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Latitude: 51.963 / 51°57'46"N
Longitude: 0.2361 / 0°14'9"E
OS Eastings: 553726
OS Northings: 231755
OS Grid: TL537317
Mapcode National: GBR MCP.SLQ
Mapcode Global: VHHLB.1XNJ
Plus Code: 9F32X67P+6C
Entry Name: Prior's Hall
Listing Date: 26 November 1951
Last Amended: 25 January 1993
Grade: I
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1274214
English Heritage Legacy ID: 415893
ID on this website: 101274214
Location: Widdington, Uttlesford, Essex, CB11
County: Essex
District: Uttlesford
Civil Parish: Widdington
Built-Up Area: Widdington
Traditional County: Essex
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex
Church of England Parish: Widdington St Mary the Virgin
Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford
Tagged with: Architectural structure
The following building shall be upgraded to Grade I:-
TL 5331 WIDDINGTON HIGH STREET
42/809 Prior's Hall
GV 26.11.51 II*
and the entry shall be amended to read:-
TL 5331 WIDDINGTON HIGH STREET
42/809 Prior's Hall
GV 26.11.51 I
House, probably originally a chapel. Circa C10 or C11; remodelled
as house circa C14; extended in circa late C17 or early C18 and
with C19 alterations. Flint rubble with Barnack stone quoins
rendered; rendered timber frame brick and flint extension. Plain
tile roof with gabled ends and hipped corner. Brick axial and
gable end stacks.
Plan: Overall L-shaped plan. The Saxon chapel is the E wing, its
E end has a small (chancel) arch and blocked double-splayed
window in the gable above; and the N wall of the lean-to on the
E end is probably the remains of the chancel. Converted into a
house and in the C14 its plan comprised a 2½-bay open hall at the
E end of the nave heated from an open hearth fire and an almost
as long 2-storey part at the west end ofthe nave. The open hall
was floored and an axial stack inserted against the partition in
the C17. The W wing appears to be a late C17 or early C18
addition and contains a stairhall and parlour with a kitchen and
service rooms in a wing to the rear; the rear wing altered and
extended in the C19.
Exterior: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 2:3 window N front, the longer
LH 2 bays has long-and-short quoins exposed. Circa C18 3 and 1-
light casements on first floor with leaded panes and C20 3 and
4-light casements on ground floor with doorcase to right of
centre with canopy on shaped brackets and glazed and panelled
door. On left (E) end the lean-to containing blocked chancel arch
with long-and-short quoins. At rear (S) circa late C15 or C16
moulded wood 6-light first floor window and 4-light ground floor
window might be remains of hall window. Flint and brick wing on
left with catslide roof over outshut and casement windows.
Interior: LH room (former hall) chamfered axial beams with hollow
step stops and blocked fireplace with exposed timber bressummer.
Centre room plastered cross-beam. C18 2-panel doors and C17
panelled door to attic and late C19 staircase. W range has circa
late C17 clasped purlin roof. 'Nave of chapel' has plain C14
crown post roof of light scantling; smoke-blackened 1 1/2 bays over
hall and long clean bay to west with partition between remains
of smoke-blackened plaster; tall crown-posts with long curved
longitudinal braces only, the collar-purlin at W end with splayed
scarf joint with undersquinted abutments; common rafter couples
complete and with ashlar-pieces halved and side-lapped.
Note: Belonged to one Thorkell (Thurchill) before 1066 and given
to the Abbey of St Valery in Picardy after the Conquest. In 1377
confiscated by Edward III and given to William of Wykeham.
Remained in ownership of New College Oxford until 1920.
Sources: RCHM4. Country Life August 1989, pp 84 & 85.
------------------------------------
WIDDINGTON HIGH STREET
TL 5331
42/809 Prior's Hall
GV 26.11.51 II*
The following building shall be upgraded to Grade I:-
------------------------------------
WIDDINGTON HIGH STREET
1.
5222
(west side)
Prior's Hall
TL 5331 42/809 26.11.51
II* GV
2.
At an earlier date the hall was also known as Stone Hall because the walls
of one part of the house, behind the present plaster, are of massive C13 stonework.
The hall with its C15 outbuildings and great barn were enclosed by a moat,
part of which still remains. It was owned by the Prior of St Valery in Picardy
until the later C14. The C13 stone building was of rectangular shape and
was much altered in the C16 when the upper storey and chimney stack were inserted.
In the C18 a wing was added at the west end extending to the south, making
it an L-shaped plan. The present house is of 2 storeys and attics with 4
window range on the north front. The upper storey windows are old leaded
casements and the ground storey has modern casements. The west front has
3 window range of modern casements (one window blocked on the upper storey)
and one canted bay on the ground storey. Roof tiled. The interior has an
open fireplace and the roof retains some smoke blackened timbers. (RCHM 4).
Listing NGR: TL5372631755
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