as a pub. Extended 18C, 19C and 20C. Refaced in brick c.1800 |
Strood is a town in the unitary authority of Medway in Kent, South East England. It lies on the northwest bank of the River Medway at its lowest bridging point, and is part of the Rochester post town.
Yarmouth Castle is an artillery fort built by Henry VIII in 1547 to protect Yarmouth Harbour on the Isle of Wight from the threat of French attack. Just under 100 feet (30 m) across, the square castle was initially equipped with 15 artillery guns and a garrison of 20 men. It featured an Italianate "arrow-head" bastion on its landward side; this was very different in style from the earlier circular bastions used in the Device Forts built by Henry and was the first of its kind to be constructed in England.
Lower Upnor and Upper Upnor are two small villages in Medway, Kent, England. They are in the parish of Frindsbury Extra on the western bank of the River Medway. Today the two villages are mainly residential and a centre for small craft moored on the river, but Upnor Castle is a preserved monument, part of the river defences from the sixteenth century.
Baconsthorpe Castle, historically known as Baconsthorpe Hall, is a ruined, fortified manor house near the village of Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England. It was established in the 15th century on the site of a former manor hall, probably by John Heydon I and his father, William. John was an ambitious lawyer with many enemies and built a tall, fortified house, but his descendants became wealthy sheep farmers, and being less worried about attack, developed the property into a more elegant, courtyard house, complete with a nearby deer park.
Nunney Castle is a medieval castle at Nunney in the English county of Somerset. Built in the late 14th century by Sir John Delamare on the profits of his involvement in the Hundred Years War, the moated castle's architectural style, possibly influenced by the design of French castles, has provoked considerable academic debate. Remodelled during the late 16th century, Nunney Castle was damaged during the English Civil War and is now ruined.
Wainscott is a small village in Rochester, in Kent, England. It is in the civil parish of Frindsbury Extra, in the Medway Unitary Authority, that is Medway Council. By 1950 it had been absorbed into the neighbouring residential areas of Strood. Wainscott itself is located immediately next to Frindsbury, and is surrounded by agricultural land and ancient woodlands. It is speculated that the name is derived from the OE meaning Wagonner Cot or Wagon Shed.
Sevenoaks Weald is a village and civil parish in the Sevenoaks District of Kent, England. The parish is located on the Low Weald, immediately south of Sevenoaks town, with the village of Sevenoaks Weald at its centre. It was formed in 1894 from part of the ancient parish of Sevenoaks.
Bayham Old Abbey is an English Heritage property, located near Lamberhurst, Kent, England. Founded c. 1207 through a combination of the failing Premonstratensian monasteries of Otham and Brockley, Bayham functioned as an abbey until its dissolution in the 16th century. The ruins were partially modified in the late 18th century, to provide a better landscape feature during landscaping of the new Bayham Abbey mansion park, and were donated to the state in 1961.
Eynsford Castle is a ruined medieval fortification in Eynsford, Kent. Built on the site of an earlier Anglo-Saxon stone burh, the castle was constructed by William de Enysford, probably between 1085 and 1087, to protect the lands of Lanfranc, the Archbishop of Canterbury, from Odo, the Bishop of Bayeux. It comprised an inner and an outer bailey, the former protected by a stone curtain wall. In 1130 the defences were improved, and a large stone hall built in the inner bailey. The de Enysford family held the castle until their male line died out in 1261, when it was divided equally between the Heringaud and de Criol families. A royal judge, William Inge, purchased half of the castle in 1307, and arguments ensued between him and his co-owner, Nicholas de Criol, who ransacked Eynsford in 1312. The castle was never reoccupied and fell into ruins, and in the 18th century it was used to hold hunting kennels and stables. The ruins began to be restored after 1897, work intensifying after 1948 when the Ministry of Works took over the running of the castle. In the 21st century, Eynsford Castle is managed by English Heritage and is open to visitors.
Frindsbury, sometimes called Frinsbury, is part of the Medway Towns conurbation in Kent, southern England. It lies on the opposite side of the River Medway to Rochester, and at various times in its history has been considered fully or partially part of the City of Rochester. Frindsbury refers to both a parish and a manor. Within the civil parish of Frindsbury Extra are the villages of Frindsbury, Wainscott, and Upnor. Frindsbury was also the name given to an electoral ward in the City of Rochester that straddled the parishes of Frindsbury and Strood.
Richard Charles Hussey, often referred to as R. C. Hussey, was a British architect. He was in partnership with Thomas Rickman from 1835, whose practice he assumed in 1838 with the latter's failing health; Rickman died on 4 January 1841.
Pen-y-clawdd is a village in Monmouthshire, south east Wales, situated between Raglan and Monmouth. The village is the site of a medieval fortification and there is a historic church with an ancient cross in the churchyard which is a scheduled monument.
All Saints, Frindsbury, is a parish church serving the combined parish of Frindsbury with Upnor and Chattenden. The church dates from 1075 and lies in the north-west corner of the Medway Towns, historically part of Kent, England. It is a Grade II* listed building, National Heritage List number 1107886.
The Church of St Margaret of Antioch at Darenth, Kent, is a church with Norman origins thought to be the third oldest in Kent and the sixth oldest in the United Kingdom. It is a Grade I listed building.
Temple Manor is a scheduled ancient monument and grade I listed building in Strood, Kent. The Manor has been owned by various religious, national and farming owners over 600 years. The building has been added to and adapted over the centuries, but the basic structure is now clearly visible.
The Royal Oak is a Grade II-listed house in Frindsbury, a Medway town in Kent, United Kingdom. The building dates from the late 17th century and it was used as a public house since before 1754. It is one of a few pre-Victorian buildings on Cooling Road in Frindsbury and one of the last remaining coach houses in the area.
John Arthur Newman is an English architectural historian. He is the author of several of the Pevsner Architectural Guides and is the advisory editor to the series.
Stuart Eborall Rigold FSA FRHistS FRSA was a British Photographer and Archaeologist, who served as President of the British Numismatic Society between 1971 to 1975 and Principal inspector of England for the Inspectorate of Ancient Monuments between 1976 to 1978. He had a keen personal interest in medieval architecture on which he studied and wrote extensively, and was a pioneer of the scholarship of timber framing.
Citations
Bibliography