( 167 )
AN OLD TTMBEB HOUSE AT SUNDRIDGE.
BY ATMEB VALLANCE.
IN the village street of Sundridge, near the western, or
Brasted, end of the same, stands an old house which, having
recently been stripped of accumulated coats of plaster and
other intrusive accretions, proves to be a singularly interesting
specimen of a medieeval dwelling of the hall-house type.
Though it is hazardous to pretend to fix the exact date of
its erection, it may be assigned approximately to the middle
of the fifteenth century. The house is situated by the south
side of the roadway, with its principal facade looking
towards the north. In elevation the scheme of this house
does not differ from that of normal houses of its type. The
line of the wall on the ground level is continuous, but the
overhanging upper storey at either end has the effect of
making the middle portion, containing the hall, to look as
though it were recessed, an effect enhanced by the pair of
braces which help to carry forward the eaves in one unbroken
line from end to end of the building.
The plan of the house, as originally constructed, without
the incongruous additions now attached to either end, is
simply an oblong parallelogram, divided transversely into
three almost equal portions, the central portion, the great
hall, being thus relatively small in area. So small is it in
fact that it consists of a single bay only, with no tie-beam
to divide it across the middle. Moreover, the available
floor-space of the hall being so curtailed, in order to avoid
encroaching upon it further, the screen passage does not
occupy the normal position within the hall itself, but was
situated beyond the hall, though immediately adjacent, on
the ground floor of the left-hand, or eastern, division of the
building. The lower part of the east wall of the hall, then,
actually constitutes a screen, and contains remains of the
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AN OLD TIMBER HOUSE AT SUNDRIDGE. 169
arched doorways which opened from the hall into the
screened passage. The screen which bounded the passage
on the other—the east—side, with its openings to the buttery
and offices, has been entirely removed. No attempt has
been made to supply its place, though the marks showing
where it originally stood are plainly visible.
On taking up the brick flooring of the hall the original
earth floor was reached, and there were discovered the
remains of the ancient central hearth, roughly in the form
of a circle, paved with irregularly-shaped stones. Close by
was found a heap of ashes, which bad been brushed aside
and trodden into a compact mass. There was no trace of
a louvre in the roof overhead, but the smoke would have
found its way out through the unglazed windows in either
side wall of the hall.
There is no projecting bay, either because the house was
•of too modest a scale for such an embellishment, or else
because the bay itself had not become developed into a
recognized feature of the hall by the date when this house
was built. The principal window in the hall is therefore
flush with the wall. It consists of six transomed lights,
having arched heads both above and below the transom.
In default of glazing, the window originally was protected
by shutters, hung on iron hooks, and swinging inwards into
the room. In the western jamb of the upper half of the
window there yet remains the topmost hook. The hook
below it, for the lower ride of the same shutter, has disappeared,
but the hole into which the hook was inserted
may still be seen. Curiously enough, the top of this window
does not extend up to the level of the wall-plate or the
eaves; but there is a considerable interval between, which
is filled externally by a timber-framed cant of plaster, while
internally there is a corresponding hollow. One would rather
have expected the inner face of the wall to be carried up
flush from above the head of the window to the plate.
In the ground floor of the easternmost division of the
house is a range of four four-centred arched openings,
•extending throughout the whole length of this portion of
170 AN OLD TIMBER HOUSE AT SUNDRIDGE.
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SUNDEIDSE, MEDIEVAL HOUSE,
172 AN OLD TIMBER HOUSE AT SUNDRIDGE.
the building. Of these the opening nearest to the hall was
the original front entrance, which led into the passage
between the screens. Fragments of the original front door
itself survived, though nothing remains of the back doorway
and door, which must have stood at the opposite end of the
screens. Its disappearance is accounted for by the presence
of a huge fireplace, which seems to have been introduced in
the seventeenth century, and which occupies the greater part
of the south end of the eastern ground-floor room. The three
windows to east of the front doorway were unglazed, but
were fitted on the inside with sliding shutters, moving, not
in horizontal grooves, as would be much the more usual
plan, but up and down vertically in perpendicular grooves.
When raised they were held in position by means of a metal
pin, transfixing the lower part of each shutter, as is witnessed
by the round hole in the middle of the face of the sill to
•each opening.
The ground-floor room at the western end of the house
has a pair of square-headed windows, also unglazed, but
protected, as also subdivided into lights, by vertical bars of
oak, square on plan, but set anglewise. The rebate for the
shutter on the inside remains.
Of all the disfiguring alterations whereto this house has
been subjected since its erection, that which has changed its
proper character most materially was the introduction in the
seventeenth century of a huge open fireplace, with internal
chimney stack of brick, at the east end of the hall. To make
room for this obstruction the screen, with its arched doorways
(except one at the southern extremity), was nearly, if
not totally, demolished. This chimney opening (like that
already referred to as having been introduced in the back of
the eastern room on the ground floor) has capacious ingles,
with seats and recesses. It also has a curious and unusual
feature in the shape of a squint, pierced through the brickwork,
to allow observation to be made of any person entering
the front door.
Before being purchased by Mr. C. P. Munn, a builder, of
Hampstead, in 1923, the house had been converted into two
AN OLD TIMBER HOUSE AT SUNDRIDGE. 173-
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174 AN OLD TIMBER HOUSE AT SUNDRIDGE.
tenements. Mr. Munn, at once perceiving that he had
acquired a house of no ordinary possibilities, consulted the
eminent architect Professor Beresford Pite, under whose
-careful direction and supervision the building has now
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Elevation ( Section WndowHaa
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