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6 bed detached house
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The Old Rectory is a red-brick house built in the reign of Edward VII, situated beneath a hipped clay tile roof with tile-hung gables and tall windows that provide a sense of light and space. The property features high ceilings, picture rails, fireplaces, timber floors, and moulded door surrounds. The interior is divided into an inverted L-shape, with four reception rooms and a kitchen/breakfast room facing south or east, and four bedrooms on the first floor. The principal bedroom is a generous size with an adjacent shower room, while the remaining bedrooms share use of a family bath and shower room and a separate shower room. The property has a pretty garden wrapping around the eastern and southern sides of the house, with level lawns, rose beds, and a belt of woodland underplanted with rhododendrons. The garden amounts to approximately 1.41 acres and is bounded by a beech hedge and stock-proof fencing.