History in Structure

Highams Farmhouse

A Grade II* Listed Building in Tolleshunt Major, Essex

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.7502 / 51°45'0"N

Longitude: 0.7684 / 0°46'6"E

OS Eastings: 591195

OS Northings: 209344

OS Grid: TL911093

Mapcode National: GBR RND.92D

Mapcode Global: VHKGP.88LP

Plus Code: 9F32QQ29+39

Entry Name: Highams Farmhouse

Listing Date: 5 February 1987

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1337678

English Heritage Legacy ID: 353213

ID on this website: 101337678

Location: Maldon, Essex, CM9

County: Essex

District: Maldon

Civil Parish: Tolleshunt Major

Traditional County: Essex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex

Church of England Parish: Tolleshunt Major St Nicholas

Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford

Tagged with: Farmhouse

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Description


TOLLESHUNT MAJOR HIGHAMS CHASE
TL 90 NW
5/109 Highams Farmhouse
- II*

House. Circa 1400, altered in late C16, extended in C19. Original build timber
framed and plastered, roofed with handmade red clay tiles. Later builds of red
brick, partly plastered, roofs tiled and slated. 2-bay hall facing SW, with
late C16 stack in left bay. Originally storeyed service bay to left. 2-bay
parlour/solar crosswing to right, with hipped roof. Hall range of one storey
with attics, crosswing of 2 storeys. Crosswing extended to rear, forming an
L-plan, with C18 dairy in rear left angle, of red brick with hipped tiled roof.
Smaller C19 extensions to left and rear of dairy. Large mid-C19 extension to
right of crosswing, of plastered brick with hipped slate roof, forming a C19
entrance front to SE, with 2 internal rear stacks symmetrically arranged, and
original central porch. This part of 2 storeys. SW elevation, ground floor, 2
C20 casements, C20 splayed bay, C20 aluminium window at right. First floor, one
C20 casement, another in gabled dormer, one early C19 sash of 16 lights, and C2U
aluminium window at right. Hall range faced with painted brick, remainder
plastered. 6-panel door, with 2 top panels glazed, in round arch of brick
facade. The hall range has jowled posts, deep chamfered braces rising to meet
in the middle of the chamfered and cambered central tiebeam, a late C16 inserted
floor comprising a chamfered axial beam with lamb's tongue stops and plain
joists of horizontal section, with a late C16 off-centre stack, much altered at
the ground floor. Crownpost roof with cross-quadrate central crownpost with
4-way rising braces, collar-purlin boxed in, collars plastered to the soffits.
An unuseal feature is a mortice in the crownpost and the jointed and pegged stub
of a second axial brace, below the other braces. Display bracing and peg-holes
for fixed bench in side wall of crosswing. The crosswing has a chamfered
binding beam with mortices for arched braces to it, and plain joists of
horizontal section jointed to it with central tenons. At front, underbuilt
jetty, and 6 diamond mortices for 2 unglazed windows, originally with a stud
between them; rear wall of ground floor removed. One panel of wattle and daub
infill exposed in side wall of crosswing. Original doorway to parlour blocked,
arched head missing, mortice for draught screen. Cambered central tiebeam; roof
not examined, but reported to be of crownpost construction with 4-way rising
braces; gabled at the front originally, later altered to a hip. The C18 dairy
at the rear is of interest, floor sunk below ground level, one original window
with arched head of gauged brick. The windows of the mid-C19 SE block have been
modernised. Highams was a manor; no history is recorded before Robert Higham,
who died in 1427, and the present house may date from his time. It remained in
the Higham family until 1545 (P. Morant, The History and Antiquities of Essex,
1768, I, 391).


Listing NGR: TL9119509344

External Links

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