
Peirce House, Charing: The house and its owners
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Edward Greensted's journey
Museums in Kent: An historical and contemporary survey
Peirce House, Charing: The house and its owners
PEIRCE HOUSE, CHARING: THE HOUSE AND ITS
OWNERS
PATRICIA WINZAR
Peirce House has stood on the west side of Charing High Street since
the fifteenth century (Plate I). Much of its interest lies in its owners
who have included members of such well known Kent families as
Brent, Dering, Peirce and Sayer, all of whom have left their imprint on
the property and the lives of local people.
The house is approached by a brick pathway leading to an imposing
porch that is just over 10 m. from the road frontage. The name Peirce
relates to a family of that name who held the property in the late
seventeenth century, but the house is much older. The earliest surviving
part is the southern half of the hall which has been dated by the Royal
Commission on the Historical Monuments of E ngland as early
fifteenth-century (Plate II). The original house followed a traditional
plan which comprised a central hall open to the rafters with a parlour
on the ground floor (in this house at the north end) and two service
rooms at the other end of the hall. A fire for warmth was placed in the
hall and the site of the louvre in the roof that allowed the smoke to
escape is still visible in the roof space. Over the parlour was an upper
room, the solar, reached by its own stair and another upper room would
have been sited over the service rooms. The northern end of the
building, containing the parlour and solar, was probably demolished in
the seventeenth century when the house was in the ownership of the
Peirce family. There are surviving drawings by E.W. Parkin from the
time when the hall was still complete showing a bracket on the north
east corner that could have supported a jettied extension to the solar
(Fig. 1). The northern end of the hall was pulled down shortly after
1962, when plans were submitted for a major renovation of the building
(Figs. 2a, 2b, 3a, 3b).
It is not known whether the original service end was jettied as it was
rebuilt in the early sixteenth century.1 That rebuild is the one seen today
1 RCHME - Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England.
131
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