Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
2 almshouses built in 1754 and founded by William Law. Altered during the 20th century. Extensions were added during these alterations.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Numbers 266 and 268 front the main road with 270 and 272 attached to the rear. 266 and 268 are 18th century, the left bay of 268 is early 19th century and 270 and 272 were built mid 19th century. They are of red brick and stucco with tiled roofs.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Former conventual building, part of the Hospital of St. John, thought to date to the late 12th century and purchased by the Corporation in 1580; much altered circa 1623, when it was converted to a court house. The building has been used for council meetings by the Old Corporation since 161...
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Almshouses, consisting of ten tenements forming an east and west terrace on the south side side of Church Street and a chapel at the east end. The range of tenements is two-storeyed, brick built, with a continuous tiled roof. Each tenement consists of a single room on either floor. Behind...
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Almshouse founded by William Woburn in 1476. It was demolished in 1860 .
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Almshouses rebuilt 1741, probably on the site of an almshouse founded before 1418.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
A house which was formerly six almshouses built in 1612 and altered in the early 19th century. Built of limestone and brick with a plain tile roof.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Almshouses built between 1668 and 1675.
Type: Sites and monuments databases or inventories Publisher: Archaeology Data Service
Also known as Wynards Hospital, now Magdalen Almshouses, founded in 1436 for 12 poor men with a chaplain and a chapel of the Holy Trinity. It was not suppressed and was restored in 1863.