1
Webb's House, Liskeard
Former Victorian Hotel in the centre of Liskeard, now it is the offices of the Cornish Times.
Image: © Philip Halling
Taken: 24 Feb 2009
0.02 miles
2
Windsor Place, Liskeard
Image: © Nigel Thompson
Taken: 13 Apr 2013
0.04 miles
3
Stuart House, Barras Street, Liskeard
This is a late medieval house, altered and extended in the 17C. The old part has walls a metre thick, and the doorway in the porch is a re-used one of the 15C. To the left is the library, dated 1896.
Image: © Humphrey Bolton
Taken: 9 Mar 2001
0.04 miles
4
Methodist Church, 13 Baytree Hill, Liskeard
Grade II Listed 1846 nonconformist chapel, restored 1887 and 1907. This Henry Rice designed chapel replaces an 1841 Wesleyan Chapel that was destroyed by fire.
Image: © Jo and Steve Turner
Taken: 26 Jun 2019
0.04 miles
5
Former bank, Windsor Place
Grade II listed former Nat West bank c1870, now disused.
Image: © Richard Croft
Taken: 4 Sep 2022
0.04 miles
6
Barras Street
B3254 Main thoroughfare in Liskeard old town
Image: © Richard Croft
Taken: 4 Sep 2022
0.04 miles
7
1 or 7 and 8 Windsor Place, Liskeard
Circa 1870 pair of semi-detached Grade II Listed houses. There is obviously some confusion over No.1 that is variously listed as the address of shops occupying the adjacent warehouse despite the numbering on the OS map. Windsor place was created in 1860 to give better access to Barras Street. The Character Appraisal gives a build date for 7 and 8 as circa 1864. The conclusion I draw from this is the houses should be numbered 7 and 8 a more logical progression.
Image: © Jo and Steve Turner
Taken: 26 Jun 2019
0.04 miles
8
Stuart House, Barras Street, Liskeard
Grade II* Listed late medieval house. The house stood on Barrel Street now Barras Street and has a style that suggests late 15th or early 16th century. It is possible Court Records of 1497 that refer to a break in to the Prior of Launceston's House in Barrel Street are about this house. It is equally possible that it was built by the Duchy of Cornwall for a steward or indeed just for a wealthy merchant. Contemporary accounts of the king's journeys record Charles I having stayed here in 1644. The deeds start in 1761 but state that the Joseph Jane mansion house is in Dean Street but the King's Highway is to the west; other details also seem to fit this house and it is unclear where Dean street ended and Barrel Street started. Deeds show a John Sowden purchased the house in 1792 who refers to it in 1794 as 'my new built house' probably referring to the addition of a double gabled wing and other alterations. The house passed to John Carthew in 1829 and it is likely Stuart House was split in two. The Stuart House name first occurs in 1876. In the 20th century the double gabled wing was removed. In 1969 a petrol station was developed in the stable block forecourt. The stable block was pulled down in 1989 to make way for a large filling station and the house was then bought by the Trust that now runs it.
Image: © Jo and Steve Turner
Taken: 26 Jun 2019
0.05 miles
9
Barras Street
Grade II listed Hill House and late 19th century bank on Barras Street
Image: © Richard Croft
Taken: 4 Sep 2022
0.05 miles
10
Stuart House
Grade II* listed Stuart House on Barras Street. Largely 17th century with late medieval origins. King Charles I reputedly slept here for several nights in 1644
Image: © Richard Croft
Taken: 4 Sep 2022
0.05 miles