HeritageGateway - Home
Site Map
Text size: A A A
You are here: Home > > > > The National Heritage List for England Result

List Entry Summary

This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.

Name: NOS 183 AND 185 INCLUDING THE WHITE HOUSE PUBLIC HOUSE

List Entry Number: 1390945

Location

NOS 183 AND 185 INCLUDING THE WHITE HOUSE PUBLIC HOUSE, 183-185, DUKE STREET

The building may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

County: 
District: Liverpool
District Type: Metropolitan Authority
Parish: Non Civil Parish

National Park: Not applicable to this List entry.

Grade: II

Date first listed: 06-Jul-2004

Date of most recent amendment: Not applicable to this List entry.


Legacy System Information

The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

Legacy System: LBS

UID: 492588


Asset Groupings

This List entry does not comprise part of an Asset Grouping. Asset Groupings are not part of the official record but are added later for information.


List Entry Description

Summary of Building

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Reasons for Designation

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

History

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Details



392/0/10193 DUKE STREET 06-JUL-04 183-185 183 and 185, including the White House public house

II A pair of former dwellings and attached public house, the houses later converted to commercial use. Empty at time of inspection (September 2003). c.1800. with later C19 and C20 alterations. Red brick with stucco finish to street elevations, ridge and gable chimneys and slate roof coverings. PLAN: Elongated street corner plot at the junction of Duke Street and Berry Street, enclosing rear yards separated by narrow service wings. EXTERIOR: Duke Street elevation comprises stepped 3 storey range of 8 bays with cellars, Nos 183-185 to the left, and the former Whitehouse public house to the right. Nos.183 and 185 now each with 3 tall semi-circular arch-headed openings (now overboarded) with moulded surrounds.The right-hand end opening is a doorway. Above a first floor band course, pairs of sash windows to the right hand side of each 3-bay frontage, some with 6 over 6 pane sashes to the first floor and 3 over 3 pane sashes to the upper floorhsed those to the upper floor. This pattern of openings is repeated in the slightly taller public house part to the right, where 3 upper floor openings are now blocked. First floor openings have sash frames without glazing bars, set below shallow bracketed hoods. The ground floor has a public house display frontage with door and window openings defined by decorative timber pilasters set above a deep stall riser and below a moulded display fascia. Main doorway to left-hand side with approach flight of 4 steps, double doors and overlight. To the right, 2 display windows, then a second doorway, now blocked, and a third window. beyond this an angled doorway at the street junction with the facis forming a shallow canopy above. Both sections retain moulded eaves cornices. 2 bay return to Berry Street, with canted display frontage, and window openings above detailed as Duke Street elevation. INTERIOR: Main compartments of original plan form survive, but with collapsed rear wall to No.83. Public house fittings removed, but primary and secondary stirs survive. HISTORY: The buildings are recorded on Horwood's large scale map of Liverpool of 1803, which shows extensively developed frontages to Duke Street, but almost no development of the Berry Street frontage. The shape of the building plots shown on the street corner site conform closely to the present buildings' footprint.

Nos 183-5 and the attached former Whitehouse public house are of special architectural interest, together forming one of the few surviving groups of early C19 buildings developed on Duke Street, a principal early access route to the port of Liverpool, and originally a residential area for the second phase of merchant housing associated with the port as the original residential area around Steer's Dock was transformed into commercial premises.


Selected Sources

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details

Map

National Grid Reference: SJ3516689709


© Crown Copyright and database right 2018. All rights reserved. Ordnance Survey Licence number 100024900.
© British Crown and SeaZone Solutions Limited 2018. All rights reserved. Licence number 102006.006.

This copy shows the entry on 21-May-2024 at 04:26:21.