History in Structure

Lodge Farmhouse 140 Metres from Road

A Grade II* Listed Building in Little Hadham, Hertfordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.8797 / 51°52'46"N

Longitude: 0.0761 / 0°4'33"E

OS Eastings: 543000

OS Northings: 222162

OS Grid: TL430221

Mapcode National: GBR LC9.22T

Mapcode Global: VHHLT.80LV

Plus Code: 9F32V3HG+VC

Entry Name: Lodge Farmhouse 140 Metres from Road

Listing Date: 30 April 1985

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1290605

English Heritage Legacy ID: 394857

ID on this website: 101290605

Location: Westland Green, East Hertfordshire, SG11

County: Hertfordshire

District: East Hertfordshire

Civil Parish: Little Hadham

Traditional County: Hertfordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Hertfordshire

Church of England Parish: Little Hadham

Church of England Diocese: St.Albans

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Description


TL 42 SW & LITTLE HADHAM CHAPEL LANE
TL 4322 (north side)
Hadham Ford

1/2 & 7/2 Lodge Farmhouse 140 metres
from road
-

- II*

House. C15 or earlier, reduced, altered in mid C19, extended
c.1925. T-shaped. Former farmhouse facing E. 2 storeys, timber
framed and plastered, with steep old red tiled gabled roof.
External gable chimney on S; lateral chimney on rear wall at
junction with rear wing; internal gable chimney at N. Roughcast
E front in two parts both of 3 windows with half-glazed door
under central window of each group. C19 flush sashes with 2/2
panes. Gabled, tiled hood to S door, the N part of E front
represents an extension c.1925 on the site of part of a medieval
range then long demolished. The S part and rear wing are
medieval and represent 4 structural bays of a lofty open hall
house with a narrow central bay for the cross passage. The 2
bays at the S end have a cellar and a fine collar-purlin roof
with tall octagonal crown post with moulded cap and base. The
timbers are massive, well-finished and chamfered, with heavy
club-shaped jowls to bay posts. The roof here is not soot-
blackened and has a closed partition on the N which, with a
similar partition a little further to the N, defines the cross
passage. The N face of the second partition looked into the hall
and it and the roof are heavily sooted. The close-studded
partition contains a central post braced down to the tie beam and
carrying the collar purlin. The splendid 3 arc, segmental-arched
braced tie beam of the central truss of the hall survives on the
1st floor, and has massive double chamfered members. The
octagonal crown post over is similar to that over the upper room
at the S end, and is braced to the collar purlin only. This has
a through-splayed and tabled scarf joint (the trait-de-Jupiter)
over the S wing, supported by the brace from the crown post. The
rear wing is of heavy timbers but less well-finished and adjoined
the W side of the medieval hall just N of the W door of the cross
passage. The N end of the medieval house was demolished as far
as the N face of the central truss of the hall, and was only
extended to the N again c.1925. The hall roof shows evidence of
being ceiled under the collars, and the infill panels of the
partition being whitened, leaving the soot blackened timbers
exposed between for contrast. This is probably the house or
lodge mentioned in the later C16 as being in the park attached to
the Bishop of Ely's manor of Little Hadham (VCH (1914) 54).


Listing NGR: TL4300022162

External Links

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