Grade II* listed buildings in Cheshire West and Chester
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Grade_II*_listed_buildings_in_Cheshire_West_and_Chester
There are over 20,000 Grade II* listed buildings in England. This page is a list of these buildings in the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester.
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Grade II* listed buildings in Cheshire West and Chester
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1
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3
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5
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6
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11
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The Cottage
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No. 24
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No. 68
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Market Hall
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No. 25
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The Old Palace
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Former premises of Trustee Savings Bank, Grosvenor Street
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Bluecoat School and former Chapel of St John Baptist
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Eccleston Hill Lodge including gatehouse and attached storeshed and domestic offices
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Vault, tombchest and memorial of the Hurleston family attached to east end of St Peter's Church
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Nos. 2–8 and Nos. 2-6 and 8 , Bridge St. and Nos. 1 and 3 and No. 1 , Watergate St.
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Southern General Service Hangar , Hooton Park Aerodrome
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Former Postillion's House at south-east corner of stable yard, Eaton Hall
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Ashton Hall Farmhouse
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Barn c.15 yards to west of Twelve Acres Farmhouse
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Barnston Memorial
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Base and part shaft of Roodeye Cross
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Beeston Cast Iron Lock at SJ553598
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Boot Inn, No. 17 and No. 9
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Bridge over moat and archway to Lower Huxley Hall
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Bridge over moat at Hulme Hall
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Brook Farm Cottage
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Castle House, Castle Street
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Clutton Lodge
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Dixon's Almshouses
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Dodds Charity almshouses and garden wall
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Dublin Packet Public House – Nos. 27, 29 and 31
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Farm building to Leighton Hall
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Former Rectory and Garden Railing
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Frederick Coplestone Memorial
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Front garden walls and gatepiers at Shotwick Hall
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Gate piers and railings at Clutton Lodge
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Former schoolmaster's house with storeshed and domestic offices attached
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Hartford Beech
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Holly Bank, formerly the Doctor's House
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Hooton Lodge with screen wall and gates
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Kinderton Hall
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Kings Buildings
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Little Abbey Gateway
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Manor House Farmhouse
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Monument to John Francis Egerton at Oulton Park
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Moorside House and attached railings
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Newton Hall
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No 9, Abbey Square with attached Walls
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No. 15 and No. 19
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No. 21 and No. 27
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No. 22 and
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No. 23 and No 27
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No. 26 and No. 32 , Eastgate St.
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No. 32 and No 30
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No. 35 , Eastgate St.
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No. 36 and No. 34
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No. 4 and No. 2
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No. 57 and Nos. 63 and 65
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No.11 and No. 11
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Nos 4, 5 and 6, Abbey Square
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Nos 7 and 8, Abbey Square with attached Walls
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Nos. 15, 17 and 19
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Nos. 21 and 23
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Nos. 38, 40 and 42 and Nos. 34, 36 and 38
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Nos. 5, 7 and 9
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Number 10, Abbey Square with attached Walls
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Number 11, Abbey Square and Attached Walls
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Number 26
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Old Newgate
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Part of City Wall from Bridgegate to County Hall
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Rode Street House
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Room – No 10 and No. 8
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Screens, lodges and gates, Oulton Park
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Seven Steps, Butchers Shop and Teal Cottage
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Stable court north of Eaton Chapel
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Stretton Hall and adjoining stable wing
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Tarvin Hall
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The Friars
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The Georgian House
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The Old Printing House
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The Old Schoolhouse
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The Old Vicarage, Vicarage Lane
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The Swan Hotel
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Tirley Garth and entrance courtyard walls
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Walls, gates, overthrow and gate piers, Eaton Hall
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Woodlake House
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Part of a Roman quay wall opposite St Martins Lodge
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The Flaggs and Hamilton House, and front garden walls and gates
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Part of Roman quay wall south of lateral steps from Nuns Road
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Equestrian statue of Hugh Lupus, 1st Earl of Chester
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Northern General Service Hangar , Hooton Park Aerodrome
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Puddington Old Hall, Priests House and Priests House Flat
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Number 5, Bridge Place with rear dwelling and attached wall
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Gates, overthrow, side screen gatepiers and steps, with handrails, south-east corner of churchyard
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Trafford Hall with attached service wing and carriage house
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Central General Service Hangar , Hooton Park Aerodrome
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Hall Green Farmhouse and attached front garden wall
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Gates, gatepiers and steps at south-west corner of churchyard
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Stretton Mill and steps, millrace and sluice adjoining
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40373150
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1097401107
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yes
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yes
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yes
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Cheshire West and Chester
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1061375
1075377
1075378
1105682
1115124
1115567
1115612
1129932
1129936
1129940
1130508
1130525
1130527
1130556
1130559
1130585
1130593
1130643
1130648
1130666
1135747
1135998
1136231
1136352
1136561
1136639
1136655
1138377
1138390
1138395
1138414
1138415
1138416
1138424
1138431
1138435
1138446
1138449
1138456
1138463
1138815
1139029
1139127
1139134
1139162
1139180
1139201
1145900
1160324
1160372
1160742
1160751
1160862
1216523
1228744
1229257
1229397
1230223
1230254
1230337
1230476
1240680
1242397
1253364
1253462
1253573
1261737
1278610
1278640
1278683
1278712
1278804
1278841
1279423
1279424
1279425
1287121
1287228
1287596
1298821
1310479
1312814
1329852
1329859
1330174
1330176
1330237
1330247
1330249
1330288
1330300
1330303
1330306
1330389
1330594
1330616
1350324
1375705
1375741
1375760
1375834
1375848
1375860
1375881
1375937
1375947
1375949
1375954
1375955
1375956
1375966
1375975
1376019
1376023
1376024
1376025
1376026
1376027
1376028
1376029
1376039
1376052
1376055
1376056
1376062
1376066
1376072
1376077
1376078
1376080
1376089
1376104
1376118
1376121
1376173
1376209
1376216
1376230
1376236
1376255
1376260
1376291
1376299
1376301
1376307
1376310
1376336
1376344
1376346
1376348
1376356
1376368
1376371
1376378
1376389
1376399
1376404
1376413
1376416
1376423
1376426
1376428
1376429
1376431
1376433
1376437
1376448
1376469
1376478
1376494
1387666
1387671
1387675
1387716
1387786
1387811
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Room
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The Beeches
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Portal
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The Cottage
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Town Hall
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Church of St Mary
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Church of All Saints
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Market Hall
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Church of Saint Bartholomew
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Lea Hall
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Church of St James
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Church of St Nicholas
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The Old Palace
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Bolesworth Castle
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Church of St John
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Church of St Mary the Virgin
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Church of St Lawrence
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Burton Hall
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Church of St Peter
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Castle House
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Chester College Chapel
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Church of St Helen
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Church of St Oswald
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Church of St Paul
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The Hermitage
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Eccleston Paddocks
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The Old Vicarage
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Bluecoat School and former Chapel of St John Baptist
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Southern General Service Hangar , Hooton Park Aerodrome
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Equestrian Statue of Hugh Lupus, 1st Earl of Chester
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Alvanley Hall Farmhouse
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Ashton Hall Farmhouse
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Barn c.15 yards to west of Twelve Acres Farmhouse
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Barnston Memorial
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Base and part shaft of Roodeye Cross at SJ40166584
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Bostock Hall
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Bridge over Moat and Archway to Lower Huxley Hall
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Bridge over moat at Hulme Hall
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Brook Farm Cottage
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Calveley Hall
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Chapel of Mostyn House School
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Chester Leadworks and Shot Tower
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Chester Railway Station
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Chorlton Old Hall
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Church of St Alban
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Church of St Chad
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Church of St John Evangelist
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Church of St Luke
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Church of St Mary and St Helen
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Church of St Marys
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Church of St Wilfred
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Clutton Lodge East Lodge
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Clutton Lodge West Lodge
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Cogshall Hall
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Coplestone Memorial Overleigh New Cemetery
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Davenham Hall
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Dixon's Almshouses
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Dodds Charity almshouses and garden wall
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Dutton Railway Viaduct
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Edge Hall
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Farm building to Leighton Hall
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Former Rectory and Garden Railing
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Former premises of Trustee Savings Bank
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Front garden walls and gatepiers at Shotwick Hall
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Gamull House
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Gate Piers and Railings at Clutton Lodge
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Former schoolmaster's house with storeshed and domestic offices attached
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Hampton Old Hall
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Hefferston Grange
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Hockenhull Hall
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Holly Bank, formerly the Doctor's House
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Hooton Lodge with screen wall and gates
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Hulme Hall
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Number 1 Row Number 2-8 Street Numbers 1 and 3 Street Numbers 2-6 and 8 Row
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Kinderton Hall
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Kings Buildings
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Lower Huxley Hall
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Manor House Farmhouse
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Monument to John Francis Egerton
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Moorside House and Attached Railings
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Newton Hall
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Number 1 Row Number 1 Street Number 2 Street
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Number 10 and Attached Walls
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Number 11 Row Number 11 Street
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Number 11 and Attached Walls
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Number 15 Street Number 19 Row
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Number 15 Street Numbers 17 and 19 Row
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Number 17 Street Number 9 Row the Boot Inn
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Number 2 Row Number 4 Street
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Number 21 Street Number 27 Row
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Number 21 and 23 Street
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Number 22 Row Number 22 Street
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Number 23 Street Number 27 Row
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Number 24 Row Number 24 Street
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Number 25 Street
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Number 26 Row Number 26 Street
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Number 26 Street Number 32 Row
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Number 33 Street National Westminster Bank
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Number 35 Street
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Number 43 Street Number 49 Row
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Number 5 and Rear Dwelling and Attached Wall
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Number 5, 7 and 9 Street
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Number 57 Street Numbers 63 and 65 Row
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Number 57 Street the Pied Bull Hotel
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Number 68 Street
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Number 9, Abbey Square with Attached Walls
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Numbers 31, 33 and 35 Street Numbers 37 and 39 Row
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Numbers 7 and 8 and Attached Walls
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Oddfellows Hall
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Old Newgate
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Equestrian Statue of Stapleton Cotton Viscount Combermere
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Part of City Wall from Bridgegate to County Hall
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Peel Hall
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Rode Street House
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Screen, Lodges and Gates at Oulton Park
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Sedan House
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Seven Steps, Butchers Shop and Teal Cottage
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Shipgate House
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Shotwick Hall
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St Marys Church of England School
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Stable Court North of Eaton Chapel
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Stretton Hall and adjoining stable wing
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Tarvin Hall
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Tattenhall Hall
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The Friars
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The Georgian House
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The Old Hall
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The Old Kings Head Hotel
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The Old Printing House
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The Old Schoolhouse
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The Swan Hotel
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Tirley Garth and entrance courtyard walls
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Tudor House
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Vale Royal Abbey
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Walmoor House
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Watergate House
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Whatcroft Hall
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Willaston Old Hall
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Woodlake House
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Hall Green Farmhouse and Attached Front Garden Wall
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Part of a Roman quay wall opposite St Martins Lodge
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The Flaggs and Hamilton House, and front garden walls and gates
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Part of Roman quay wall south of lateral steps from Nuns Road
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Former Postillion's House at south-east corner of stable yard
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Numbers 34, 36 and 38 Row Numbers 38, 40 and 42 Street
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Northern General Service Hangar , Hooton Park Aerodrome
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Puddington Old Hall, Priests House and Priests House Flat
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Vault, Tombchest and Memorial of the Hurleston Family Attached to East End of Church of St Peter
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Gates, overthrow, side screen gatepiers and steps, with handrails, south-east corner of churchyard
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Trafford Hall with attached service wing and carriage house
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Central General Service Hangar , Hooton Park Aerodrome
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Walls with Pair of Gates and Overthrow, Central, Along Southern Boundary of Walled Garden
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Gates, gatepiers and steps at south-west corner of churchyard
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Shropshire Union Canal Beeston Cast Iron Lock at Sj 553 598
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Stretton Mill and steps, millrace and sluice adjoining
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Numbers 27, 29 and 31 Street the Dublin Packet Public House
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Eccleston Hill Lodge Including Gatehouse and Attached Storeshed and Domestic Offices
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1
rdf:langString
All Saints Church, Handley
rdf:langString
Boot Inn, Chester
rdf:langString
Burton Hall
rdf:langString
Chester Town Hall
rdf:langString
Equestrian statue of Viscount Combermere
rdf:langString
Numbers 31, 33 and 35 Street Numbers 37 and 39 Row, Chester
rdf:langString
All Saints Church, Harthill, Cheshire
rdf:langString
Barnston Monument
rdf:langString
Bluecoat School, Chester
rdf:langString
Boughton shot tower, Chester
rdf:langString
Castle House, Chester
rdf:langString
Chester railway station
rdf:langString
Church of St James the Great, Ince
rdf:langString
Hefferston Grange
rdf:langString
St Alban's Church, Tattenhall
rdf:langString
St Bartholomew's Church, Barrow
rdf:langString
St Chad's Church, Farndon
rdf:langString
St Chad's Church, Over
rdf:langString
St Helen's Church, Tarporley
rdf:langString
St James' Church, Christleton
rdf:langString
St John the Evangelist's Church, Norley
rdf:langString
St John's Church, Threapwood
rdf:langString
St Lawrence's Church, Stoak, Cheshire
rdf:langString
St Luke's Church, Whitley
rdf:langString
St Mary the Virgin's Church, Bruera
rdf:langString
St Mary's Handbridge
rdf:langString
St Mary's and St Helen's Church, Neston
rdf:langString
St Mary's, Pulford
rdf:langString
St Mary's, Tilston
rdf:langString
St Nicholas' church, Burton-in-Wirral
rdf:langString
St Oswald's Church, Backford
rdf:langString
St Paul's Church, Boughton
rdf:langString
St Peter's Church, Hargrave, Cheshire
rdf:langString
St Peter's Church, Waverton
rdf:langString
St Peter's church, Little Budworth
rdf:langString
St Wilfrid's Church, Davenham
rdf:langString
Stretton Watermill
rdf:langString
The Old King's Head, Chester
rdf:langString
Tirley Garth
rdf:langString
Tudor House, Chester
rdf:langString
Vale Royal Abbey
rdf:langString
Walmoor Hill
rdf:langString
Eaton Hall, Eaton
rdf:langString
Hooton
rdf:langString
Bridge St, Chester
rdf:langString
Bridge St., Chester
rdf:langString
Eastgate St., Chester
rdf:langString
Eaton Park, Eaton
rdf:langString
Eaton Park, Eccleston
rdf:langString
Hooton Park
rdf:langString
King Street, Chester
rdf:langString
Leighton, Neston
rdf:langString
Lower Huxley, Huxley
rdf:langString
Newton, Kingsley
rdf:langString
Northgate St., Chester
rdf:langString
Watergate St. , Chester
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Watergate St., Chester
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The church replaced an earlier chapel. It was restored in 1862–63 when the vestry and a larger belfry were added. The church is built in sandstone with a slate roof. The nave and chancel are in one range and have a hammerbeam roof. Inside the church is the framework of a screen bearing the date 1609.
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The former manor house stands on a moated site. Major additions and alterations were made to it in the 17th century. The house is partly timber-framed, the rest being in orange brick, with blue brick diapering. It has sandstone dressings and a Welsh slate roof. The house has an L-shaped plan, and is in two storeys with attics. The east wing has a symmetrical three-bay west front, the end bays projecting with gables. The windows are mullioned and transomed. The moated site on which the hall stands is a scheduled monument.
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The country house has been subsequently altered and extended. The main block is timber-framed on a stone plinth, with wings in stone and diapered brick. The roofs are partly slated and partly tiled. The building is in two storeys with cellars, and the front of the main block is in three bays, each with a gable surmounted by a finial. On the right side is a timber-framed porch. The windows are mullioned and transomed, containing casements.
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This was originally built as a chapel and a school. It was paid for by Thomas Moulson, who came from the village and later became Lord Mayor of London. The building was later converted for use as a church, and was restored in 1878–80. This restoration, and the addition of a vestry, have been attributed to John Douglas. The church is built in sandstone with a tiled roof, and consists of a nave and chancel in one range, a south porch and a vestry.
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The body of the church was rebuilt in 1842–44 by Edmund Sharpe, the steeple was damaged by lightning in 1850 and repaired to Sharpe's design by E. G. Paley. The chancel and transepts were built in 1870 by Paley and Austin. The church is constructed in sandstone with a slate roof. It consists of a nave and aisles, transepts, a chancel, and a west steeple.
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This consists of a vault, a tombchest, and a memorial plaque in Baroque style. The vault cover is carved with a pair of skeletons, scrolls, and crossed palm fronds.
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Originally timber-framed, the house was encased in brick in about 1870. It is in two and three storeys, and has an entrance front of seven bays. Inside is "much good Jacobean plasterwork and panelling".
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Once the largest Cistercian abbey in England, much of it was demolished after the Dissolution of the Monasteries when it was converted into a house. The building was extended from 1833 by Edward Blore, and more work was carried out from 1860 by John Douglas. It has since been converted partly into a golf club house, and partly into apartments. The land on which the abbey stood is a scheduled monument.
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A hotel built in brick with ashlar dressings and a slate roof. It is in three storeys and has a symmetrical entrance front of five bays, the central three of which are canted and contain Venetian windows.
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A large house in Vernacular Revival style designed by W. E. Tower. It is timber-framed with rendered infill, and has a stone slate roof. The house is in two storeys, with a single-storey stable wing to the left and a gabled wing on the right. The symmetrical garden front contains three large bay windows.
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The bridge is built in sandstone and has two segmental arches. The cutwaters rise as buttresses to parapet level, where they form seats.
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The oldest fabric in the church is in the lower part of the tower. The church was badly damaged in the Civil War, following which it was largely rebuilt in 1658. It was restored in the 19th century. The church is constructed in sandstone with slate roofs, and consists of a nave, a chancel, a north porch, a south vestry, and a west tower.
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This is basically a timber-framed house with a hall and a cross-wing, later enclosed in brick. Inside the house are mural paintings of Cheshire scenes.
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Alterations and additions were made in the 17th and 19th centuries. The house is constructed in brick with slate and stone-slate roofs. It has an asymmetrical plan, with two storeys and an attic,The entrance front has three gabled bays, and the garden front has five bays. The moated site on which the house stands is a scheduled monument.
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The chancel dates from the late 13th century, the tower from about 1500, and the nave was rebuilt in brick in 1731. The church was remodelled in 1877–79 by Ewan Christian. It is constructed in sandstone with slate roofs. Inside the church are wall paintings by Edward Frampton.
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A country house in Georgian style to which a rear wing was added in the 20th century. It is constructed in brick with a slate hipped roof. The entrance front has five bays and an Ionic portico and there is a similar, smaller portico on the right side.
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The lodge is constructed in sandstone with a stuccoed brick roof in Baroque style. The roof is in the form of a dome, and carries a terracotta urn. The lodge has a square plan, with concave sides and canted corners. The doorway and window openings are round-headed; the windows are casements.
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Baron Fine Art
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Eva shop
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Grosvenor Antiques
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A brick house with stone dressings and a slate roof. It is symmetrical, and in three storeys. The windows are sashes. Inside the house is an inglenook and oak panelling.
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This was built as a mansion, but was much reduced in size by 1812, and was later used as a farmhouse. It is built in sandstone with slate roofs, and is in Jacobean style. The house has an L-shaped plan, is in three storeys with a basement, and has a symmetrical five-bay south front. The doorcase has a Tuscan architrave and a fanlight. The windows are mullioned and transomed. William III was entertained in the house on his way to Ireland to fight the Battle of the Boyne.
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The bridge crosses the moat around the hall, with an archway on the hall side of the bridge, and the remains of a former curtain wall. Apart from a few bricks in the wall, the structures are in sandstone. The bridge has two segmental arches, triangular cutwaters, a plain parapet, and a flagged carriageway. The archway has a rosette on its keystone, and an entablature with an open pediment flanked by finials. Only stubs of the wall remain.
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A country house with a timber-framed core, standing on a moated site, it was encased in brick in about 1700. The front dates mainly from 1721, and there have been later alterations and additions. It has two storeys, and is in six bays, with two gables to the left of the entrance, and three to the right. The entrance is recessed, and has a brick parapet with stone balusters. Above the entrance is an octagonal open cupola with a hemispherical roof and a ball finial. The doorcase has Corinthian pilasters supporting an open pediment. On the rear are bow windows. Inside, the hall contains an Ionic screen, and in the dining room is an elaborate chimneypiece.
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Additions and alterations have been made to the country house since it was first built. It is constructed in brick and has a slate roof. The house is in storeys, and has a T-shaped plan. The front has four bays, of which the right hand bay and the entrance bay project forward, and have shaped gables. The other two bays contain dormers. The rest of the windows are casements.
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The body of the church was largely rebuilt in 1875, re-using some 12th-century fabric. It is constructed in sandstone with slate roofs, and is in Early English style. The church consists of a nave with a clerestory, aisles, a chancel with a north vestry, and a west tower, which is battlemented.
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Whistles clothes shop
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A brown brick house with blue-brick banding, sandstone quoins, and a slate roof. It is in two storeys and has an attic, a two-storey porch, and a lean-to extension. One of the rooms has oak panelling.
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York Roast Shop
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This was built as a country house, incorporating parts of an earlier house, and was enlarged in the 1770s. During the 20th century it was used as a hospital for the treatment of tuberculosis, and has since been converted into apartments. The building is in early Georgian style, and is constructed in brick with stone dressings and a slate roof. The windows are sashes. Internally, some of the rooms have stucco decoration in Rococo style.
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The house was altered in the early 19th century, and then extended and remodelled in 1872 by John Douglas. It is constructed in brick with stone dressings and has a tiled roof. The vicarage is in two storeys plus an attic. Its features include a turret with a tall roof, and diapered brickwork.
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The tower was built between about 1490 and 1526 in Perpendicular style. The body of the church was rebuilt in 1798–1800, and the interior was restored in 1870–71 by John Douglas. It is constructed in sandstone with a slate roof, and consists of a nave, a chancel, and a west tower.
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Altered later, the barn is built partly in timber framing with rendered infill, and partly in brick, with a slate roof. The building is in two storeys, with a north front of nine bays. Features include doorways, pilaster buttresses, casement windows, and diamond-shaped breathers.
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The house is in brick on a stone plinth with stone dressings and a slate roof. It has a double-range plan, is in three storeys, and has a four-bay front. Four steps lead up to the doorway, which has a shell canopy. The windows are sashes with wedge lintels. At the top of the house is a cornice and a plain parapet. The wrought iron railings are included in the listing.
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The monument is to John Francis Egerton, and was designed by Scott and Moffatt. It is in the form of an Eleanor cross, is in Gothic style, its features including statues, pinnacles and a spire.
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Built by Joseph Locke and George Stephenson for the Grand Junction Railway in sandstone. It consists of 20 arches crossing the River Weaver.
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The chapel was designed by Frederick Fraser and Warburton, with input by the headmaster of the school, A. G. Grenfell. It is built in red Ruabon brick with terracotta dressings, and has a red tiled roof with a finial at the east end. The chapel consists of a nave and chancel in a single range, an apsidal east end, and a west bellcote. The furnishings are in collegiate style, designed by Frederick Fraser. In the windows is painted glass made by Morton and Company of Liverpool.
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A farmhouse built in brick with stone dressings and a slate roof in two storeys and an attic. The front is in four bays. Flanking the two central bays are large pilasters with capitals, standing on plinths. At the top is a partial Doric entablature and a pediment. The windows are a mix of sashes and casements.
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The memorial, designed by E. A. Heffer, is to the memory of Major Barnston, who was killed in the Crimean War. It consists of a slim yellow sandstone obelisk, surrounded by cast iron railings. It is flanked by four crouching lions, and carries a plaque inscribed with details of his service and death.
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Basically a timber-framed country house, with a two-storey porch added in 1623. Much of it was encased in brick in the 19th century when the house was also extended. It is a two-storey house, consisting of a hall with two cross wings and the porch.
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The buildings were first completed in 1910 for the 2nd Duke of Westminster. They were designed by W. T. Lockwood.
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The statue was designed by G. F. Watts for the 1st Duke of Westminster. It is in bronze on a stone plinth standing in the forecourt of the hall, and depicts Hugh Lupus seated on a horse, holding a falcon in a gauntlet.
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The gate piers are square and in stone. They are panelled, and topped by a cornice with a tapering finial. The railings are in wrought iron and are ornately decorated.
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A terrace of three pebbledashed houses, built in red brick, possibly with stone dressings. The roofs are slated at the front, and tiled at the back. The houses have three storeys and cellars, gabled half-dormers, and each house is approached by a flight of steps. The butcher's shop has bays; the other two houses have a single bay. The windows are sashes. Seven Steps contains wall paintings.
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The cottage has earlier internal features, and probably incorporates a timber-framed core. It stands on a sandstone plinth, has a pebbledashed exterior, and a thatched roof. There is a 19th-century brick rear wing.
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A country house, enlarged in 1807, constructed in brick with a slate roof in Georgian style. There are two storeys, with an entrance front of six bays. In the centre of the house is a spiral staircase, above which is a copper-covered, ogee-shaped cupola, surmounted by a weathervane, and standing on a drum containing Gothic-style windows.
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A row of six almshouses, designed by J. Oldrid Scott. They are timber-framed on a sandstone plinth, with tiled roofs, and are in Tudor Revival style. They are in one and two storeys, with a symmetrical six-bay front. Between the timber-framing, the plaster panels are decorated with pargeting. On the front are two gabled two-storey porches, and to the rear are three single-storey projecting entrances with verandahs.
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The church is built in sandstone with slate roofs. It consists of a nave, a north aisle, a chancel, a south porch, and a west tower. The oldest fabric is in the east window, and the tower dates from the later part of the 15th century. Much of the church was rebuilt in Perpendicular style in 1854 by Edward Hodkinson.
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The tower is the oldest part of the church. The rest of the church was restored in 1854 by James Harrison who replaced all the masonry, but re-used the hammerbeam roof dated 1661. A chancel and vestry were added in 1891. The church is built in red sandstone with a slate roof, and has a three-bay nave. The tower is embattled, and has gargoyles.
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A remaining fragment of the great house designed by Alfred Waterhouse for the 1st Duke of Westminster. It stands at the southeast corner of the stable yard, and is joined to the chapel by two-storey wing. The building is in stone with a slate Mansard roof, and has three storeys. At the corners are octagonal turrets.
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These were designed by Joseph Turner for the Oulton Estate, and are constructed in sandstone. There is a central arched gateway containing iron gates, Above the arch is a heraldic shield, and Rococo decoration, including swags. Flanking the gateway are two-storey lodges with large blind arches and pedimented gables and more swags. Outside the lodges are curved screen walls.
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This consists of a farmhouse and a cottage added later in the 17th century. The top storey of the farmhouse was remodelled in the 19th century. The building is in sandstone with concrete tile roofs and brick chimneys on the gables. The house is in three storeys with a five-bay front, and the cottage has two storeys and an attic and is in two bays. The windows in the lower storeys of the house are mullioned and transomed, those in the top storey are casements, and in the cottage they are mullioned.
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Katies Tea Rooms , The Antique Shop , Corbett Sports
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This is a castellated country house, designed by William Cole. The interior was partly remodelled and structures in the grounds were created by Clough Williams-Ellis in 1920–23. It is constructed in sandstone, and is in two storeys, with a three-storey turretted centre portion.
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The church, other than the tower, was rebuilt in 1874–78 by William Butterfield. On the tower is a shingled pyramidal cap. The church is constructed in red and white sandstone with a slate roof. The body of the church consists of a nave and chancel in one range with a clerestory, north and south aisles, a south porch, and side chapels to the chancel.
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Rebuilt on the site of an earlier church, the roof was added in the 17th century, and the church was much restored during the 19th century. It is constructed in brick with sandstone dressings, and has a slate roof. At the east end is an apse, and at the northwest is a stone bell turret with a slate spire containing one bell.
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The house was remodelled between 1814 and 1824 for Thomas Marshall, and has since been divided into two houses. It is constructed in stuccoed brick, and has a hipped slate roof. The house is in Neoclassical style with Gothic details.
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A brick country house with a slate roof, it is in two storeys with an attic. Its entrance front is in five bays, and it has a double depth plan. The medieval moated site on which the hall stands, together with two annexes, five fishponds, a garden and a prospect mound, is a scheduled monument.
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A former country house, later divided into flats. It is constructed in brick with ashlar dressings and a tile roof. It is in two storeys, with an attic and a basement. The symmetrical entrance front is in five bays. The central bay projects forward and contains a doorway with a swan's nest pediment decorated with scrolls, and a crest.
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This is a timber-framed house with whitewashed brick infill and a tiled roof. It is in two storeys, the upper floor being gabled and jettied. The windows consist of casements, mullioned and transomed windows, and dormers.
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Designed by Alfred Waterhouse for the 1st Duke of Westminster, the walls are high and in brick, the gate piers are in brick and sandstone, and the gates and overthrow in wrought iron. The walls separate the nursery and kitchen gardens from the main part of the gardens. The overthrow contains a portcullis medallion and the Grosvenor sheaf.
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The chancel was built in 1671, and the tower is dated 1744. In 1871 John Douglas carried out a limited restoration, followed by a more substantial scheme in 1883. The church is constructed in sandstone with tiled roofs, and consists of a nave, a north aisle, a south porch, a chancel, and a west tower.
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A country house, thought to have been designed by Samuel Wyatt. It is constructed in brick with ashlar dressings and a slate roof. The house has three storeys and a basement, and an L-shaped plan. In the entrance front is a single-storey porch with balustraded parapet. The fenestration includes sash windows, a Venetian window, and a Diocletian window.
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The former market hall is constructed in brick with stone dressings and has a hipped slate roof. It is in two storeys with a main front of five bays, which were originally open. On the front are two arches and Tuscan columns, and there are more Tuscan columns inside the building. At the top of the building is a cornice and an open pediment. The upper storey contains five sash windows.
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The country house was remodelled in 1880, and further alterations were made during the 20th century. It is built in rendered brick on a stone plinth, and has slate roofs. The entrance front is symmetrical, with three storeys, and is in seven bays, the lateral bays being recessed. The doorcase has columns and a semi-circular fanlight. The windows are sashes.
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The oldest parts of the church are the two chapels. Since then there have been alterations on a number of occasions during the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. In the 19th century J. S. Crowther carried out three restorations, and in 1931–32 a baptistry was added by Sir Percy Worthington. The church is constructed in sandstone with a slate roof, and has a southwest tower.
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An L-shaped sandstone farmhouse in two storeys plus attics with slate roofs. The windows are mullioned. In the cellar are two large medieval circular piers on polygonal bases.
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A country house, extended in the 19th century, and later converted into a nursing home. It is constructed in stuccoed brick and has a slate roof. The entrance front is in six bays. In the centre is a porch with four Tuscan columns and an entablature containing a triglyph, above which are two windows with a pediment over them, and a parapet on each side. Inside the house is delicate plasterwork, and a central staircase hall lit by a dome.
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Designed by J. L. Pearson, the church is constructed in red sandstone with a red tile roof. Its style is that of the later 13th century; it has a central tower.
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The hall originated as a timber-framed building with a quadrilateral plan around a courtyard on a moated site. During the Popish Plot it housed Catholics. The house was re-walled in the 18th century, and alterations were made in 1909. It has been converted into two houses and a flat. The building retains three sides around a courtyard, and is in two storeys, with a Welsh slate roof. The windows are casements.
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A school in the churchyard built for Sir John Deane, later used as a meeting room. It is a brick building with sandstone dressings on a sandstone plinth, with a stone-slate roof, stone quoins, and timber-framed gables. It has a rectangular plan, is in two storeys, and has mullioned windows. The upper storey was added in about 1750, and the building was restored in 1860 for Rowland Egerton-Warburton.
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This is a country house constructed in brick with sandstone dressings and a slate roof. It has a square plan, is in three storeys with a basement, and has a symmetrical three-bay front under a gable with a finial. The door is approached by ten steps. The windows are mullioned and transomed.
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The almshouses are constructed in brick with sandstone dressings and a tiled roof. They are in two storeys, with a symmetrical entrance front of five bays. There is a central round-headed doorway surrounded by quoins and voussoirs. The windows are mullioned. The garden wall is included in the listing.
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The lock on the Shropshire Union Canal was designed by Thomas Telford. It is unique in that its sides are lined with cast iron plates to hold back sand and marshland. The bottom gates are wooden; the upper gates are steel. Crossing the tail of the lock is an iron footbridge. The lock is also a scheduled monument.
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Constructed in sandstone, the church was remodelled in 1543. Restorations and additions were made in 1829, 1868–78, 1897–98, 1904–05, and 1926. Most of the church, including the west tower, is in Perpendicular style, except for the east window, which is in Decorated style.
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The church incorporates a chapel dating from 1380, and the chancel was rebuilt in 1870. It is built in sandstone and has a slate roof. The church consists of a continuous nave and chancel, a north aisle, a north vestry and a west tower. The tower is in four stages and has a plain parapet and a clock face, the clock having only one hand.
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Designed as stables by Alfred Waterhouse for the 1st Duke of Westminster, it consists of four ranges forming a courtyard. It is constructed in brick with half-timbering and tiles roofs. The building includes arched entrances, stair turrets, gables with bargeboards and finials, former accommodation for grooms, a library, and a Long Room .
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Almshouses
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Bank
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Bridge
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Church
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Restaurant
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School
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Stables
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Gate
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House
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Obelisk
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Terrace
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Villa
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Railway station
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Lodge
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Wall
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Row
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Abbey
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Barn
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Steps
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Town hall
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Country house
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Parish church
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Statue
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Gravestone
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Almshouse
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Manor house
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Apartment
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Farmhouse
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Hangar
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Market hall
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Public house
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Inn
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Boundary stone
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Timber-framed house
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Vicarage
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Commemorative monument
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Terraced house
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Bishop's palace
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Aircraft hangar
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Canal lock
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Charity school
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Chest tomb
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Church school
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Coachmans cottage
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Collegiate chapel
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Galleried row
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Galleried row house
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Jettied house
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Managers house
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Railway viaduct
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Shot tower
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Teacher's house
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Terrace house
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Town gate
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Town house
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Town house/Shop
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There are over 20,000 Grade II* listed buildings in England. This page is a list of these buildings in the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester.
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1277
1363
1512
1558
1591
1603
1609
1615
1627
1662
1665
1666
1671
1676
1684
1717
1721
1729
1733
1741
1751
1756
1763
1769
1775
1781
1799
1802
1804
1812
1815
1820
1827
1828
1829
1836
1858
1865
1868
1872
1873
1876
1878
1883
1888
1892
1895
1896
1897
1900
1903
1917
1934
1790.0
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