( 169 )
SOME TIMBER-FRAMED HOUSES IN THE
KENTISH WEALD.
BY H. S. COWPER, ESQ., P.S.A.
INTKODUCTOEY.
IN the great clay plain which traverses Kent from west
to east, and lies wholly within the Weald, there are perhaps
two features which are especially characteristic. One is the
extraordinary number of ponds which dot the map, and the
other is the timber-framed houses and farm buildings of
various dates, into the construction of which as a general
rule brick does not enter, and stone only for foundations.
The connection between houses and ponds may not at
once be apparent, but the number of the latter has never
been completely explained, and it is possible that many of
them have been dug for the marly clay, from which the
so-called loaming, which, filled the panels of these timber
houses, was made. When one considers that in every house
and barn not only the outer walls, but the inside partitions
were largely made up of this filling, it will be recognized
that a large supply was required.
The timber houses themselves are so often disguised by
tiling and weather boards, or have been subject to structural
modification and modernizing, that it is difficult to realize
how numerous and interesting they are. Tt was the purchase
of the old timber-framed residence of Loddenden, Staplehurst,
that turned my attention to these buildings, and I
now venture to put before the Society some notes, plans, and
details of a few in this part of the Weald.
'' The study of these houses is a fascinating one, for anybody
who cares for old domestic work, On examination it
voi,. XXIX, H"
170 SOME TIMBER-PRAMED HOUSES
is possible to group them into types; but it seems to me,
that although these unpretentious dwellings have received
some notice from antiquaries and architects, sufficient attention
has not hitherto been paid to the development of the
ground plan, which probably is the best way of classifying
th.em; The difficulties in the way of dating them by the
means of detail are very great, owing to the overlapping of
styles during the- sixteenth century; and this difficulty is
increased by the fact that in certain areas the houses appear
to have originated for different purposes. By this I mean
that some of these houses were erected as manor houses for
the small manors which were characteristic of Kent, some
for the larger yeomen, and some for influential clothiers'
families; and the character and finish of the work put into
them was, I think, influenced by these facts.
Again, in dealing with the houses by detail, one is largely
handicapped by the process of decay and reconstruction,
since the first has often caused the removal of the original
windows, barge boards, and sometimes the fascia boards protecting
the joist ends. Reconstruction, weather tiling, and
boarding, have covered up features right and left; but in most
cases a survey, if done with sufficient care, will reveal the
original plan. Still further, I believe that a study of detail
and mouldings alone will be found very confusing, identical
mouldings being used long after their first mtroduction.
The overlapping of styles also appears to have caused the
use of detail that in more pretentious buildings would probably
have been quite out of fashion.
There are indeed so many points to consider in discussing
rural architecture, that probably only a writer thoroughly
versed in local history and trained as an architect can treat
it adequately, so that I feel some diffidence in approaching
the subject. Vet the desirability of recording ground plans
must be my excuse.
When, hunting for precedents, I began, to examine these
houses I was astonished to find how many houses still exist
which have been constructed on the mediseval open-roofed
hall plan, So numerous are these, that probably in many
IN THE KENTISH WEALD. 17 1
parts of the Weald it is impossible to go a mile in any direction
without finding one. In no case, however, have these
halls been left-open to the roof, for at some subsequent date
a floor has been laid to make bedrooms over, and other
structural alterations have generally been carried out at the
same time. These inserted floors have of course always remained,
except in one or two instances where a house of this
character has been acquired for the purpose of bringing out
the ancient features.
JSTow in many parts of England such a thing as an openroofed
hall hardly exists, even in manor houses, much less in
yeomen's homesteads ; and such is the case in Cumberland
and the Lakes, which were formerly largely owned by statesmen
(estatesmen) or yeomen, and where very hard stone
formed the building material. This makes it more interesting
to find them so numerous in a district where timber
alone was obtainable.
Eeverting to the question of dating timber houses, I
have ventured to say that the plan and general arrangement
appear to have been neglected. Certain suggestions have
indeed been made as to guides in the date of a building,
among which we find—
1. If the upright intermediate posts (which were in general
use in the home counties) are placed close together the
building is early.
2. That if the joist ends which project to carry the
floor of the oversailing, or jetty storey, are covered with
a fascia board, the building, belongs to a later type, since
this was done to hide the joists, which were becoming lighter
as timber got rarer.*
3. Exactly the reverse of the above, viz., that it is a sign
of early work if the joists are covered with a fascia board.f
Prom my own observation I feel much inclined to doubt
any of these rules, at any rate for this part of Kent, and I
think it would be easy to point out both early and late
* R. Nevill, Old Cottage and Domestic Architecture in S. W. Surrey, 1889,
p. 36.
f P, H- Ditohfleld, The Manor Houses of England, p. 69.
If 2
172. SOME. TIMBER-PRAMED HOUSES
houses in which,the fascia board is used, and late ones in
which the timbering is close. As a matter of fact this close
timbering was generally used only on the front elevation,
and was I believe chiefly decorative, and it was simply a
question whether the original builder cared for the appearance
of his house and could afford it.
;. I would prefer to adopt the following criterions of date :—
1. The ground and sectional plans as first built.
2. The measurements of main posts and corner posts and
measurements and sections of girders.
But even in an external examination there are certain
rules which may be taken as almost definite :—
.. 1. A house which oversails or overhangs at each end of
the front, but not in the middle, is early.
. 2. A house that oversails at the first floor the whole
length of its elevation is later.
3. A house that has no oversailing storey at all is generally
late.
4. A house supported on four corner posts is probably
early and untouched externally.
The reasons for these propositions will be apparent in
this Paper, but it may be pointed out here that, in the first,
the fact that it oversails at each end, but not in the middle,
is an almost certain indication of the open-hall type, because
the oversailing storeys shew that floors are laid at each end
of the building of which the joists project, and that such
joists are absent in the middle, which means usually that
there was no floor originally laid there.
Of course the open-hall type, of which I shall describe
two examples, takes precedence of the others as a type. But
the question is, At what date did the erection of this type
come to an end?. And also whether open-hall houses were
ever erected after the fashion for building with rooms over
the hall, and for inserting the floors, had set in. The Renaissance
began about 1516, affecting at first the detail of houses
and not the plan,* and may be said to have been fully
# Crotch, Growth of the English House, pp, 134, 136,
IN THE KENTISH WEALD. l7 3
established in the time of Inigo Jones, say a hundred years
later, i.e., 1616. I think therefore it is reasonable that we
may, when not treating any individual example, class roughly
the open-hall type of homestead as a fifteenth-century type,
while those built with rooms over the hall may be sixteenth
century or later. It is only by examination of numerous
examples that we -can ascertain if the fifteenth-century type
houses were often erected in the sixteenth century, or if any
of the later type were erected before the conclusion of the
fifteenth century.
Inthe majority of the older timber houses of the Weald I
have come to the conclusion that for safety's sake the cooking
was done in a kitchen built quite separate, beside or behind
the offices which always adjoin the hall. At any rate, in no
single instance that I have been able to examine is there
any trace of an original kitchen as part of the structure.
These out-of-door kitchens have now disappeared, and it is
pretty evident that with the disuse of the hall it sometimes
became the kitchen. Therefore inside these houses the
only original fire was the central hearth, from which the
smoke escaped through a roof vent, and doors and windows.
The same change of habits and new wants which made them
build in floors for extra bedrooms, called for brick fireplaces
and flues, and these were generally obtained by erecting an
enormous chimney of brick within the house from eight to
ten feet in width in order that it should carry four flues, one
from the much curtailed room formed from the hall, one
from the room behind the hall—either the old parlour or else
a new parlour made out of the old offices—and one from
each of the bedrooms above. If they had put the chimneystack
at the back of the hall instead of practically in it, it
would have only given them two fireplaces, so that the other
course was generally adopted. But this system set the
example for the new houses, so that we find the great
chimney-stack built in the same way inside the house and
between hall and parlour, and taking up so much space that
it made the frontage nine or ten feet longer than otherwise
would have been necessary. The amount of internal space
174 SOME TIMBER-PRAMED HOUSES
lost in the older houses by this building-in process was very
great.
Into the very interesting methods of construction, framing,
and materials, etc., I do not propose to enter here,
since it would occupy much space, and also because the subject
has been well treated by Mr. Charles Baily, Mr. Ralph
Nevill, and others.* Both methods and materials are indeed
so utterly different to those in general use that the subject
well deserves attention, especially as they are methods and
materials which though of the utmost excellence can never
be revived in England.
The examples now to be described will no doubt illustrate
sufficiently the above remarks.
PATTENDEN, GOUDHURST.
The ancient timber house of Pattenden nestles atthe bottom
of Goudhurst Hill on the right hand of the road leading nearly
due south to Bedgebury. • I t faces east, and its high pitched
tile roof is a noticeable feature from the bridge crossing the
line from Paddock Wood to Hawkhurst. It is now the pro -
perty and residence of Mr. W. Dungey, who has lived here for
many years, and I should like to say, before describing the
house, that it is difficult to find a timber house which has been
treated with better judgment. All old features have been
reverently preserved and cared for, and where new features
were absolutely necessary, they have been carried out with
simphcity, and in the substantial manner which the old
homestead deserves. Besides the acknowledgment which is
due to Mr. Dungey for his care of an interesting relict of the
past, I must add my thanks to him for the courtesy he
shewed me personally.
* Charles Baily, Remarlcs on Timber Houses (Surrey Arch. Collections,
vol. iv.); R. Nevill, P.S.A., P.R.I.B.A., Old Cottage and Domestic Architecture
in S. W. Surrey (Guildford, 1889, and a later edition). "
PATTENDEN. GOUDHURST.
!5H^entuTij
KSYeTltuTlj
16 Century ?
Blocked.
AAA are |}roba,bly modern o"pe.Tunqs
PRESENT KITCHEN
^^^^\^\S^\\\Vv\\\^ gj
iinnuuiiiuinuuiuiiimniiuynnnunii
Site of Stair. SifeofStahr.
H A L L
PARLOUR ^ _ _^mmiiji'iii»imiiimi mii11nitimnmi
bum in
HS.O.Fec.iaocj.
IN THE KENTISH WEALD. 1^5
Pattenden is a fine example of the older type I have
alluded to. The total frontage is 59 feet long; but while
there is no overhang for 25 feet in the centre, there is a
strongly projecting jetty storey on each side, that on the
north being rather the wider. As this projection is continued
round at side, front, and back, an additional four
feet is added to the total length of the building, which on
the first floor is therefore 63 feet.
To describe the house as it was originally built we must
picture the wide brick chimney-stack and the two floors
cleared away from in and over the part marked " Hal l " in
the accompanying plan. We see then that there was a fine
hall extending from floor to roof and measuring 25 feet by
19 feet. The screens passage with its front and back doors
was at the north end, and to the right of this lay the two
usual offices. There is, however, an arrangement here which
is not quite normal. In most timber houses the front and
back door were actually in the hall, and if there ever was a
screen at all it wai actually erected in the hall. At Pattenden,
however, both the doors and passage between are in
the north wing and under the floor of the bedroom; so that
the screen, which I think no doubt actually existed at Pattenden,
did not project into the hall at all, but must have
stood flush with the north wall above it.
The roof of this hall was supported by two fine main
posts, from which, just above the level of the inserted first
floor, spring heavy arched supports, and over which was a
fine tie-beam carrying a king post. The position of this
part of the truss is not central to the hall, being only eight
feet from the northern end; and although this lack of symmetry
is probably not unusual, it is a little difficult to see the
reason, though here it may have been to give room for the
wide window in the east -wall, of which the jambs nine feet
apart can be traced, and which may originally have been a
bay window.
The main posts* themselves measure in their lower halves
* The main post is sometimes termed story or storey-post, and the intermediates
punohiou's, quarters, or studquarters.
176 SOStE TIl&BER-PRAMED HOtJSES
16 inches by 9 inches, but they are apparently cut from a
tree reversed, as they are shaped into broad corbels projecting
inward at the upper ends to carry the tie-beam, and here
they measure about two feet from front to back and about
15 inches wide. Externally the main post on the front of
the house is worked into a buttress-like projection of perpendicular
character, a form of treatment only found in
better class timber houses; while internally we find the
underside of the great curved braces moulded with a hollow
chamfer and bold round (PIG. 1), and springing from a cap or
corbel something like the capital of the king post which will
be later described. These caps have been cut and tampered
with, and it is not clear if they simply acted as brackets, or
if they stood on columns or pilasters worked on the inner
side of the main posts below, but which may have been
chiselled off in subsequent alterations.
The tie-beam on which the king post stands is 12 inches
wide and 16 inches deep. The king post itself carries a
horizontal beam on which are short tie-beams tenoned into
the rafters, of which there are fourteen pairs clear within the
hall roof, each eight inches wide. As usual in these houses
there is no ridge piece.
The king post is octagonal with well moulded capital and
base, and measures 5 feet 3 inches high (EIG. 2 ) . Its character
will be seen in my sketch, and as is usual in the roofs over
these halls, both the king post itself and all the timbers above
the roof are smoke stained. There is no trace left of any
smoke vent or louvre.
Before describing the sixteenth-century alterations it will
be best to notice the other original features of the house.
To begin with, as shewn in the plan, this house at both ends
had a somewhat wide oversailing storey at the first floor,
and this was carried round all three outside walls. Now,
whenever this " overhang" was carried round two sides of a
building it could only be effected by carrying a diagonal (or
" dragon '•") beam anglewise over the corner, into which
short joists could be mortised and project both ways ; and
without which of course the joists could be only laid in one
PATTENDEN, GOUDHURST. [Photo F. FRITH & Co.
IN THE KENTISH WEALD, 177
direction, in which direction only? could there he an " overhang."
This was accordingly done in two ways, and the
dotted lines in the north end of the plan shew the methods. In
one side the diagonal beam was carried right across the room
from a main girder, but in the other side a secondary transverse
girder was inserted, and a short " dragbn " beam carried
from that to the angle. The object of this was undoubtedly
to leave room for the short original flight of steps to the
upper rooms, which undoubtedly existed here, and of which
this .arrangement is now evidence. It will be seen that in
houses of this character, where the hall filled up the centre
of the house, there was no communication upstairs between
the first-floor rooms at one end of the building and those
at the other. This necessitated another flight of steps
at the other end of the house, but the great inconvenience
attending such an arrangement was probably one reason why
the halls were invariably divided into floors when once the
fashion had been set. Accordingly we find that at Pattenden
there was another flight of stairs in the same position at
the other end of the hall, although neither of these staircases
have survived to the present day. ' ' '
These diagonal beams were laid on and mortised to four
fine corner posts, each of which is about 8 | feet high and
144 inches wide, and the mouldings of which and general
appearance are shewn in my sketch. (PIG. 3.) The existence
of these four corner posts and the oversailing round
both sides and ends of the structure prove with certainty
that we have here a complete house of the period, and that
all other offices, including the kitchen, were built separate.
The original front entrance at the east end of the screen's
passage has a Tudor arch with oak jambs measuring 14 inches
by 12 inches, enriched by a bold moulding of hollow, ogee,
and round. (PIG. 4.) The door itself is original, 6 feet
8 inches high, and 4 feet 4 inches wide, made up of six overlapping
oak planks each 8£ inches wide worked into vertical
ridges and hollows so as to conceal the joins, and have.something
of the appearance of a bold linen pattern. The whole
effect is solid and dignified. On the right are two doors
1*78 SOME TlHBER-PRAMED HOUSES
with the original Tudor arches
which entered respectively the offices
commonly called buttery and
pantry, though the east one has
now become a small parlour. The
third door which must have opened
to the old stair has gone. There
is a cellar under these rooms which
is now approached from the later
kitchen, but which originally may
have been entered from under the
staircase.
The only other original features
existing, or perhaps we should say
exposed, are the moulded door
frame opening at the back end of
the screens passage, the frame of
the door at the south or dais end
of the hall opening originally to
the destroyed staircase, and the
boldly moulded fascia boards which
cover the projecting joist ends of
both jetty storeys on the front.
(EIG. 6.) There is also one window
left, which must be Original, though
its position is peculiar; it is of
two lights without transoms, but
as far as can be seen from the
garden a hollow chamfer and segmental
heads to the lights. This
little window (which indoors is now
hidden in a cupboard) was high up on the east wall of the
hall, and fnay have been intended to light a small gallery
above the screens passage; if so, this gallery was probably
reached from the adjoining bedroom.*
The original house, therefore, consisted of the hall with
* I have omitted above the jambs of the hall window, whioh are presumably
original. (Pig. 5.)
HI III fl iri.lW
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PIG. 3.
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PCLTIOUT
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£ (J nside.)
2.
Hall Joist,
PATTENDEN DETAILS.
IN TH& KENTISH WEALD. . 179
two offices behind the screens, and at the opposite end a
parlour which, when the stairway existed, was only fifteen
feet square. Above on each side were two bedrooms of
larger area than the rooms below by the width of the " overhang."
This was all the accommodation within the house,
whatever else was outside.
When the owners became dissatisfied with these arrangements
they carried out their alterations in a substantial
way. They built in a large chimney-stack with its back to
the screens passage which was retained as a passage, and
put in two floors over the hall. This work was well done.
They threw a great oak girder across the hall fixed by
mortise and tenon to the upright main posts, and from it
two secondary girders, one central to the hall and the other
to one side, in order to let its end rest on the brick jamb
of the fireplace. The main girder is 15 inches across, and
the secondary ones about 14 inches, and all are richly
moulded, the main girder having eleven rounds and hollows
on each side above the lowest. The other girders are similar,
and even the common joists are moulded as shewn in my
sketch. (FIG. 7.) The great beam over the chimney opening
is similar, and the whole effect of this room now, with all the
woodwork carefully oiled and polished, is very good.
Upstairs we find in the room over the hall, instead of an
,oak lintel to the fireplace, a stone one of the design shewn
in the drawing (FIG. 8), and the end of which (not sketched)
is carved with an oak or maple-leaf. There is a late Gothic
character about this, but it is built into the brick chimneystack,
and there is no reason, I think, to doubt that it is of
the same age as the other inserted features. Above this
fireplace, on the ceiling, there is some reeded " panelling,"
which is evidently a portion of that described briefly in
Parker's Glossary of Gothic Architecture (1840).*
" In the principal room upstairs of a timber house, Pattenden
near G-oudhurst, the walls and- ceilings are lined with
oak boards reeded with mouldings of the linen pattern, but
* P. U.
180 SOME TIMBEB.-PRAMED HOUSES
not panelled. In one of the other rooms in the same house
there was a ceiling similar to that before mentioned at Sherborne
Abbey."*
I t has been said that practically all original windows
have gone, but good oak-framed windows with transoms
exist in several rooms and have well moulded mullions of the
type shewn in my sketch. (FIG. 9.) These are to be found
in the small north parlour, the larger south parlour, and, if
I remember right, there is one (closed) in the west wall of
the hall. All these are of the date of the alterations, but
the combination of hollow and round mouldings appears to
be purposely chosen to match the mouldings of the fascia
boards under edge of braces, etc., which must all be of the
earlier date.f
In the hall window there are four quarries of stained
glass of yellow tint:—
1. A monkey drinking.
2. A pomegranate crowned.
3 and 4. A rose crowned.
What the first signifies I do not know, but the others
being the badges of Henry VIII. and Catherine of Arragon
must be before 1533, and probably give us the approximate
date of the alterations to the house. J
Externally there is not much to notice except the generally
picturesque aspect of the house. Like most other houses
of this style, the tile roof is brought down over projecting
wings and central hall as if all the front was in line.
The plate is carried along from one projection to the other
and supported by two large curved braces of oak,, and on the
under side of this plate are large mortise holes which I. am
unable to explain, unless a sort of barge-board wasoriginally
* The allusion is to a ceiling at Sherborne Abbey, " a good timber one divided
into squares with flowers oarved at the intersections": but there is nothing like
this to be seen now.
f There is a small window in the north -wall of the north parlour which was
of the old unglazed type and probably original. No doubt there were others.
X These badges might I think also be used by Mary I , the daughter of Catherine.
But she used other badges as well as the pomegranate, and as they are
both orowned here they muoh more probably represent Henry VIII. and Catherine.
IN THE KENTISH WEALD. 18 1
fastened underneath it. The two chimney-stacks at the
north and south ends are of uncertain date, but not original,*
and so also is the kitchen, which is built of old materials.
The back of the house is a good deal obscured by modern
buildings, within which is the modern staircase, an excellent
one of oak erected by the present proprietor. Just outside
this there is a small length of wall which is old, apparently
part of a sixteenth-century construction.
Pattenden appears to have been both a dene, a borough,
and a manor. As a dene it was held of Loose manor.f It
was a borough under East Farleigh ;J and in the time of
Edward I. there was a prison at Patyndenne in which G-oudhurst
malefactors were imprisoned. § A summary of the
descent of it is found in Hasted. It belonged to Pattendens
from at least as early as the time of Edward I., and this
family was returned in 1451 by Jervase Clifton's Commission
as bearing Arma Antiqua. || One of this family alienated
the estate to Sir Maurice Berkeley, standard-bearer to
Henry VIII., Edward VL, and Elizabeth; and he by will,
1581, gave the manor to his fourth son Eobert, from whom it
passed to Mr. William Beswicke, and afterwards to the
Mariotts.l
Sir Maurice Berkeley married Elizabeth, sister of Thomas
Sondes, eldest son of Sir Anthony Sondes of Throwly,
and the said Thomas alienated to him the manor of Boycot
in Ulcomb.**
There can be no doubt that Pattenden was built by the
Pattendens, possibly about 1470, and the alterations were made
by Sir Maurice Berkeley in the early years of the sixteenth
* That at the north end has its lower courses of stone, and probably is
sixteenth century.
t Purley, History of the Weald,\\., p. 709. .
X Hasted, vii., p. 77.
§ Furley, ii., p. 241. (Quo Warranto Rolls.)
|| I find the following in the Streatfield collection relating to Kent in the
B.M. Add. MS. 33,883 :'PatteMen, Wm. dePatendenne 12 Bd. II., 10 Bd. III.;
John his son 11 Ed.-III., 15 Ed. HI . j John Patynden 5 Hen. VI. The Pattendens
had property in Goudhurst as late as the reign of Chas. I, See will of
Pattenden, oik., dated 2 June 1643.
; if.'SasteU, vii:, p."77.
** Hftsted, v.; p. 393,
182 SOME TIMBER-PRAMED HOUSES
century, and probably not later than 1533, when Catherine
of Arragon was divorced, since her badge is in the hall
window.
There is a fire-back in the hall dated 1636 on which are
two shields, each bearing the same coat, which is quarterly
of nine, under a helmet, crest and mantling. It is so burned
away that I was able to make little of it; in fact not one
of the quarterings seems decipherable.*
SMARDEN HOUSE (now CHESSENDEN), SMAEDEN.
Smarden is one of the most picturesque and characteristic
places in the Weald, and as it was anciently a market to wn, and
has not suffered from development like some villages in this
part, it still contains several houses worth study. The one I
have selected is not rich in detail, but it affords a type which
illustrates my present purpose.
Smarden House lies a little way along the street from the
church as you leave Smarden by the road to Pluckley and
Charing. It is close to the road, and therefore faces about
north-west, but for the purposes of description it will be
treated as facing north. We have in it a house of the same
type as Pattenden but of smaller dimensions, since the front
only measures 471 feet, or, with the projecting ends measured
in, just over 50 feet.
In spite of the small size of the house, its hall, before it
was cut down and floors inserted, measured no less than
23£ by 19 feet, or only 1£ feet shorter than Pattenden and
of equal width. It was in the same way divided into two
bays, the eastern one of which was 12^ feet and the western
one only 10 feet. No reason is apparent for this inequality.
* I made the following note : 1, On a ohevron three . . . ' . ( ? ) ; 2, Abend, or
else two bendlets; 3, Looks like a wheel; 4, A bend raguly (?); 5 and 6, Both
seem chevrons; rest quite undecipherable.
CHIMNEY
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