Listed buildings in Broughton, Cumbria

Broughton is a civil parish in the Borough of Allerdale in Cumbria, England. It contains four listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. All the listed buildings are designated at Grade II, the lowest of the three grades, which is applied to "buildings of national importance and special interest".[1] The parish contains the villages of Great Broughton and Little Broughton, and is otherwise rural. The listed buildings consist of houses, a war memorial, and a farmhouse and farm building.

Buildings

Name and location Photograph Date Notes
17 West End
54.66763°N 3.43725°W / 54.66763; -3.43725 (17 West End)
Late 17th or early 18th century Originally a house, later altered and used for other purposes, it is roughcast with a green slate roof. The building has two storeys and three bays, a central door with a plain surround, and sash windows with plain reveals.[2]
Pennybridge and barn
54.66366°N 3.43547°W / 54.66366; -3.43547 (Pennybridge)
Late 18th century A farmhouse and attached barn that are stuccoed and have tiled roofs. The house has two storeys and three bays, quoins and sash windows with architraves. On the front is a gabled porch and a door, also with an architrave. The barn, to the left, has a blocked segmental arch and a projecting cart entrance.[3]
Scott House
54.66812°N 3.43481°W / 54.66812; -3.43481 (Scott House)
Early 19th century A roughcast house with a green slate roof, in two storeys and four bays. Above the doorway is a cornice hood, and the windows are sashes.[4]
Great Broughton War Memorial
54.67161°N 3.43526°W / 54.67161; -3.43526 (Great Broughton War Memorial)
1920 The war memorial is in the churchyard of Christ Church, Great Broughton. It is in slate and consists of a stele-like panel on a four-sided plinth and a single-stepped base. The panel has a pointed top, a carved laurel wreath, inscriptions, and the names of those lost in both World Wars.[5]
gollark: "Pluck it out" is also easy to say, but it's actually even harder.
gollark: "Find useful stuff" also sounds pleasantly easy, but it's *not*. Even a human reading a repository or paper may struggle to find "useful" bits; reasoning about the relevance of a new set of information or methods for a project is a difficult general intelligence task.
gollark: I mean, "list of AI" is probably easy enough, you could just... search github using some keywords, and maybe research papers.
gollark: Just because you can describe a task in a sentence or so doesn't mean you can give a description clear and detailed enough to think about programming it.
gollark: Early attempts at AI back in the last millennium tried to create AIs by giving them logical reasoning abilities and a large set of facts. This didn't really work; they did some things, hit the limits of the facts they had, and didn't do anything very interesting.

References

Citations

Sources

  • Historic England, "H. Thompson Betting Office, Broughton (1327222)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 4 January 2016
  • Historic England, "Pennybridge and adjoining barn, Broughton (1327221)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 4 January 2016
  • Historic England, "Scott House, Broughton (1144501)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 4 January 2016
  • Historic England, "Great Broughton War Memorial, Broughton (1457605)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 August 2018
  • Historic England, Listed Buildings, retrieved 4 January 2016
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