We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 51.1283 / 51°7'41"N
Longitude: -0.0386 / 0°2'18"W
OS Eastings: 537347
OS Northings: 138386
OS Grid: TQ373383
Mapcode National: GBR KLX.338
Mapcode Global: VHGSS.8WZX
Plus Code: 9C3X4XH6+8H
Entry Name: 1-3 Imberhorne Farm Cottages
Listing Date: 25 June 2007
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1392066
English Heritage Legacy ID: 502401
ID on this website: 101392066
Location: Mid Sussex, RH19
County: West Sussex
District: Mid Sussex
Civil Parish: East Grinstead
Traditional County: Sussex
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Sussex
Church of England Parish: Felbridge St John
Church of England Diocese: Southwark
Tagged with: Cottage
658/0/10010
25-JUN-07
EAST GRINSTEAD
IMBERHORNE LANE
1-3 Imberhorne Farm Cottages
GV
II*
Former open hall, later three cottages. Nos. 2 and 3 comprised an early C15 open hall aligned east-west, timbers in No. 3 tree-ring dated to 1428. In the late C16 the open hall was veiled over and a chimneystack inserted. No. 3 is a late C18 or early C19 L-shaped wing addition to the north.
MATERIALS: Nos. 2 and 3 timber-framed, the ground floor underbuilt in brickwork on deep stone plinth, except to the west. The upper floor and gable end are tile-hung. Gabled roof of C20 machine-made tiles and central brick chimneystack, rebuilt above ridge level after 1926.
PLAN: Originally a two bay open hall with arch-braced hammerbeam roof, of which the central and western truss remain within No. 3. The eastern bay and solar extended into No. 2 and the west service end, comprising perhaps a narrow screens passage with a service bay or wing beyond, has not survived. In the late C16 the building was adapted to form a lobby entrance house by inserting a chimneystack and ceiling over the open hall. Probably in the late C18 or early C19 the building was converted into two cottages and a further cottage added in an L-wing to the north. Now two storeys, with irregular fenestration.
EXTERIOR: The ground floor brickwork is in English bond to the west, mainly Flemish bond to the north, south and east sides, except for the western half of the south side which has been refronted in C19 brown brick in stretcher bond, and the north and west facing sides of No. 1 are in English Garden Wall bond. The upper floor and gable ends are tile-hung with a wide band of twelve courses of pointed tiles to the west gable end. Windows are irregularly-spaced casements. The ground floor of the north gable has a C19 tripartite casement. A similar tripartite window on the south side has been replaced in uPVC. No. 3 retains three C19 wooden casements on the north and one on the south. Other windows are C20, some wooden but most uPVC, within earlier openings. No. 1 has a late C20 door and brick and tiled surround facing east, No. 2 has an entrance facing south and No. 3 one facing east, both with four-panelled doors in cambered arches under penticed tiled weatherhoods on wooden brackets. Both have narrower plank doors approached by stone steps facing north. On the north side ground floor where the L-shaped wing adjoins is a projecting rectangular breadoven, mainly of stone blocks, the upper part in English bond brickwork with tiled roof.
INTERIOR: Visible early features are inside No 3. The ground floor is divided into two rooms, the smaller northern room, now kitchen, has a central axial beam and early C19 fireplace in the eastern wall with a C19 cast iron range. The south ground floor room, the living room, has a continuation of the axial beam in the kitchen with a spine beam abutting it at right angles and a further short spine beam attached to the western wall. Although the fireplace is a small early C19 fireplace, identical to the one in the kitchen, it is thought that an open fireplace with bread oven may survive beneath and this would continue into No. 2. To the south of the fireplace is an early C19 plank door on pintle hinges leading to a half-winder staircase. The staircase walls are lined with early C19 vertical beaded boards. A section of the wallplate is visible here and also the upper part of the late C16 chimneystack. A plank door leads to the large south bedroom where the lower part of the two medieval trusses are visible. The eastern truss was an arch-braced hammerbeam to the former open hall, later adapted to form a first floor partition, inserted in the later C16 when the chimneystack was inserted and the open hall ceiled over. On the south side facing west the inner hammer spandrel has an inscribed, cusped quatrefoil, flanked by foil and dagger motifs, of a type more usual in stonework. The reverse side of the spandrel, now situated in a cupboard, is undecorated. The northern spandrel has an outer spandrel marked for the carving of a similar quatrefoil with teardrop, but this appears not to have been executed. The western truss has jowled posts, tie beam and mid-post visible. The north and south wallplates are exposed. A smaller room has been partitioned off in the north west corner, now a bathroom. This is approached through a ledged plank door. The roof retains a virtually complete roof structure dated to 1428 with smoke-blackened timbers. The eastern truss has visible the vertical members of the hammerbeam, collar beam, a giant arch and scissor braces above the collar beam. A post-medieval wattle and daub partition now divides the roof of No. 3 from the adjoining property. Most rafters survive with shorter rafters for a louvre to the west of the eastern truss. There are single clasped purlins and two rows of plain concave windbraces which form diamond patterns. The western truss has no signs of weathering, nor is there a sill beam beneath the western wall, which suggests it was a spere truss with a narrow bay for the screens passage and a service bay or wing beyond it originally.
HISTORY: According to the "Chartulary of St Pancras, Lewes" in about 1100 a half-hide of land called Imberhorne was given to Lewes Priory by William Malfield. Lewes Priory continued to add land in the area and by 1275 had amassed the substantial manor of Imberhorne. The remaining timber-framed structure within Nos. 1-3 Imberhorne Farm Cottages has been tree-ring dated to 1428. Although no court rolls or Priory records have survived which refer to the construction of the property, from 1414 Lewes Priory was undergoing a period of building work on its decayed manors under Prior Nelond. Imberhorne is situated at the northern end of Lewes Priory's landholding about halfway along the main route between London and Lewes, roughly a day's ride to each, and is likely to have been constructed as a dwelling providing accommodation between London and Lewes on Lewes Priory lands. Imberhorne Manor was held by Lewes Priory until the Dissolution of the Monasteries when it passed to Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex and royal minister. The manor was purchased by Sir Richard Sackville in 1560 and the first documentary reference to a property there is a lease of 1580 where it is described as a "capital Messuage". A building is shown here on a terrier map of 1597-98. The adjoining Imberhorne Farmhouse was built in 1808 and perhaps at that time the older building became farm cottages. Imberhorne Manor remained in the hands of the Sackvilles, the Dukes of Dorset, until 1872, when it was sold as an independent country estate. On the 26th June 1926 Nos. 1-3 Imberhorne Farm Cottages was struck by lightning and a contemporary photograph shows that the top of the chimneystack between Nos. 2 and 3 collapsed and the roof of No. 2 was extensively damaged.
SUMMARY OF IMPORTANCE: This building is particularly interesting because it retains the surviving part of a C15 timber-framed open hall, tree-ring dated to 1428, built for Lewes Priory. This was a building of high quality which retains a decorated spandrel, two trusses and roof of an elaborate early arch-braced hammerbeam roof. Arch-braced hammerbeam roofs are rare and this is the only surviving example known of a vernacular building using a very close copy of Herland's design for the Great Hall at Westminster. This very special architectural survival of structure merits this high grade of listing.
SOURCES:
J Clarke "An early vernacular hammer-beam structure: Imberhorne Farm Cottages, East Grinstead, West Sussex". Vernacular Architecture, Vol. 36 (2005) Pp 32-40.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings