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Latitude: 53.7246 / 53°43'28"N
Longitude: -1.7671 / 1°46'1"W
OS Eastings: 415462
OS Northings: 425384
OS Grid: SE154253
Mapcode National: GBR JT3C.6K
Mapcode Global: WHC9N.TMPZ
Plus Code: 9C5WP6FM+V4
Entry Name: Barn immedately to the east of Whitwood Farmhouse
Listing Date: 8 February 2011
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1396444
English Heritage Legacy ID: 512181
ID on this website: 101396444
Location: Bailiff Bridge, Calderdale, West Yorkshire, HD6
County: Calderdale
Electoral Ward/Division: Hipperholme and Lightcliffe
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Lightcliffe St Matthew
Church of England Diocese: Leeds
Tagged with: Barn
This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 26 May 2021 to reformat the text to current standards
32/0/10027
BAILIFF BRIDGE
WHITWOOD LANE
Barn immedately to the east of Whitwood Farmhouse
08-FEB-11
II
Aisled barn, dated to 1445 by dendrochronology, aligned approximately north-south to the east of a trackway and part of a farmstead.
MATERIALS: the barn is timber framed, later encased in roughly coursed shaped stone rubble with some brick infill and a corrugated sheeting roof covering.
PLAN: the barn has seven bays with a separate lower section at the north end with a single aisle on the eastern side.
EXTERIOR: there are cart entries on the west side in the third and fifth bays, and smaller openings in the first and seventh bays. On the east side there are openings in the first, third (blocked), fifth and seventh bays, and there are two openings in the south end, the eastern one blocked. The northern extension, in brick, stone and breezeblock, is single storey and of much less substantial construction with a lower roof line.
INTERIOR: the interior of the main barn is divided into two alongside the third truss by a later internal brick wall, probably relating to the two units into which the farmhouse was divided. The first and sixth bays have a timber upper floor, with dividing walls at ground floor level. At the southern end this wall is pierced by a door and a lower opening into the main area of the barn, while at the north end there is a door and a series of five small openings at ground floor level, and a doorway leading to the upper floor.
The roof structure has wall plates, arcade plate, two through purlins and ridge piece. Joints are pegged and there are carpenters' marks on some of the timbers. Some of the timbers have evidence of reuse in the form of unfilled sockets. Numbering from the south, the first truss has a king post with a strut on the west side, and the aisle is supported on a pier rising from the upper floor. The second truss has a queen strut construction which in turn supports a short king post on an upper tie-beam, and a full height aisle post. The third and fourth trusses are similar, with an additional brace to the aisle post and a tie-beam in the aisle of the third truss. The fifth truss is similar without the brace and with a stone pier replacing the aisle post. The sixth truss has a king post construction, with a brace and tie-beam on the aisle post. Some timbers at the northern end of the barn are decayed and in poor condition, and there is evidence in the form of brick infill of a slight raising of the roof at the north end on the west side.
HISTORY: A settlement at Whitwood is recorded as early as 1329, and deeds refer to lands at Whytwood in 1592. Surviving earthwork remains suggest a settlement site, including a trackway between the farmhouse and barn. A survey of the farmhouse and barn has produced dendrochronology (tree-ring) dates for the barn of 1445 and, less certainly, mid-C16 for the house. The barn was encased in stone at a later date, probably in the C16 or C17. Whitwood Farm is mentioned in the C18, and the barn is marked on the OS 1:10560 map published in 1854. By 1893 it had a small extension at its northern end.
SOURCES
Nottingham Tree-ring Dating Laboratory; Tree-ring Analysis of Timbers from the Barn and House at Whitwood Farm, Bailiff Bridge, Yorkshire, 2010
WYAAS HER Record, Aisled barn & farmhouse, Whitwood Farm, 2009
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION
The mid-C15 timber framed barn at Whitwood, Brighouse, West Yorkshire, is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* Architecture: the surviving roof structure and aisled construction of the barn is of great architectural interest as a rare survival from the late medieval period
* Historic interest: the early date of the barn is an indicator of the early growth in prosperity of wealthy farmer-clothiers presaging the establishment of the nationally important textile industry of Yorkshire in later centuries
* Age: the established dendrochronology date of 1445 for the barn places it firmly in the period when all buildings that contain a significant proportion of their fabric are listed
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