新規更新April 18, 2019 at 10:04PM
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Listed buildings in Rugeley
Peter I. Vardy: New list
[[Rugeley]] is a [[market town]] and a [[civil parish]] in the district of [[Cannock Chase District|Cannock Chase]], [[Staffordshire]], England. It contains 30 buildings that are recorded in the [[National Heritage List for England]]. Of these, two are listed at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains three churches, the current [[parish church]] of St Augustine, the remains of its predecessor, and a [[Roman Catholic]] church; items in the churchyards of the first two churches are also listed. Most of the other listed buildings are houses and cottages, the earliest of which are [[timber framed]]. The rest of the listed buildings include a two public houses, a bridge, two boundary stones, and a water pumping station.
__NOTOC__
==Key==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Grade
! Criteria
|-
|align="center" |II*
| Particularly important buildings of more than special interest
|-
|align="center" |II
| Buildings of national importance and special interest
|}
==Buildings==
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="width:100%; border:0; text-align:left; line-height:150%;"
|-
! scope="col" style="width:150px" |Name and location
! scope="col" style="width:100px" class="unsortable"|Photograph
! scope="col" style="width:120px" |Date
! scope="col" style="width:650px" class="unsortable"|Notes
! scope="col" style="width:50px" |Grade
|-
|Remains of Old St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Ruin of Rugeley Old Church - geograph.org.uk - 178883.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|What remains of the church is the west tower, the [[chancel]] and its north chapel, and a four-[[bay (architecture)|bay]] [[arcade (architecture)|arcade]] joining them. They are in [[Early English Gothic|Early English]] style, and the tower has [[buttress]]es and an [[embattled]] [[parapet]].
|align="center" |
|-
|16 and 18 Horse Fair<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of houses in [[timber framing]] and painted brick with a tile roof. There is one storey and an attic, three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a later [[gable]]d wing at the left painted to resemble timber framing. The doorways have [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surrounds, and the windows are [[casement window|casements]], those in the attic with gables breaking through the [[eaves]].
|align="center" |
|-
|20 Horse Fair<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house is partly [[timber framed]] and partly in painted brick, and has a tile roof. There is one storey and an attic, and two [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The doorway has a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surround, the windows are [[casement window|casements]], and there are two [[gable]]d [[dormer]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|The Stone House<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house was much altered and extended in about 1800. It is in stone, and has two storeys, attics and a basement, a front of two [[gable]]d [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a later projecting gabled wing on the left. In the original part the windows are [[mullion]]ed and [[transom (architecture)|transomed]], in the later part they are replacements, and all have [[hood mould]]s. In the front is a gabled porch.
|align="center" |
|-
|Red Lion Inn<br/><small></small>
|[[File:The Red Lion, Rugeley - geograph.org.uk - 843400.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The public house is [[timber framed]], the front has been rebuilt in brick, the right [[gable]] end is in stone, and there is exposed timber framing in the left gable end and at the rear. There is one storey and an attic, and a front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. On the front are two doorways with [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surrounds, one with a [[pediment]]. The windows have segmental heads, and there are three gables [[dormer]]s breaking through the [[eaves]].
|align="center" |
|-
|32 and 34 Market Street<br/><small></small>
|[[File:32 and 34 Market Street, Rugeley.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|A [[timber framed]] house, later divided into two, partly [[roughcast]] and partly with plaster [[infill]], and with a tile roof. There are two storeys and five [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The windows are [[casement window]]s, and No. 34 has a doorway with a plain surround and a [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]].
|align="center" |
|-
|31 and 33 Market Square<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Most of the building dates from the 18th century. It is [[stucco]]ed with [[quoin (architecture)|quoins]], [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[eaves]], a panelled [[parapet]], and a [[slate]] [[Mansard roof]]. There are two storeys and an attic, and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The middle bay contains a doorway with [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] [[pilaster]]s, a [[frieze]] with [[triglyph]]s, and a curved [[pediment]]. The left bay contains a bank front, and the right bay a 19th-century shop front. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with [[keystone (architecture)|keyblocks]], the window above the doorway having a moulded [[architrave]], and there are two [[gable]]d [[dormer]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|Tomb of Elizabeth Cuting and Emma Hollinhurst<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1696
|The tomb is in the churchyard of the old St Augustine's Church. It is a table tomb in stone, amd the slab is carved in semi-[[relief]] with two effigies in linen shrouds.
|align="center" |
|-
|Garden wall, 22–30 Horse Fair<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The wall running in front of the gardens is in plain [[ashlar]] stone.
|align="center" |
|-
|9 Wolseley Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A red brick house with side [[pilaster]]s, [[belt course|bands]], [[dentil]]led [[eaves]], and a [[parapet]]. There are three storeys and five [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The central doorway has a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surround and a curved [[volute]]d [[pediment]], and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Crossley Stone<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A red brick house on a corner site with end [[pilaster]]s, [[belt course|bands]], [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[eaves]], a blocking course, and a [[hip roof|hipped]] tile roof. There are three storeys, four [[bay (architecture)|bays]] on Crossley Stone, and three on Bow Street. On both fronts is a doorway with a moulded surround, that on Crossley Stone with a curved [[volute]]d [[pediment]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with cambered heads.
|align="center" |
|-
|Chaseley<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Originally a [[workhouse]], later a private house, it is in [[stucco]]ed red brick, and has side [[pilaster]]s surmounted by ball [[finial]]s, a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[belt course|band]], a moulded [[eaves]] [[cornice]], and a [[parapet]]. There are three storeys and four [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. On the front is a [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] porch with a [[frieze]], a [[modillion]] cornice, and a [[pediment]], and a doorway with a moulded surround. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] in moulded [[architrave]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|Ornamental Bridge, Lakeside<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The bridge crosses Rising Brook in the grounds of the house. It is in stone and consists of a single segmental arch with [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] [[voussoir]]s, and [[abutment]]s with scrolled [[coping (architecture)|coping]]. On the bridge is a [[wrought iron]] [[balustrade]] and a [[cast iron]] handrail, and at the ends are four circular [[pier (architecture)|piers]] surmounted by vases, two of which are inscribed.
|align="center" |
|-
|Boundary stone on the north bank of Rising Brook<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The boundary stone has a rectangular plan and a rounded top, and it is roughly hewn.
|align="center" |
|-
|Boundary stone on the south bank of Rising Brook<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The boundary stone has a rectangular plan and a rounded top. It is roughly hewn and there is a diagonal fissure on the west face.
|align="center" |
|-
|Shrewsbury Arms Hotel and coach house<br/><small></small>
|[[File:The Shrew Pub, Rugeley.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The public house, which may contain an earlier core, is [[stucco]]ed, and has a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[cornice]] and a tile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, a main block of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], a later bay to the right, and a five-bay coach house with an archway on the left. In the centre of the main block is a projecting [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] porch above which is a 19th-century inn sign. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and there are three [[hip roof]]ed [[dormer]]s. The bay to the right contains a two-storey [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]] and a sash window in the attic.
|align="center" |
|-
|St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
|[[File:St. Augustine's Church Rugeley.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1822–23
|The east end of the church was extended in about 1904. The church is built in stone with [[slate]] roofs, and has [[Perpendicular Gothic|Perpendicular]] features. It consists of a [[nave]] with a [[clerestory]], north and south [[aisle#Church architecture|aisles]], a [[chancel]] with an organ chamber and [[vestry]] at the southeast and a north chapel, and a west tower. The tower has two stages, a [[Tudor arch]]ed west doorway, polygonal [[buttress]]es, and an [[embattled]] [[parapet]]. The east window has five lights and a [[crocket]]ed [[ogee]] [[hood mould]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Grotto<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The [[grotto]] consists of a number of connected underground chambers carved out of natural red [[sandstone]] [[bedrock]]. It is entered through a [[roughcast]] [[portal (architecture)|portal]], which leads to a rotunda with a colonnade of six [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] columns carrying an [[entablature]] and a dome, and through more chambers to a [[basilica]] containing a [[nave]] with an [[apse]] and [[aisle]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|2 and 4 Church Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Two houses at the end of a terrace in red brick with a [[slate]] roof. The left house has four [[bay (architecture)|bays]] under a [[gable]], two storeys and an attic, and the right house has three bays and two storeys. Each house has a [[pediment]]ed porch, and a doorway with a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surround and a rectangular [[fanlight]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with [[cornice]] hoods, some of them blocked, and at the left is a passageway.
|align="center" |
|-
|17 Lower Brook Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A [[stucco]]ed shop with three storeys, two [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a two-bay wing on the left. In ground floor are paired engraved [[pilaster]]s at the sides, in the upper storeys are paired [[Ionic order|Ionic]] pilasters, the middle storey contains a [[cornice]], and at the top are a plain [[frieze]], a cornice, and a blocking course. In the centre of the ground floor is a modern shop front, and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with engraved surrounds, those in the top floor in [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[architrave]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|19 Lower Brook Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A [[stucco]]ed shop with side and intermediate [[pilaster]]s in the upper storeys and a [[parapet]]. There are three storeys and five [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and in the ground floor is a modern shop front.
|align="center" |
|-
|Brook House<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A red brick house with plain [[eaves]] and a [[slate]] roof. There are two storeys and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The doorway has [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[stucco]]ed [[pilaster]]s and a [[cornice]] hood on [[corbel|consoles]], and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with channelled [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
|align="center" |
|-
|32 Talbot Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A [[stucco]]ed house, the ground floor [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]], with a band above the ground floor, a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[cornice]] on paired [[corbel|consoles]] over the middle floor, and a tile roof. There are three storeys and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the left bay recessed. The doorway in the left bay has a moulded surround, a semicircular head and a [[fanlight]], and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] in moulded [[architrave]]s, those in the ground floor with semicircular heads.
|align="center" |
|-
|Church of St Joseph and St Etheldreda<br/><small></small>
|[[File:SS Joseph and Etheldreda Catholic Church, Rugeley - geograph.org.uk - 1538142.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1849–50
|A [[Roman Catholic]] church designed by [[Charles Hansom]] in [[Decorated Gothic|Decorated]] style, it is built in [[sandstone]] and has tile roofs. The church consists of a [[nave]] with a [[clerestory]], north and south [[aisle#Church architecture|aisles]], north and south porches, a [[chancel]] with a north [[Lady chapel]] and a south [[vestry]], and a west [[steeple]]. The steeple has a tower with diagonal [[buttress]]es, a stair turret with a [[pinnacle]], a [[trefoil]] [[balustrade]] with small pinnacles, a tall octagonal spire with [[lucarne]]s and [[flying buttress]]es, and a [[weathercock]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Vicarage<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The vicarage is in red brick, and has two storeys, four [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a single-storey wing with an [[embattled]] [[parapet]] on the right. The second bay projects and is [[gable]]d, and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]]. The doorway has a [[stucco]]ed surround, a rectangular [[fanlight]], and a [[cornice]] hood on [[corbel|consoles]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Lloyds Bank<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The building is [[stucco]]ed, the ground floor [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]], and above are [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[belt course|bands]], a [[modillion]] [[eaves]] [[cornice]], and a tile roof. The building has two storeys and eight [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. There are two doorways with moulded [[pilaster]]s, one with a cornice hood on [[corbel|consoles]], and the other with a semicircular head and a [[fanlight]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and at the right end is an arched cover-way with a rusticated surround.
|align="center" |
|-
|Brindley Bank Pumping Station<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Brindley Bank Pumping Station - geograph.org.uk - 475443.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1902–07
|The water pumping station is in brick with [[terracotta]] dressings, it has a [[slate]] roof, and is in [[Tudor Revival architecture|Tudor Revival]] style. There are two storeys, attics and cellars, and a T-shaped plan, with the engine house along the front, and the boiler house at the rear. The entrance front has seven [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the fifth bay projecting and [[gable]]d. This bay contains a [[Tudor arch]]ed doorway and a [[hood mould]] incorporating a dated panel. The ground floor windows are [[mullion]]ed and [[transom (architecture)|transomed]], in the upper floor three of the bays contain four-light windows, and the others have diamond panels. At the top are three smaller gables containing slit windows, and all the gables have [[finial]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|Churchyard Cross<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|Undated
|The cross is in the churchyard of the old St Augustine's Church, it is in stone and consists of a plain shaft on a base and a step. At one corner of the base is a hollowed-out kneeling place.
|align="center" |
|-
|Churchyard walls, piers and gates, St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|Undated
|A low stone wall with rounded [[coping (architecture)|copings]] runs along the west and south sides of the churchyard. At the entrance to the churchyard are four stone [[pier (architecture)|piers]], a pair of [[wrought iron]] gates, and smaller gates flanking them.
|align="center" |
|-
|Graveyard wall, Old St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|Undated
|A low stone wall running along the east side of the churchyard of the old St Augustine's Church.
|align="center" |
|-
|}
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[[Category:Lists of buildings and structures in Staffordshire]]
__NOTOC__
==Key==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Grade
! Criteria
|-
|align="center" |II*
| Particularly important buildings of more than special interest
|-
|align="center" |II
| Buildings of national importance and special interest
|}
==Buildings==
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="width:100%; border:0; text-align:left; line-height:150%;"
|-
! scope="col" style="width:150px" |Name and location
! scope="col" style="width:100px" class="unsortable"|Photograph
! scope="col" style="width:120px" |Date
! scope="col" style="width:650px" class="unsortable"|Notes
! scope="col" style="width:50px" |Grade
|-
|Remains of Old St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Ruin of Rugeley Old Church - geograph.org.uk - 178883.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|What remains of the church is the west tower, the [[chancel]] and its north chapel, and a four-[[bay (architecture)|bay]] [[arcade (architecture)|arcade]] joining them. They are in [[Early English Gothic|Early English]] style, and the tower has [[buttress]]es and an [[embattled]] [[parapet]].
|align="center" |
|-
|16 and 18 Horse Fair<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A pair of houses in [[timber framing]] and painted brick with a tile roof. There is one storey and an attic, three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a later [[gable]]d wing at the left painted to resemble timber framing. The doorways have [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surrounds, and the windows are [[casement window|casements]], those in the attic with gables breaking through the [[eaves]].
|align="center" |
|-
|20 Horse Fair<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house is partly [[timber framed]] and partly in painted brick, and has a tile roof. There is one storey and an attic, and two [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The doorway has a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surround, the windows are [[casement window|casements]], and there are two [[gable]]d [[dormer]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|The Stone House<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The house was much altered and extended in about 1800. It is in stone, and has two storeys, attics and a basement, a front of two [[gable]]d [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a later projecting gabled wing on the left. In the original part the windows are [[mullion]]ed and [[transom (architecture)|transomed]], in the later part they are replacements, and all have [[hood mould]]s. In the front is a gabled porch.
|align="center" |
|-
|Red Lion Inn<br/><small></small>
|[[File:The Red Lion, Rugeley - geograph.org.uk - 843400.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The public house is [[timber framed]], the front has been rebuilt in brick, the right [[gable]] end is in stone, and there is exposed timber framing in the left gable end and at the rear. There is one storey and an attic, and a front of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. On the front are two doorways with [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surrounds, one with a [[pediment]]. The windows have segmental heads, and there are three gables [[dormer]]s breaking through the [[eaves]].
|align="center" |
|-
|32 and 34 Market Street<br/><small></small>
|[[File:32 and 34 Market Street, Rugeley.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|A [[timber framed]] house, later divided into two, partly [[roughcast]] and partly with plaster [[infill]], and with a tile roof. There are two storeys and five [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The windows are [[casement window]]s, and No. 34 has a doorway with a plain surround and a [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]].
|align="center" |
|-
|31 and 33 Market Square<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Most of the building dates from the 18th century. It is [[stucco]]ed with [[quoin (architecture)|quoins]], [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[eaves]], a panelled [[parapet]], and a [[slate]] [[Mansard roof]]. There are two storeys and an attic, and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The middle bay contains a doorway with [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] [[pilaster]]s, a [[frieze]] with [[triglyph]]s, and a curved [[pediment]]. The left bay contains a bank front, and the right bay a 19th-century shop front. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with [[keystone (architecture)|keyblocks]], the window above the doorway having a moulded [[architrave]], and there are two [[gable]]d [[dormer]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|Tomb of Elizabeth Cuting and Emma Hollinhurst<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|1696
|The tomb is in the churchyard of the old St Augustine's Church. It is a table tomb in stone, amd the slab is carved in semi-[[relief]] with two effigies in linen shrouds.
|align="center" |
|-
|Garden wall, 22–30 Horse Fair<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The wall running in front of the gardens is in plain [[ashlar]] stone.
|align="center" |
|-
|9 Wolseley Road<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A red brick house with side [[pilaster]]s, [[belt course|bands]], [[dentil]]led [[eaves]], and a [[parapet]]. There are three storeys and five [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The central doorway has a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surround and a curved [[volute]]d [[pediment]], and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Crossley Stone<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|A red brick house on a corner site with end [[pilaster]]s, [[belt course|bands]], [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[eaves]], a blocking course, and a [[hip roof|hipped]] tile roof. There are three storeys, four [[bay (architecture)|bays]] on Crossley Stone, and three on Bow Street. On both fronts is a doorway with a moulded surround, that on Crossley Stone with a curved [[volute]]d [[pediment]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with cambered heads.
|align="center" |
|-
|Chaseley<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Originally a [[workhouse]], later a private house, it is in [[stucco]]ed red brick, and has side [[pilaster]]s surmounted by ball [[finial]]s, a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[belt course|band]], a moulded [[eaves]] [[cornice]], and a [[parapet]]. There are three storeys and four [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. On the front is a [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] porch with a [[frieze]], a [[modillion]] cornice, and a [[pediment]], and a doorway with a moulded surround. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] in moulded [[architrave]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|Ornamental Bridge, Lakeside<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The bridge crosses Rising Brook in the grounds of the house. It is in stone and consists of a single segmental arch with [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] [[voussoir]]s, and [[abutment]]s with scrolled [[coping (architecture)|coping]]. On the bridge is a [[wrought iron]] [[balustrade]] and a [[cast iron]] handrail, and at the ends are four circular [[pier (architecture)|piers]] surmounted by vases, two of which are inscribed.
|align="center" |
|-
|Boundary stone on the north bank of Rising Brook<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The boundary stone has a rectangular plan and a rounded top, and it is roughly hewn.
|align="center" |
|-
|Boundary stone on the south bank of Rising Brook<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The boundary stone has a rectangular plan and a rounded top. It is roughly hewn and there is a diagonal fissure on the west face.
|align="center" |
|-
|Shrewsbury Arms Hotel and coach house<br/><small></small>
|[[File:The Shrew Pub, Rugeley.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|
|The public house, which may contain an earlier core, is [[stucco]]ed, and has a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[cornice]] and a tile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, a main block of three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], a later bay to the right, and a five-bay coach house with an archway on the left. In the centre of the main block is a projecting [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]] porch above which is a 19th-century inn sign. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and there are three [[hip roof]]ed [[dormer]]s. The bay to the right contains a two-storey [[cant (architecture)|canted]] [[bay window]] and a sash window in the attic.
|align="center" |
|-
|St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
|[[File:St. Augustine's Church Rugeley.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1822–23
|The east end of the church was extended in about 1904. The church is built in stone with [[slate]] roofs, and has [[Perpendicular Gothic|Perpendicular]] features. It consists of a [[nave]] with a [[clerestory]], north and south [[aisle#Church architecture|aisles]], a [[chancel]] with an organ chamber and [[vestry]] at the southeast and a north chapel, and a west tower. The tower has two stages, a [[Tudor arch]]ed west doorway, polygonal [[buttress]]es, and an [[embattled]] [[parapet]]. The east window has five lights and a [[crocket]]ed [[ogee]] [[hood mould]].
|align="center" |
|-
|Grotto<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|The [[grotto]] consists of a number of connected underground chambers carved out of natural red [[sandstone]] [[bedrock]]. It is entered through a [[roughcast]] [[portal (architecture)|portal]], which leads to a rotunda with a colonnade of six [[Tuscan order|Tuscan]] columns carrying an [[entablature]] and a dome, and through more chambers to a [[basilica]] containing a [[nave]] with an [[apse]] and [[aisle]]s.
|align="center" |
|-
|2 and 4 Church Street<br/><small></small>
|
|align="center"|
|Two houses at the end of a terrace in red brick with a [[slate]] roof. The left house has four [[bay (architecture)|bays]] under a [[gable]], two storeys and an attic, and the right house has three bays and two storeys. Each house has a [[pediment]]ed porch, and a doorway with a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] surround and a rectangular [[fanlight]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with [[cornice]] hoods, some of them blocked, and at the left is a passageway.
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|17 Lower Brook Street<br/><small></small>
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|A [[stucco]]ed shop with three storeys, two [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a two-bay wing on the left. In ground floor are paired engraved [[pilaster]]s at the sides, in the upper storeys are paired [[Ionic order|Ionic]] pilasters, the middle storey contains a [[cornice]], and at the top are a plain [[frieze]], a cornice, and a blocking course. In the centre of the ground floor is a modern shop front, and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with engraved surrounds, those in the top floor in [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[architrave]]s.
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|19 Lower Brook Street<br/><small></small>
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|A [[stucco]]ed shop with side and intermediate [[pilaster]]s in the upper storeys and a [[parapet]]. There are three storeys and five [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and in the ground floor is a modern shop front.
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|Brook House<br/><small></small>
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|A red brick house with plain [[eaves]] and a [[slate]] roof. There are two storeys and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. The doorway has [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[stucco]]ed [[pilaster]]s and a [[cornice]] hood on [[corbel|consoles]], and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] with channelled [[lintel (architecture)|lintels]].
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|32 Talbot Street<br/><small></small>
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|A [[stucco]]ed house, the ground floor [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]], with a band above the ground floor, a [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[cornice]] on paired [[corbel|consoles]] over the middle floor, and a tile roof. There are three storeys and three [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the left bay recessed. The doorway in the left bay has a moulded surround, a semicircular head and a [[fanlight]], and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]] in moulded [[architrave]]s, those in the ground floor with semicircular heads.
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|Church of St Joseph and St Etheldreda<br/><small></small>
|[[File:SS Joseph and Etheldreda Catholic Church, Rugeley - geograph.org.uk - 1538142.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1849–50
|A [[Roman Catholic]] church designed by [[Charles Hansom]] in [[Decorated Gothic|Decorated]] style, it is built in [[sandstone]] and has tile roofs. The church consists of a [[nave]] with a [[clerestory]], north and south [[aisle#Church architecture|aisles]], north and south porches, a [[chancel]] with a north [[Lady chapel]] and a south [[vestry]], and a west [[steeple]]. The steeple has a tower with diagonal [[buttress]]es, a stair turret with a [[pinnacle]], a [[trefoil]] [[balustrade]] with small pinnacles, a tall octagonal spire with [[lucarne]]s and [[flying buttress]]es, and a [[weathercock]].
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|Vicarage<br/><small></small>
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|The vicarage is in red brick, and has two storeys, four [[bay (architecture)|bays]], and a single-storey wing with an [[embattled]] [[parapet]] on the right. The second bay projects and is [[gable]]d, and the windows are [[sash window|sashes]]. The doorway has a [[stucco]]ed surround, a rectangular [[fanlight]], and a [[cornice]] hood on [[corbel|consoles]].
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|Lloyds Bank<br/><small></small>
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|The building is [[stucco]]ed, the ground floor [[rustication (architecture)|rusticated]], and above are [[molding (architecture)|moulded]] [[belt course|bands]], a [[modillion]] [[eaves]] [[cornice]], and a tile roof. The building has two storeys and eight [[bay (architecture)|bays]]. There are two doorways with moulded [[pilaster]]s, one with a cornice hood on [[corbel|consoles]], and the other with a semicircular head and a [[fanlight]]. The windows are [[sash window|sashes]], and at the right end is an arched cover-way with a rusticated surround.
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|Brindley Bank Pumping Station<br/><small></small>
|[[File:Brindley Bank Pumping Station - geograph.org.uk - 475443.jpg|100px|centre]]
|align="center"|1902–07
|The water pumping station is in brick with [[terracotta]] dressings, it has a [[slate]] roof, and is in [[Tudor Revival architecture|Tudor Revival]] style. There are two storeys, attics and cellars, and a T-shaped plan, with the engine house along the front, and the boiler house at the rear. The entrance front has seven [[bay (architecture)|bays]], the fifth bay projecting and [[gable]]d. This bay contains a [[Tudor arch]]ed doorway and a [[hood mould]] incorporating a dated panel. The ground floor windows are [[mullion]]ed and [[transom (architecture)|transomed]], in the upper floor three of the bays contain four-light windows, and the others have diamond panels. At the top are three smaller gables containing slit windows, and all the gables have [[finial]]s.
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|Churchyard Cross<br/><small></small>
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|align="center"|Undated
|The cross is in the churchyard of the old St Augustine's Church, it is in stone and consists of a plain shaft on a base and a step. At one corner of the base is a hollowed-out kneeling place.
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|Churchyard walls, piers and gates, St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
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|align="center"|Undated
|A low stone wall with rounded [[coping (architecture)|copings]] runs along the west and south sides of the churchyard. At the entrance to the churchyard are four stone [[pier (architecture)|piers]], a pair of [[wrought iron]] gates, and smaller gates flanking them.
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|Graveyard wall, Old St Augustine's Church<br/><small></small>
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|align="center"|Undated
|A low stone wall running along the east side of the churchyard of the old St Augustine's Church.
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==References==
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[[Category:Lists of buildings and structures in Staffordshire]]
http://bit.ly/2XkiCNe