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Petergate House (or Oratory House) is a grade II* listed building in the city centre of York, in England. A previous building on the site was constructed about 1500, and its later owners included Thomas Herbert and Henry Swinburne. William Turner bought it in 1723, and largely demolished it, only a single passageway surviving. The new house was of three storeys and seven bays, with a stucco front, lined to resemble stonework, while the rear is of brick.

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rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Petergate House (en)
rdfs:comment
  • Petergate House (or Oratory House) is a grade II* listed building in the city centre of York, in England. A previous building on the site was constructed about 1500, and its later owners included Thomas Herbert and Henry Swinburne. William Turner bought it in 1723, and largely demolished it, only a single passageway surviving. The new house was of three storeys and seven bays, with a stucco front, lined to resemble stonework, while the rear is of brick. (en)
foaf:name
  • Petergate House (en)
foaf:homepage
name
  • Petergate House (en)
geo:lat
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foaf:depiction
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Petergate_House,_York.jpg
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  • Petergate House, in 2021 (en)
denomination
former name
  • The Rectory (en)
other name
  • Oratory House (en)
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  • 53.96234 -1.08451
has abstract
  • Petergate House (or Oratory House) is a grade II* listed building in the city centre of York, in England. A previous building on the site was constructed about 1500, and its later owners included Thomas Herbert and Henry Swinburne. William Turner bought it in 1723, and largely demolished it, only a single passageway surviving. The new house was of three storeys and seven bays, with a stucco front, lined to resemble stonework, while the rear is of brick. In the 19th-century, a new mansard roof was added, as was a two-storey semicircular bay to the rear. The interior was also largely remodelled, and the staircase was altered and moved. From the original fittings, several fireplaces survive, as does much of the decoration of the left-hand front room on the ground floor. The top of the staircase includes some reused balusters from about 1700. The building serves as the rectory for the York Oratory. It is the home of the Fathers of the Oratory and its garden is occasionally opened to the public. (en)
functional status
  • Active (en)
heritage designation
  • Grade II* (en)
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page length (characters) of wiki page
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  • POINT(-1.0845099687576 53.962341308594)
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