We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 51.8302 / 51°49'48"N
Longitude: 0.3243 / 0°19'27"E
OS Eastings: 560259
OS Northings: 217173
OS Grid: TL602171
Mapcode National: GBR NGV.BS7
Mapcode Global: VHHM4.K8TB
Plus Code: 9F32R8JF+3P
Entry Name: Salem Cottage
Listing Date: 20 February 1967
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1141242
English Heritage Legacy ID: 352751
ID on this website: 101141242
Location: High Roding, Uttlesford, Essex, CM6
County: Essex
District: Uttlesford
Civil Parish: High Roothing
Built-Up Area: High Roding
Traditional County: Essex
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex
Church of England Parish: High Roding All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford
Tagged with: Cottage
TL 60 17 HIGH RODING THE STREET
4/11
20.2.67 Salem Cottage
GV II
Hall house, c.1400, altered in C16, C17 and C20, with addition C18/19. Timber
framed, plastered, roof tiled. Consisted originally of a low 2-bay hall with
integral parlour/solar at SW end, and a contemporary 3-bay service crosswing
at NE end, jettied at the front, c.1400. A brick chimney stack was inserted
in the NE bay of the hall, just off the cross-entry, and a floor inserted, late
C16. In the C17 the front wall of the hall was raised by about 1.5 metres,
but not the rear, and the roof was rebuilt. A long single-storey extension
with axial chimney stack at SW gable, C19. 2 storeys. On ground floor, 2
C20 casement windows, door with gabled and tiled hood, C20, jetty underbuilt
as a bay window with 2 horizontal-movement sash windows, C19. On first floor,
3 C20 casement windows and small diamond-shaped window above door. Single-
storey extension, 3 C20 casement windows. Some framing exposed internally.
Low end of hall had matched pairs of curved rising braces to central post, of
which one remains at each floor. Front and rear doors remain in their original,
medieval positions, but doorheads missing and frames concealed. C16 inserted
stack blocked, with inserted cupboards, brickwork exposed on first floor,
rebuilt above first-floor ceiling. Unchamfered common joists of horizontal
section in crosswing.
It is probable that the roof was tiled originally. An undated photograph at
the NMR shows it thatched, without door hood or diamond-shaped window above,
but all other windows unchanged. A thatch fire in August 1973 destroyed the
roof, except some charred timbers of the front gable of the crosswing. They
show it to have been of crownpost construction, with curved rising braces to
the king stud. As a result of the fire the rear end of the crosswing was
slightly shortened, and the new roofs were tiled. RCHM 15.
Listing NGR: TL6025917173
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings