We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 52.1053 / 52°6'19"N
Longitude: -2.6167 / 2°37'0"W
OS Eastings: 357858
OS Northings: 245402
OS Grid: SO578454
Mapcode National: GBR FQ.9FK5
Mapcode Global: VH85J.LBJW
Plus Code: 9C4V494M+48
Entry Name: Threshing Barn at Old Monkton Farm
Listing Date: 23 April 2019
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1463675
ID on this website: 101463675
Location: Kymin, County of Herefordshire, HR1
County: County of Herefordshire
Civil Parish: Ocle Pychard
Traditional County: Herefordshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Herefordshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Threshing barn at Old Monkton Farm, thought to date primarily from the C18 but possibly re-using earlier fabric.
Threshing barn at Old Monkton Farm, thought to date primarily from the C18 but possibly re-using earlier fabric.
MATERIALS: the barn is timber framed with external weatherboarding and a corrugated sheet roof.
PLAN: the threshing barn stands approximately in the centre of the farm and is orientated roughly east-west.
EXTERIOR: the threshing barn encloses what was the northern side of the farmyard. Externally is it mostly clad in timber weatherboarding, with some areas of brick, with few openings. The threshing doors are towards the western end of the building. The roof is modern corrugated sheeting.
INTERIOR: the barn's timber frame is visible internally. It is of seven bays with trusses which have angle struts and are supported on central posts which demarcate the bays of the barn. The framing of mostly of square panels with some bracing, and much evidence or re-used timbers. Many of the timbers have holes suggesting the original panel infilling was of staves and withies. The stone flagged threshing floor partially survives.
Old Monkton Farm lies in the parish of Ocle Pychard. The manor of Monkton is known to have belonged to the Benedictine Priory of St Guthlac in nearby Hereford, and was possibly a grange or cell for that priory. After the Dissolution, the land was granted to Sir John Price or Prise, a Welsh public notary and scholar. Little is known about Monkton Farm itself, although during the C18 the manor was owned by Thomas Phillips of Eaton Bishop.
The farmhouse is most likely the oldest building on the site, probably dating from the C17 although much altered and now a fragmentary survival (not listed). This threshing barn appears to date in its present form from the C18, although there is evidence of re-used timbers and it may incorporate earlier fabric. At seven bays long, it is unusually large, suggesting that this was a location of some importance. The barn for storing and threshing corn is the most important building and usually the largest. They are generally the oldest and most impressive buildings to be found on farms and they dominate the statutory list in terms of which kinds of farm buildings are designated. The traditional threshing barn has bays for storage of the crop flanking the floor where it could be threshed. These threshing bays had opposing doors which, when opened, allowed a through breeze which helped to separate the grain for the chaff. Survival of threshing floors is now relatively uncommon.
Sales particulars of 1852 describe the spending of "several hundred pounds [in the] last two years improving the estate and buildings", which suggests that the rebuilding and remodelling of the farmhouse and large brick barn (not listed) may have taken place at this time. A plan accompanying the sale shows both barns to have been L-plan at that time, with the house to the south. The farm is also depicted on the First Edition Ordnance Survey map of 1887. This shows the house to the south with a loose courtyard arrangement of barns north of it, which remains legible today, with later buildings added. By the time of the Second Edition Ordnance Survey of 1904, a new house had been built on the west side of the farm and some additional farm buildings to the north.
The Threshing Barn at Old Monkton Farm, thought to date from the C18, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
Architectural interest:
* it is an unusually large example of a timber framed threshing barn of the C18, which may incorporate earlier fabric;
* the barn has considerable evidence demonstrating its historic construction and evolution which adds to its interest;
* despite external alterations, the timber frame survives well.
Historic interest:
* for its illustration of historic farming practices and their evolution over time;
* for its position within the historic manor of Monkton, formerly owned by the Priory of St Guthlac and which appears to have remained an estate of some status after the Dissolution.
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