History in Structure

Higher Week Farmhouse

A Grade II Listed Building in Burrington, Devon

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Coordinates

Latitude: 50.9503 / 50°57'1"N

Longitude: -3.9791 / 3°58'44"W

OS Eastings: 261074

OS Northings: 118632

OS Grid: SS610186

Mapcode National: GBR KV.NFSC

Mapcode Global: FRA 26KL.MLR

Plus Code: 9C2RX22C+48

Entry Name: Higher Week Farmhouse

Listing Date: 8 January 1988

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1209582

English Heritage Legacy ID: 97145

ID on this website: 101209582

Location: Week, North Devon, EX37

County: Devon

District: North Devon

Civil Parish: Burrington

Traditional County: Devon

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Devon

Church of England Parish: Burrington Holy Trinity

Church of England Diocese: Exeter

Tagged with: Farmhouse

Find accommodation in
High Bickington

Description


BURRINGTON
SS 61 NW


5/15 Higher Week Farmhouse
-
- II
Farmhouse. Circa 1600. Rendered stone rubble and cob. Bitumenised slate roof.
Axial brick stack and tall rendered stack to front end of lean-to at left (lower)
end.
The surviving fabric of the original house consists of hall to right heated by axial
stack backing onto cross-passage. The roof timbers over the hall appear to show
faint sighs of smoke-blackening, suggesting this part was originally open to the
roof for a short period before the stack was inserted. There is a solid stone and
cob wall partition between the hall and inner room, the latter definitely being a
later, probably C19 addition. At the same time, the house was extended at the rear
to accommodate a double flight of stairs, each flight running up beside the rear
wall of the hall, 1 serving the room over the cross-passage, the other the chambers
over the hall and inner room. The original staircase appears to have been
originally housed to the rear lower end of the hall, beside the axial stack and
hall/cross-passage doorway. In the late C19, a lean-to was added at the lower end,
a doorway being pierced through the solid gable end wall on the lower side of the
cross-passage. It is not clear, therefore, whether the lean-to replaced a lower
service end or outbuildings, or whether this is an unusual example of a hall and end
passage type plan. The unheated inner room, however, was in use until recently as a
dairy and salting house, suggesting the lower end, if it existed, did not
accommodate service rooms. In C20, 1 of the flights of stairs was removed, the
doorway at the rear of the hall blocked up and access to the stairs opened up at the
rear of the cross-passage.
2 storeys. 3-window range. C20 fenestration except central upper storey window
which has a late C19 3-light casement. C20 gabled porch with slate roof.
Interior: Hall fireplace has chamfered timber lintel and bread oven. Creamery
niche in front wall beside the fireplace jamb. No exposed ceiling beams. Original
roof structure survives over hall only, with one raised cruck truss with trenched
purlins, diagonally set ridge purlin and straight morticed and tenoned collar.
Probably in C18 the former gable end of the hall was converted to a hip. The
additional of the inner room and rear extension involved the superimposition of a
wide span roof structure with a much higher ridge level.


Listing NGR: SS6107418632

External Links

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