History in Structure

Wrixhill Farmhouse

A Grade II* Listed Building in Bratton Clovelly, Devon

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.6954 / 50°41'43"N

Longitude: -4.1758 / 4°10'32"W

OS Eastings: 246428

OS Northings: 90670

OS Grid: SX464906

Mapcode National: GBR NV.5F8G

Mapcode Global: FRA 2747.P05

Plus Code: 9C2QMRWF+4M

Entry Name: Wrixhill Farmhouse

Listing Date: 7 September 1987

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1105626

English Heritage Legacy ID: 94269

ID on this website: 101105626

Location: West Devon, EX20

County: Devon

District: West Devon

Civil Parish: Bratton Clovelly

Traditional County: Devon

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Devon

Church of England Parish: Bratton Clovelly St Mary the Virgin

Church of England Diocese: Exeter

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Description


BRATTON CLOVELLY
SX 49 SE

9/14 Wrixhill Farmhouse

GV II*

Farmhouse. Late C15 extended and altered in approximately early C17 with later C17
wing and further alterations in C18 and C19. Rendered cob walls. Asbestos slate
roof hipped at left end and gabled to right. 2 axial stacks, left-handed one is of
rubble, right-hand one is constructed of dressed granite; rendered rubble lateral
stack to inner face of rear wing.
Complex and unusual development of plan. Originally three room and through-passage
plan with lower room to the right. There was a central hearth in the 2-bay hall and
the house was also open to the roof over the lower end but the inner room was
floored. The insertion of the 2 axial stacks may have coincided with this addition
or occurred at any time in the first half of the C17; they need not necessarily be
exactly contemporary. An unusual aspect of this customary stage of modernisation
was that instead of keeping to the tradition 3-room and through-passage plan the
insertion of the 2 stacks created just 2 rooms with a very wide passage onto which
the stacks backed; thus the hall was occupied by the passage and lower stack and the
passage was absorbed into a large heated lower room. Possibly this became a kitchen
and the left-hand room, which had the 2nd axial stack, a parlour. The hall, which
had now become the passage, was ceiled at this stage; the lower room, despite the
insertion of a stack, was not ceiled and remarkably, according to the present owner,
was recalled by his grandmother as having been still open to the roof within her
memory. This is corroborated by the lack of ceiling beams visible at this end of
the house and the existence of only C19 joinery compared to the C17 and C18 joinery
visible in other parts. In the later C17 a 1-room wing was added at the rear of the
left-hand room heated by a lateral stack - this may have been intended as a kitchen
although this then raises the question of what use the unceiled right-hand room was
put to. A certain amount of remodelling appears to have occurred in the C18 from
the evidence of several 2-panel doors and a staircase with turned balusters leading
from the lower room to over the passage. In the C19 leanto additions were made at
the right-hand end of the house, at the rear of the main block and against the inner
face of the rear wing - this formed a passage from the house to an outbuilding which
was attached at the rear of the wing.
2 storeys. Asymmetrical 3-window front of C19 and early C20 2-light casements with
glazing bars; the ground floor right-hand window has 3 lights. Early C19 20-pane
hornless sash to left on ground floor. 1st floor right-hand window is in gabled
dormer. C20 panelled door at centre with a large sloping buttress to either side
and one towards the right-hand end. The wing projects to the rear of the left-hand
side with a small outbuilding attached at its rear which is parallel to the front
block and has on its rear wall a shouldered-head wooden door frame with studded oak
door which has been reused from the house. The outshuts at the rear of the house
and side of the wing are under continuous catslide roofs.
Interior: the 4 original roof trusses survive in slightly varying forms which
suggest the status of different ends of the building. The right-hand truss has
threaded purlins and diagonal threaded ridge with cranked collar. The 2 trusses
over the higher end of the passage and over the hall are very similar but have
curved collars. All these timbers are smoke-blackened, the principal rafters curve
into the walls but it is not possible to see how far they extend. Over the inner
room part of an identical clean truss survives. An unusual feature of these trusses
is that instead of being arch-braced the principal rafters begin to curve on their
inner face before they meet the collars which continue the curve - thus making it
continuous. In the approximately early C17 extension the rear blade of the roof
truss survives, clean, with threaded purlin. Over the rear wing the roof trusses
are probably original and consist of substantial well cut principal rafters with
cambered collars which are lapped and pegged to the principals.
The only other surviving feature in the house dating from its original build is a
wooden shouldered-head doorframe which was at the rear of the original passage.
Both fireplaces in the main range are blocked but that in the rear wing has a
chamfered wooden lintel. The only beams visible on the ground floor are in the
passage end are chamfered with no visible stops. On the 1st floor C17 square-headed
wooden doorframe survives leading into the chamber over the inner room, it is
chamfered with ogee stops. Adjoining it in the rear wall of the inner room where it
joins the wing is a curved recess which probably housed a newel stair. In the
present passage are 3 C18 2-panel doors.
In several ways this house is an important survival; the form of its original roof
trusses shows it was a high quality medieval house which had a complex and unusual
development that can be traced from a number of features of various periods. The
remarkable existence in releatively recent times of one end of the house still open
to the roof raises questions about the modernisation of Devon farmhouses in general.
The house has been little altered since the C19 and forms part of a traditional farm
complex.


Listing NGR: SX4642890670

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