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Latitude: 51.6937 / 51°41'37"N
Longitude: 0.0678 / 0°4'4"E
OS Eastings: 543017
OS Northings: 201463
OS Grid: TL430014
Mapcode National: GBR LFD.RYK
Mapcode Global: VHHML.4P6G
Plus Code: 9F32M3V9+F4
Entry Name: Copt Hall and Attached Walls, Pavilions and Conservatory
Listing Date: 4 July 1984
Last Amended: 30 November 1989
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1337306
English Heritage Legacy ID: 118702
Also known as: Copt Hall
ID on this website: 101337306
Location: Epping Forest, Essex, CM16
County: Essex
District: Epping Forest
Civil Parish: Epping Upland
Traditional County: Essex
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex
Church of England Parish: Epping St John
Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford
Tagged with: Architectural structure Historic house English country house Country house
In the entry for the following:-
TL 40 SW EPPING UPLAND
6/11 Copt Hall
II
The address shall be amended to read:
TL 40 SW EPPING UPLAND
6/11 Copt Hall and attached
walls, pavilions and
conservatory
GV II
And the description shall be amended to read:
Also known as Copped Hall. Country House. Built c.1751-8, probably by John
Sanderson for John Conyers; internal remodelling by James Wyatt. c 1775;
extended and remodelled c.1895 by C E Kempe for Edward James Wythes. Flemish
bond brick with Portland stone dressings. Double-depth plan flanked by screen
walls, extended to right c.1895. Palladian style. 3 storeys. East and west
fronts each of 2:3:2 fenestration with pedimented centre. East front has
central porch with moulded cornice and semi-circular arched rusticated doorway,
having paterae with festoons in spandrels; rusticated quoining to ground floor,
which has square-headed architraves to windows; raised cill band beneath first-
floor windows which have cornices and pulvinated friezes over architraves;
square-headed architraves to second-floor windows. Similar fenestration to
4-bay left (south) side wall, with eared architrave to c.1895 doorway. West
(garden) front has similar fenestration and tetrastyle Ionic pilastered portico
built in stone by Kempe, c.1895; doubled staircase (balcony removed) rises on
rusticated basement with 3 round-arched openings to first-floor piano mobile,
which has pedimented full-height window openings; sculptured figures flank
pedimented sundial in tympanum. All elevations have modillioned stone cornices,
balustraded parapets and chimneystacks with moulded stone caps by Kempe,
c.1895. Addition to right, of 4 x 4 bays, is also by Kempe and in matching
style, with 2 bays to left of west front faced in stone ashlar with Ionic corner
pilasters. Subsidiary features: east front is flanked by blind arcaded screen
walls, of 4 bays to right and 5 to left, with stone parapet and impost band
running to end pavilions, each with broken pediment over semi-circular arched
niche; paterae between arches on right. Conservatory attached to south (left),
built c.1895 and of L-plan with wing extending to west: 6-bay rusticated west
elevation, with Ionic columns and balustraded parapet to central gateway; rear
wing has 6-bay blind arcade with banded rustication articulated by Ionic half-
columns rising to dentilled cornice. Copt Hall has remained derelict since it
was destroyed by fire in 1917.
(National Monuments Record; VCH; Country Life, Vd 28 (1910), pp 610-17, 646-53;
M McCarthy, 'Sir Roger Newdigate: drawings for Copt Hall, Essex, and Arbury
Hall, Warwickshire', Architectural History, Vol 16 (1973), pp 26-36; 'Copthall,
Essex', in H Colvin, J Harris (ed.), The Country Seat, Studies in the history of
the British Country House presented to Sir John Sumnerson, 1975, pp 18-29.
------------------------------------
TL 40 SW EPPING UPLAND
6/11 Copt Hall
II
House. Circa 1775 by James Wyatt, altered early C20. In stock brick with
Portland stone dressings. 3 Storeys. 2,3,2 window range. Angle quoins to
ground floor only. Band over. Centre projects slightly to full height with
pediment over. Ground floor window openings with cill band, architraves,
pulvinated friezes and cornices. Centre window similar with ramped sides, and
cornice on consoles. Top floor window openings are square with architraves.
Stone modillioned cornice and balustrade all early C20. Ground floor has flat
headed, solid, slightly projecting porch. Round headed rusticated doorway,
paterae in spandrels with swags, and cornice over. To right and left are screen
walls of single storey height, culminating in stone pavilions. Arcaded with
coping. The Pavilions are taller and wider, and crowned by pediments. The
screen walls are of unequal length, 4 bays on the right and 5 bays on the left.
Behind the right hand screen is an external 3 storey wing in matching style.
Garden front similar with C20 attached tetrastyle Ionic pilastered portico
in Portland stone with Portland stone walling between. Elaborate sculpture
in pediment. In the centre, on the ground floor is a projecting terrace for
the piano mobile, with 3 round headed openings. The balustrading is missing.
Elaborate early C20 chimneys. Interior completely destroyed by fire in 1917.
The building is a shell with no roof, windows or doors. (Country Life
29/10/10).
Listing NGR: TL4301701463
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