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SONNING
In the Churchyard/near the Thames:
Wall to former Bishop’s Palace Ice House High Street (East side, from Pearson Road):
Bow Cottage (P) Blayes White Lodge White House (P) Brook House (P) Deanery Cottage 1 (P) Deanery Cottage 2 Cleavers High Street (West side, from Pearson Road):
The Old Exchange Holmelea Country Cottage (P) The Malt House (P), with Maltings, incorporating The (former) Thrift Shop The Bull (Grade II*) Pump Wall to Deanery Pearson Road (North side, from Pound Lane):
Telephone Kiosk outside Pearson Hall Robert Palmer Cottages (P) Sonning House (P) - incorporating Hammering House (P) The Dower House (P) Grove Cottage (P) Green House (P) Green Cottage Rosemary Cottage - incorporating Sunnyside (P) Ivy Cottage (P) Wistaria (P) Rich’s Cottage - withTurpins Pearson Road (South side, from Pound Lane):
Forge Cottage The Old Cottage (P) Glendale - with Sarum Cottage (P) and York Cottage (P) The Grove (P) Lilac Cottage (P) Roxburgh (P) - with Laundry Cottage (P) Thames Street (North side, from Sonning Bridge):
Sonning Bridge (Berkshire End) The Red House (P) Restaurant and Annex to The Great House Pilgrims (P) Old School House (off road) (P) Thames Street (South side, from Sonning Bridge):
Little Deanery Deanery (Grade I - Lutyens) (P) APPROACH ROADS TO SONNING Charvil Lane (South side, from Twyford):
Littlecourt Farm(P) Spring Cottages 1 & 2 (P) Spring Cottages 3 & 4 (P) Sonning Lane (West side, from Reading):
Barns at Holme Park Farm Wall south of North Lodge North Lodge (Woodyer) (P) Gate and Piers at North Lodge (Woodyer) Also listed:
Milestone on Bath Road (North) near Sonning Lane Milestone on Old Bath Road (North) near Bath Road, Charvil SONNING EYE Walking away from Sonning Bridge:
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Listed Buildings in Sonning and Sonning EyeThe DRAFT list on the left has been compiled by members of the Society to enable residents and visitors to identify important buildings in the two villages. There are key works here by Arts & Crafts architects, Sir Edwin Lutyens (Deanery Garden, 1901) and Halsey Ricardo (The Eyot House, 1905), as well as several restorations or new buildings by Victorian architect, Henry Woodyer. In addition to the restored mediaeval church, the villages also have some fine buildings dating from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. Note: This list is a working draft as at October 2004, so please treat with caution. What is a listed building?Listed building are those recommended by English Heritage for inclusion on statutory lists compiled by the Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport. Listing ensures that the architectural and historic interest of the building is carefully considered before any alterations, either outside or inside, are agreed. What do the Grades mean? Grade I buildings are of exceptional interest All the buildings on this list are Grade II unless otherwise indicated. Wherever possible current building names are used. (P) indicates a restoration or alteration by Sidney Paddick, a 20th-century builder who lived in Sonning for over 60 years. Paddick and his firm were responsible for much of the newer developments in Pound Lane, and on the south side of the Bath Road. The information is taken from Paddick’s privately published, Memoirs of a Nonagenarian, (1981). How to use this page
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