Nantwich

Nantwich, Cheshire East, England, United Kingdom
category: boundary — type: administrative — OSM: relation 358433

Items with no match found in OSM

105 items

3 Bollards On North Side Of Churchyard (Q26431772)
item type: bollard

National Heritage List for England number: 1138730

Cosy Super Cinema (Q41629287)
item type: movie theater / chapel / nightclub

Street address: 2 Castle Street, Nantwich, CW5 5BA, England (from Wikidata)

38, High Street, Nantwich (Q26431746)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1138691

85, Welsh Row (Q26554475)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1263702

141, Welsh Row (Q26541785)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249676

42 And 44, High Street, Nantwich (Q26431747)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1138692

Combermere House, Nantwich (Q5150789)
item type: school / house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Combermere House, or 148 Hospital Street, is a Georgian town house in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, which dates from the mid-18th century. It is on the south side of Hospital Street (at SJ6561152154), near the end of the street and opposite the junction with Millstone Lane. The building has previously been known by other street numbers, including number 154. It is listed at grade II, and local historian Jane Stevenson describes it as "sheer perfection".

National Heritage List for England number: 1249317

54, Welsh Row (Q26541808)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249700

46 High Street, Nantwich (Q4638334)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

46 High Street is a timber-framed, black-and-white Elizabethan merchant's house in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, located near the town square at the corner of High Street and Castle Street. The present building dates from shortly after the fire of 1583, and is believed to have been built for Thomas Churche, a linen merchant from one of the prominent families of the town. It remained in the Churche family until the late 19th century.

National Heritage List for England number: 1206205

Shrewbridge Cottages (Q26541615)
item type: house / pub

National Heritage List for England number: 1249484

33, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26291360)
item type: house

Street address: 33, Hospital Street, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1039566

146, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26566955)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1277549

125 and 127, Welsh Row (Q26541783)
item type: house / dental clinic

National Heritage List for England number: 1249673

Beehive Cottages (Q26431768)
item type: cottage

National Heritage List for England number: 1138723

129, Welsh Row (Q26541669)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249542

The Rookery, Nantwich (Q7761465)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Rookery, or 125 Hospital Street, is a substantial Georgian townhouse in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. It is at the end of Hospital Street, on the north side, at the junction with Millstone Lane (at SJ6558752192). The existing building dates from the mid-18th century and is listed at grade II; English Heritage describes it as "good" in the listing. Nikolaus Pevsner describes it as "square and stately." It incorporates an earlier timber-framed house at the rear, which probably dates from the late 16th or early 17th century.

National Heritage List for England number: 1249343

1–3 Churchyard Side, Nantwich (Q4596718)
item type: bank building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

1–3 Churchyard Side is a grade-II-listed Victorian Gothic building in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, located on the corner of Churchyard Side and Pepper Street (SJ6511952369), opposite St Mary's Church. Built in 1864–66 to a design by Alfred Waterhouse as the Nantwich branch of the Manchester and Liverpool District Bank, it is among the most notable examples of Victorian corporate architecture in the town. The building remained a branch of the District Bank until the late 20th century, and is still in use as a bank.

Street address: 1–3 Churchyard Side, Nantwich, District Bank, Nantwich, Cheshire, England (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1138728

9, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26291402)
item type: house / shop

Street address: 9, Hospital Street, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1039606

56, Welsh Row (Q26541682)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249556

153 and 155, Welsh Row (Q26554392)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1263613

30, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541335)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249174

46, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26566988)
item type: house / shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1277582

108, Welsh Row (Q26554374)
item type: house / school building

National Heritage List for England number: 1263595

89, Welsh Row (Q26541664)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249537

20, Beam Street (Q26501313)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1206051

Weaver House (Q26541663)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249535

Lamb Hotel (Q6481032)
item type: building / pub / inn
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Lamb Hotel, now known as Chatterton House, is a former public house in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. It is located on the north side of Hospital Street, at the junction with Church Lane (at SJ6517252261). The present building by Thomas Bower dates from 1861 and is listed at grade II; Nikolaus Pevsner describes it as "decent" and "staid".

National Heritage List for England number: 1263790

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: Former pubs in England
40, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541411)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249260

11 and 13, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541468)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249324

Tannery House (Q26541671)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249544

Dysart Buildings, Nantwich (Q5319332)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Dysart Buildings is a terrace of nine Georgian houses on Monks Lane in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. Dating from 1778 to 1779, the building is listed at grade II*. It is located at 1–9 Monks Lane (SJ6534252361), now a pedestrian walkway, opposite the former Congregational Chapel and immediately north east of St Mary's Church. Nikolaus Pevsner describes the building as "surprisingly metropolitan".

National Heritage List for England number: 1249422

69 and 71, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26291350)
item type: house

Street address: 69 And 71, Hospital Street, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1039554

15, Beam Street (Q26615193)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1330034

100 and 102, Welsh Row (Q26541827)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249719

83 Welsh Row, Nantwich (Q4644710)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

83 Welsh Row is a Georgian town house in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, dating from the late 18th century, located on the south side of Welsh Row (at SJ6466852394). It is currently used as offices. It is listed at grade II*; in the listing, English Heritage describes it as "a good tall late C18 house", featuring a "good doorway".

National Heritage List for England number: 1249536

Porch House (Q7229983)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Porch House, formerly sometimes the Porche House, is a large Georgian house, dating from the late 18th century, in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. It is listed at grade II. Located at numbers 64A and 64B on the north side of Welsh Row (at SJ6471452454), it is entered via its former stable entrance, The Gateway. Currently divided into two houses, the Porch House has previously served as a day and boarding school, and as a house for Belgian refugees. The existing building stands on the site of a 15th-century mansion of the same name.

National Heritage List for England number: 1263672

71 and 73, Welsh Row (Q26554474)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1263701

Ye Olde Vaults Inn, Nantwich (Q26615204)
item type: inn

National Heritage List for England number: 1330055

144, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541351)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249191

50, Welsh Row (Q26541805)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249697

Nantwich Castle (Q6964386)
item type: castle / former building or structure
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Nantwich Castle was a Norman castle in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, built before 1180 to guard a ford across the River Weaver. The castle is first documented in 1288. It was last recorded in 1462, and was in ruins by 1485. No trace now remains above ground; excavations in 1978 near the Crown Inn uncovered terracing and two ditches, one or both of which possibly formed the castle's bailey.

39 Welsh Row, Nantwich (Q2816440)
item type: office building / bank building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

39 Welsh Row is a Victorian former savings bank, in Jacobean Revival style, in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. It stands on the south side of Welsh Row at the junction with St Anne's Lane (at SJ6482352398). Dating from 1846, it is listed at grade II. Nikolaus Pevsner describes number 39 as "the first noteworthy building" on Welsh Row, which he considers "the best street of Nantwich". The street has many listed buildings and is known for its mixture of architectural styles, including timber-framed black-and-white cottages such as the Wilbraham's and Widows' Almshouses, Georgian town houses such as Townwell House and number 83, and Victorian buildings such as the former Grammar School, Primitive Methodist Chapel and Tollemache Almshouses.

National Heritage List for England number: 1249211

4 and 6, High Street, Nantwich (Q26431743)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1138687

8 and 10, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541322)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249161

1–5 Pillory Street, Nantwich (Q4596721)
item type: building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

1–5 Pillory Street is a large curved corner block in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, in the French Baroque style of the late 17th century, which is listed at grade II. It is located on the corner of Hospital Street and Pillory Street (at SJ6513252244), and also includes 2 Hospital Street. Formerly known as Chesters' Stores, it was built in 1911 for the grocer's, P. H. Chesters, to a design by local architect, Ernest H. Edleston (1880–1964). The building has subsequently been used for a variety of retail and wholesale purposes, and it is currently a furniture store.

National Heritage List for England number: 1373915

106, Welsh Row (Q26541690)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249567

42 and 44, Welsh Row (Q26541801)
item type: house / shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249692

134, Hospital Sreet, Nantwich (Q26566951)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1277543

38, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541338)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249177

Wilbraham's Almshouses, Nantwich (Q8000129)
item type: almshouse
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Wilbraham's Almshouses, also known as the Wilbraham Almshouses, are six former almshouses in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, located on the north side of Welsh Row at numbers 112–116 (at SJ6444252448). Founded by Sir Roger Wilbraham in 1613, they were the town's earliest almshouses. They remained in use as almshouses until 1870, when they were replaced by the adjacent Tollemache Almshouses. The timber-framed building, which is listed at grade II, was subsequently used as a malthouse and as cottages, and was later considerably altered to form a single house. The Hospital of St Lawrence, a medieval house for lepers, might have been situated nearby.

National Heritage List for England number: 1249568

91, Welsh Row (Q26554476)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1263703

122 and 124, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541348)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249188

Townwell House, Nantwich (Q7830291)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Townwell House is an Early Georgian town house in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, located at number 52 on the north side of Welsh Row (at SJ6478852439). It dates from 1740, and is listed at grade II*; in the listing, English Heritage describes the building as "important" and highlights its "good central entrance".

National Heritage List for England number: 1263708

64, Welsh Row (Q26541683)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249558

136 and 138, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541350)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249190

130 and 132, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541349)
item type: cottage

National Heritage List for England number: 1249189

6, Beam Street (Q26431771)
item type: house / shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1138726

99 and 101, Welsh Row (Q26541666)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249539

126, Hospital Street (Q26566954)
item type: house / clinic

National Heritage List for England number: 1277547

140–142 Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q4549630)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

140–142 Hospital Street, sometimes known as Hospital House, is a substantial townhouse in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, located on the south side of Hospital Street (at SJ6557452166). The building is listed at grade II. It was built in the late 16th century by John Crewe, a tanner, whose sons Randolph and Thomas both served as the Speaker of the House of Commons. The original timber-framed, close-studded façade has been concealed by alterations during the late 17th century; these include the addition of small-paned casement windows, some of which contain old heraldic stained glass. The building was further altered and extended in the 18th century, with the addition of two Gothic-style entrances. Later occupants include the architect, Thomas Bower, and the building remains in residential use.

National Heritage List for England number: 1277548

Old Grammar School House (Q26541782)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249672

7, Mill Street, Nantwich (Q26654865)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1373950

46 and 48, Welsh Row (Q26541677)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249551

The Gateway, Nantwich (Q7735938)
item type: house / gate
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Gateway, or 60–62 Welsh Row, is a Late Georgian former stable entrance in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, dating from the early 19th century. It is located on the north side of Welsh Row (at SJ6474552433), on the junction with Red Lion Lane. It is listed at grade II. Nikolaus Pevsner describes The Gateway as "handsome".

National Heritage List for England number: 1249557

15 and 17, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26654814)
item type: restaurant / shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1373897

Churche's Mansion (Q5118110)
item type: mansion
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Churche's Mansion is a timber-framed, black-and-white Elizabethan mansion house at the eastern end of Hospital Street in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. The Grade I listed building dates from 1577, and is one of the very few to have survived the Great Fire of Nantwich in 1583.

National Heritage List for England number: 1039605

37, Welsh Row (Q26541626)
item type: restaurant

National Heritage List for England number: 1249497

Tollemache Almshouses (Q7814375)
item type: almshouse
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Tollemache Almshouses, also known as the Wilbraham Almshouses or Wilbraham's Almshouses, are six former almshouses in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. They are in two blocks of three cottages each, located on the north side of Welsh Row at numbers 118–128 (at SJ6442852469). The present buildings, which are listed at grade II, were erected in 1870 by John Tollemache (later created first Baron Tollemache) to replace adjacent almshouses founded by Sir Roger Wilbraham in 1613. The almshouses were modernised in 1980 and remain in residential use. The Hospital of St Lawrence, a medieval house for lepers, was possibly on or near the site of the present almshouses.

National Heritage List for England number: 1249725

52 and 54, High Street, Nantwich (Q26409521)
item type: shop

Street address: 52 and 54, High Street, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1115846

32 and 34, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541406)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249254

Nantwich Workhouse (Q6964393)
item type: workhouse / office building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Nantwich Workhouse, also known as Nantwich Union Workhouse, Nantwich Union House and Nantwich Institution, is a former workhouse in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. It is located at The Barony, off Barony Road (at SJ65295338). Built in 1779–80 to accommodate up to 350 people, the institution remained in use as a workhouse until 1930.

National Heritage List for England number: 1205976

55, Welsh Row (Q26554473)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1263700

36, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541337)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249176

Congregational Chapel, Nantwich (Q5160706)
item type: house / church building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Congregational Chapel, also known as the Independent Chapel, is a former Congregational or Independent church in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. It is located on Monks Lane (SJ 65297 52331), now a pedestrian walkway, opposite the Dysart Buildings and immediately north east of St Mary's Church. Built in 1841–42, it is listed at grade II. The chapel closed in the late 20th century, and the building has been converted to residential use.

National Heritage List for England number: 1373912

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: Former churches in Cheshire
Whitewell House (Q26501365)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1206104

14 and 16, Barker Street (Q26569568)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1280431

Regent and Warwick House (Q7308116)
item type: hotel
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Regent House and Warwick House together form a large timber-framed building, probably dating from the late 16th century, in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. Regent House occupies numbers 12 and 14, and Warwick House numbers 16 and 18a, on the west side of the High Street (at SJ6502652380 and SJ6504252377); Regent House occupies a bend in the street which reflects the town's Norman castle. The building was probably constructed shortly after the fire of 1583. Regent House and Warwick House are listed separately at grade II.

Widows' Almshouses (Q7998820)
item type: pub / almshouse
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Widows' Almshouses, also known as the Wilbraham or Wilbraham's Almshouses and as the Widows' Hospital, are former almshouses for six widows in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. They are located at numbers 26–30 on the north side of Welsh Row, on the junction with Second Wood Street (at SJ6486452420). The almshouses were founded by Roger Wilbraham in 1676–7 in memory of his deceased wife in three existing cottages built in 1637; they were the earliest almshouses in the town for women. In 1705, Wilbraham also founded the Old Maids' Almshouse for two old maids in a separate building (now demolished) on Welsh Row. They remained in use as almshouses until the 1930s. The timber-framed Widows' Almshouses building, which is listed at grade II, has subsequently been used as a café, public house, night club, restaurant, wine bar and hotel.

National Heritage List for England number: 1249548

47, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26291361)
item type: building

Street address: 47, Hospital Street, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1039567

Sweetbriar Hall (Q7655654)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Sweetbriar Hall (also Sweet Briar Hall and other variants) is a timber-framed, "black and white" mansion house in the town of Nantwich, Cheshire, England, at 65 and 67 Hospital Street. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade II listed building.

National Heritage List for England number: 1039553

116 Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q170988)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

116 Hospital Street (also 116 and 118 Hospital Street) is a substantial townhouse in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, located on the south side of Hospital Street (at SJ6548852178). It is listed at grade II. The present building, of Georgian appearance, incorporates an earlier timber-framed house, which probably dates in part from the 15th century. Local historian Jane Stevenson calls it "the most interesting house in Hospital Street", and considers it might be "the oldest surviving residence in Nantwich."

Street address: 116 Hospital Street, Nantwich, Cheshire, England (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1277546

84 and 86, Welsh Row (Q26541688)
item type: building

National Heritage List for England number: 1249565

21 and 23, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541472)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249328

4, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26541404)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249252

94 And 96, Hospital Street (Q26541344)
item type: house

National Heritage List for England number: 1249183

Wesleyan Methodist Church, Nantwich (Q7984054)
item type: protestant church
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Wesleyan Methodist Church, also known as the Wesleyan Chapel, is a former Wesleyan Methodist church on Hospital Street, Nantwich, Cheshire, England (at SJ6531052249). Built in 1808, a new façade was added in 1876. The church then seated over a thousand, and was the largest Nonconformist place of worship in the town in the 1880s. It is listed at grade II. The church closed in 2009, after the congregation moved to the former Methodist schoolrooms opposite.

National Heritage List for England number: 1373918

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: Former Methodist churches in the United Kingdom, Former churches in Cheshire
25, Hospital Street, Nantwich (Q26291406)
item type: shop

Street address: 25, Hospital Street, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1039609

33 And 35, Welsh Row (Q26541368)
item type: restaurant

National Heritage List for England number: 1249210

Nuthurst School (Q26541461)
item type: house / school building

National Heritage List for England number: 1249316

4A, Church Lane (Q26409495)
item type: shop

Street address: 4A, Church Lane, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1115807

20A and 22, High Street, Nantwich (Q26431745)
item type: bank building

National Heritage List for England number: 1138690

41–47, Welsh Row (Q26541662)
item type: house / optician shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249533

52-62, Pillory Street (Q26291358)
item type: cottage

Street address: 52-62, Pillory Street, Nantwich, Cheshire East, Cheshire, CW5 (from Wikidata)

National Heritage List for England number: 1039564

103-107, Welsh Row (Q26541667)
item type: building

National Heritage List for England number: 1249540

Marsh Lane Bridge Number 91 (Q26599266)
item type: bridge

National Heritage List for England number: 1312780

Stable block at rear of Number 87 (Q26541746)
item type: stable

National Heritage List for England number: 1249633

Nantwich Walled Garden (Q26409497)
item type: walled garden
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Nantwich Walled Garden is a disused walled garden in the town of Nantwich, Cheshire, UK. It occupies approximately half an acre (0.2 hectares) north of 82 to 96 Welsh Row.

National Heritage List for England number: 1115809

2 Bollards at Churchyard End of Church Lane (Q26431742)
item type: bollard

National Heritage List for England number: 1138686

Regal Cinema (Q41629273)
item type: movie theater

Street address: 1-3 Churchyardside, Nantwich, CW5 5DE, England (from Wikidata)

Forecourt wall and gateway of Wright's Almshouses (Q26263501)
item type: wall / gate

National Heritage List for England number: 1320247

Barclays Bank (Q26541380)
item type: shop

National Heritage List for England number: 1249224