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arch. As the
Carmelite friary has now been shown by archaeological excavation to have been under St Mark's Station, on the opposite side of the High Street, it is unlikely that the building was associated with the friary. It has been alternatively suggested that the Whitefriars was the half-timbered
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and is coved (curved) outwards with eaves above. South side has moulded uprights. Above, two square wooden oriels on moulded brackets and a 4-light window with wooden mullions and gothic tracery The interior has stud walls with jowled bay posts, two of them with arch braces, and arch braces to the
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Surprisingly little is known about this building. The name Akrill refers to a baker who owned the property in the early part of the 19th century. Padley, who made scaled drawings of the buildings in 1851, said that traditionally it was thought to be part of the White or
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who was the MP for
Grantham. The building may have been a speculative commercial venture, attracting superior tenants who would sell from the ground floor chamber and live with their family on the first floor. Restoration work was undertaken to the building in 1963.
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building in
Lincoln. It now has a late 20th century shop front, but the timber-framed building survives with the southern front facing the narrow Akrill’s passage, on the east side of the High Street and just to the south of the railway crossing.
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Originally a house dating from the 15th century. The facade faces to the south in a narrow alley-way and the building is at a right angle to the High Street. It has a
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church, but there is documentary evidence that in 1563 it was owned by Arthur Hall, an important
Grantham merchant – this appears to be the same
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Vernacular
Architecture Group, Spring Conference 2016: Lincolnshire, March 29th to April 1st 2016
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spine beams. Principal rafter roof with collars and spine beam. Two stud walls without nogging.
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Selections from the ancient monastic ecclesiastical and domestic edifices of
Lincolnshire
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In Akrill’s passage, behind the frontage of ABC House
Clearance, 333 High Street, Lincoln
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Friary in
Lincoln. Adjacent to it at the east end was a small stone building with a
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Antram N (revised), Pevsner N & Harris J, (1989),
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See also - Medieval
Domestic Architecture in Lincoln
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210:Akrill's Passage, Lincoln by A E Wright, c.1880
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381:Buildings and structures in Lincoln, England
266:and a plain tile roof. The first floor is
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282:The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire
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35:Whitefriars, 333 High Street, Lincoln
24:Whitefriars, 333 High Street, Lincoln
18:Historic site in High Street, Lincoln
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193:or Akrill's Court is a 16th century
244:Whitefriars, High Street, Lincoln.
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284:, Yale University Press. pg 525.
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366:John of Gaunt’s Palace, Lincoln
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262:of four bays with rendered
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349:British Listed Buildings
296:Stocker D. (ed) (2016),
386:Houses in Lincolnshire
328:"Stocker" (2016), p.16
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108:Architectural style(s)
246:By J. S. Padley, 1851
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318:Photograph of c1955
287:Padley J.S. (1851)
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230:St Mary le Wigford
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141:Reference no.
70:53.2262°N 0.5418°W
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177:Location in
103:16th Century
93:SO1392992455
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251:Description
234:Arthur Hall
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49:Coordinates
375:Categories
305:References
291:, Lincoln
275:Literature
191:Whitefriar
133:Designated
127:– Grade II
58:53°13′34″N
217:Carmelite
61:0°32′30″W
226:vicarage
41:Location
268:jettied
264:nogging
202:History
144:1388593
221:Norman
100:Built
228:of
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