80 High Street, Tetsworth,

A Building Survey for Jay Construction (Crowell Hill) Ltd

by Peter Reeves

(Wardell Armstrong) for

Thames Valley Archaeological Services Ltd

Site Code 80HST03/54

October 2003 Summary

Site name: 80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire

Grid reference: SP 6870 0170

Site activity: Building Recording

Date and duration of project: 14th August and 2nd September 2003

Project manager: Steve Ford

Site supervisor: Peter Reeves

Site code: 80HST03/54

Summary of results: A three-bayed timber-framed building that was designed or converted for use as two dwellings and then converted back to a single occupancy house. The rear of the house appears not to be original, with most of the timber frame replaced with brick and stone.

Monuments identified: A three-bayed timber-framed house.

Location and reference of archive: The archive is presently held at Thames Valley Archaeological Services, Reading and will be deposited at Oxfordshire Museums Service in due course.

This report may be copied for bona fide research or planning purposes without the explicit permission of the copyright holder

Report edited/checked by: Sian Anthony9 06.11.03 Steve Preston9 06.11.03

i 80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire A Building and Photographic Survey

by Peter Reeves

Report 03/54

Introduction

This report documents the results of an archaeological building recording carried out at 80 High Street,

Tetsworth, Oxfordshire (SP 6870 0170) (Fig. 1). The work was commissioned by Mr Ron Needham, Jay

Construction (Crowell Hill) Limited, Autumn Chase, Spriggs Holly, Nr , Oxfordshire, OX39 4BH.

Planning permission (PO3/E0178) and Listed Building Consent (PO3/E0177/LB) have been gained from South

Oxfordshire District Council to refurbish the existing structure. As a condition of the planning permission, a historic building survey (Level 2) has been requested so as to record the historically interesting components of the building prior to the alterations. This is in accordance with the Department of the Environment’s Planning

Policy Guidance, Planning and the Historic Environment (PPG15 1994), and the District policies on archaeology.

The field investigation was carried out to a specification approved by Ms Jenny Harte, Conservation

Officer at District Council. The fieldwork was undertaken by Peter Reeves of Wardell

Armstrong, Clare Challis and Sarah Coles of Thames Valley Archaeological Services on 14th August and 2nd

September 2003 and the site code is 80HST03/54. The archive is presently held at Thames Valley

Archaeological Services, Reading and will be deposited at Oxfordshire County Records Office and with the

National Monuments Record in due course.

Location, topography and geology

The Grade II Listed Building is located on the High Street in Tetsworth on an upland area to the south-east of

Oxford (Fig. 1). The building is sited on the south side of the A40 which is also the High Street (Fig. 2). The underlying geology is Gault Formation; a grey mudstone (BGS 1994). The site lies at approximately 85m above

Ordnance Datum.

Archaeological background

It is thought that the house was constructed in the 17th century or earlier. General site observation indicates a

17th century construction date with significant 19th century extension and 20th century alteration.

1 Objectives and methodology

The specific aims of the survey were:

(i) To record the building prior to its refurbishment and repair

(ii) To describe the development of the building

(iii) To highlight the most important historical elements of the building

The standing building survey involved two methods of study and follows the approach defined by Brunskill

(1990; 1992). These were:

A descriptive text of the materials and methods of construction used in the building. The description was also to cover the chronological development of and alteration(s) to the building.

A photographic record of the building covering each of the rooms and important features was undertaken.

The photographic record utilizes colour slides, colour print and black and white print in 35mm format (see

Appendices 1 to 3).

Results

The results are set out with reference to Figure 6. The ground plan of the building is a rectangle on an east–west alignment. The house is a three-bayed, two-storey, timber-frame building. The house was constructed of oak with the timber frame infilled with brick. The rear or southern elevation has been taken down, or had collapsed, and has been rebuilt using brick and stone (Pl. 1). The sill beam can be observed at the base of the front

(northern) elevation, however it is in an extremely poor state of repair (Pl. 2). The sill beam at the rear of the house has been removed, as has most of the timber frame, and been replaced with a concrete sill (Pl. 3).

The gable roof is covered with plain clay tiles although internal evidence shows that these were probably placed some time after 1905. The tiles are stamped Dreadnought, a name registered in 1905. The battens supporting the tiles are treated with some form of damp protection.

Where observed, the front or north elevation, the building is constructed with hand made bricks set in panels between the oak timber frame (Pl. 8). This, the oldest part of the structure is bonded using lime mortar.

The later additions, to the east and the west are bonded with cement.

None of the original internal finishes appear to have survived, as throughout the walls on the ground floor are finished with modern plaster. The internal wood structure is best observed on the first floor and in the roof.

Only one of the internal fireplaces, that in the kitchen, survives in its original form (Pl. 10).

2 The chronological development of the building is described in a later section of the report. During its history the building was extended and refurbished leading to the functions of the rooms changing.

An outbuilding appears to have been constructed to the west of the two cottages. The outbuilding would appear to have collapsed or been dismantled when the cottages were converted from two cottages into one dwelling. A living extension was built over where the outbuilding had stood and new outbuildings, the garden room and coal shed, were constructed at the east of the house using the garden wall as the lower part of the wall.

The building is described from east to west beginning on the ground floor ascending to the first floor.

Generic names are used to identify the rooms.

The Coal Shed is a small sub-rectangular room at the eastern end of the building. The side and curving rear wall consist of ten courses of stone-built garden wall surmounted by a brick wall in English Bond (Pl. 4). The west wall is a simple wooden plank wall separating this room from the garden room. The use of the shed is indicated by the thick layer of coal dust on the brick floor and the black staining against the walls.

The Garden Room is a large square room but with a curving front wall, again consisting of ten courses of stone, the garden wall, surmounted by modern bricks in English Bond. A large brick fire place and chimney is located in the north-east corner and a large wooden workbench is located adjacent to the west wall. A small window is in the front wall and the present door is in the south west corner. The west wall marks the position of the exterior wall of the original house. The south corner of this wall contains an additional thickness of brick which upon later investigation was proved to be hiding and blocking a doorway. The brick floor has a cement skim with incised lines scored in the surface to represent stone flags. A simple loft constructed of pine planks functions as a wood store.

The Sitting Room located at the eastern end of the house is a small square room. Where it has been exposed the south or rear wall is constructed of a combination of bricks and stone, resting on modern cement sill beams.

All other walls are obscured by wallpaper covering modern plaster. A built-in cupboard is located in the north- west corner of the room adjacent to a modern fireplace. The fireplace is constructed from artificial moulded stone and rests on a concrete plinth. Subsequent stripping of the internal fabric of the east wall in order to assess damage and level of repair required revealed this wall to be of very late construction. This modern stud wall concealed the doorway leading into the garden room. The frame and door contained within are of late nineteenth century/early twentieth century design and construction. The indications are that the wall behind the stud wall is not the original end wall of the timber framed building and that this wall and associated doorway were most likely constructed at the same time as the garden room.

3 The Dining Room would originally have been the kitchen of the eastern of the two cottages. The window located in the south-east corner of the room is a blocked doorway that originally gave access to this room. The floor consists mostly of square, red clay tiles although the floor leading from the eastern door is of red bricks. A blocked-up fireplace set into the east wall is original but has been altered to modernize it. A door in the north- west corner gives access to a larder with a small meshed window set into the north wall giving ventilation to the outside. The centre of the north wall contains a wooden stairway giving access to the first floor. The north-east corner of the room has a cupboard built under the stairs. As with the sitting room, the south wall is a combination of brick and stone, the other walls are covered in wallpaper overlying the modern plaster.

The Kitchen is located in the western of the two houses. The tile floor is heavily cracked, due to its use as a surface for chopping wood for the wood-fired stove sited in the kitchen fireplace in the west wall (Pl. 10). A

Raeburn, sitting on firestone flags occupies the vast fireplace. The east wall has two simple wooden doors. The northern of the two is a cupboard beneath the stairs accessed by the southern door. The central beam and joists observed in the kitchen are modern and squared, the original joists supporting the floor above can be observed in the roof of the cupboard. The thick end wall of the original house has been knocked through to give access to the western extensions added later. The kitchen is fitted with mid-20th century fittings, although the north-east vernacular cupboard is of 19th century date. It has an open front and is constructed from pieces of scrap timber nailed together. The lower part of the north wall has been boarded over using pine.

The Hall would have originally been the exterior of the house at some point in the 18th/19th century. A doorway was knocked through the house’s exterior wall, the west wall of the kitchen and this area added on. The floor is a mixture of brick and stone slabs. Multiple alterations have been made to the floor, noticeably the ramps for disabled access. Within the hall it can be observed that the crudely erected south wall butts up against the west wall of the original building. A tiebeam supports the low roof but is not connected either to the timber frame nor to the external face of the house. Two access doors are located in the northern and southern walls, a small window is located next to the southern wall door.

The Bathroom is located to the west of the hall and is of modern construction. The exterior wall is a mixture of stone and brick, bonded in the Flemish style. Both the bathroom and adjacent toilet are partitioned with modern wood.

A Bedroom is located in the south-west corner of the present building and is an extension into what may have originally been an outbuilding located adjacent to the original house. The exterior walls show no foundations and the original walls have largely been taken down and rebuilt. The rebuild uses a mixture of

4 salvaged bricks and modern bricks. The interior of the room is panelled throughout with plyboard and has an artificial hipped ceiling. The truss observed in the room is an artificial feature and not part of the original construction.

A Store located to the rear of the extension bedroom is a timber lean to with a plain tiled gable roof. The store is constructed of timber and since undertaking the survey this store has collapsed.

The building survey progresses onto the upstairs suite of rooms that were surveyed from east to west.

Bedroom 1. The fabric of the south and eastern walls in this room is in a severe state of decay. The collapsing fabric illustrates that the timber frame has been removed from the south wall and that it has been rebuilt using a mixture of stone, salvaged brick and modern brick. The east, or end wall, shows broken elements of the timber frame and holes in the fabric that pass through the whole thickness of the wall. Remnants of plaster on the east wall and the north wall contain horsehair indicating its antiquity. The room contains a blocked late

19th/early 20th century fireplace. There are two small windows in the northern and southern walls.

The Stairwell (east). Not much can be observed in this area and the timber frame of the building can be partially observed but the walls are largely obscured with modern wallpaper. The stairwell separates bedroom 1 from bedroom 2.

Bedroom 2 is a small room, probably not originally a bedroom, located to the south of the stairwell. The west wall is severely damaged with a large diagonal vertical crack running through the full thickness of the wall from ceiling to floor. The west wall is sagging indicating the removal of the original timber brace below. The action of removing the timber is causing significant damage to the remaining timber frame of the building.

Combined with the removal of the south timber elevation the weight of the west wall in bedroom 2 is in effect pulling the north wall of the house down. The wooden struts observed in the north wall are false. There is a small window in the southern wall.

Bedroom 3 and stairwell (west). The original ceilings over both of these rooms have been replaced. The bedroom ceiling has been replaced with chipboard whereas the ceiling above the stairwell has been replaced with plasterboard. The ISO Standard printed on the plasterboard demonstrates that the ceiling was replaced post-1985.

The floor of the bedroom is original and is heavily bowed, there is a small window in the northern wall.

Bedroom 4 is the westernmost of the upstairs rooms. The owner of the house upon request removed all the plaster boards from the ceiling and has allowed the most complete part of the timber frame structure to be observed (Pl. 5). The chimney breast at the west end of the room has a later fireplace inserted in its northern half.

Observations made in the west bedroom suggest that the roof has been replaced twice. Twin sets of common

5 rafters rise from the wall plate or principal rail, the second, later, set rest on blocks of wood (Pl. 6). The second major roof alteration can be observed by close observation of the laths onto which rest the roof tiles. The laths are of pine and have been treated to make them waterproof. The tiles themselves are a mixture of plain tiles with pegholes, although iron and stainless steel nails have been used to hold them onto the rafters. The majority of the tiles on the northern slope of the roof are nibbed clay tiles and are also machine stamped with the word

DREADNOUGHT (Pl. 7). The tile company states that the name Dreadnought was patented in 1905 therefore this is the earliest possible date for these tiles, but the moulded nibbs on tiles should be regarded as late 20th century.

A sketch cross section drawing of the exposed roof timbers in this room is included as Figure 3.

Chronological development

The structure is extremely ruinous and has been extensively rebuilt on its southern elevation. What may have been an outbuilding associated with the original house was either demolished or collapsed and has been extensively rebuilt with modern materials. Unfortunately the alterations made by previous occupiers have severely damaged and weakened the building.

Phase 1 (Fig. 4)

The indications are that the house started as two storey rectangular building with one staircase. Due to the extensive damage and removal of the original fabric from the south elevation it is difficult to ascertain whether the house was originally constructed as one dwelling or as two. It is probable that the stone-built outbuilding to the west of the house was constructed at the same time.

This phase is characterized as a three bay two storey timber-framed house with a stone outbuilding.

Phase 2 (Fig. 4)

Phase 2 is defined by the construction of the garden wall at the eastern end of the property. It is not possible to give a precise date for this event although we are in a position to state that it occurred later than the house and earlier than the construction of the garden room and coal shed.

Phase 3 (Fig. 4)

It is possible that a fourth lean-to bay may have been constructed at the western end of the cottage, the original wall fabric has largely gone through later extensions and alterations to this end of the building. The addition of the additional bay may mark the conversion of the cottage from single to dual occupancy. The internal wall of

6 the original cottage (shown dashed) may have been largely removed during this phase to allow access to the upper level of the western of the two cottages.

Phase 4 (Fig. 5)

The fourth phase of activity should be regarded as ongoing repairs to the south elevation of the house. Where observed, the remaining timbers are in a very poor state of preservation and either the poor quality of the original wood or alteration from one to two dwellings required the rebuilding of this elevation.

Phase 5 (Fig. 5)

On site recording suggests a major phase of new build probably in the late 18th century. The main features were the construction of the garden and coal rooms utilizing the garden wall as a foundation for the north wall. It is possible although it cannot be proven, that the end wall of the cottage between what we are calling the sitting room and the garden room was replaced and a new doorway inserted (shown dashed). However the frame and door do not date to this period.

Phase 5 or 6 (Fig. 5)

It is highly probable that the outbuilding was demolished or collapsed during this phase and the suite of rooms at the western end of the house was built. The nature of the materials used and the different quality of building between the west and east end of the original timber building indicates that the house may still have been divided into two at this time.

Phase 6 (Fig. 5)

Phase 6 is best characterized as internal improvements to the building continuing through the 19th century and into the early 20th century prior to the house returning to use as a single unit. These improvements are best noted as the replacement of the roof, the windows in the south elevation and the insertion of modern fireplaces throughout most of the building. The frame and door recently discovered, in the wall separating the sitting room and garden room date to this period.

Phase 7 (Fig. 6)

Phase 7 encompasses the 20th century alterations to the property. The alterations observed are related to the single use of the building to accommodate a disabled resident and increasing effort to stem the decay of the building. The majority of the alterations are observed on the south side of the building. The second or east doorway is blocked up and a modern window inserted. The new stud wall concealing the doorway between the sitting room and garden room belongs to this period sealing the eastern end of the house (Pl. 9). The rear extensions at the western end of the building are completely refurbished to accommodate a disabled person

7 allowing access to a bedroom, bathroom and the kitchen. The roof is extensively replaced/repaired and the external wall on the south side is underpinned with concrete beams.

Conclusion

The building is in an extremely poor state of maintenance. The poor condition of the building is due to removal of large parts of the original timber frame. Although badly damaged the building exhibits at least seven phases of development:

Phase 1 is probably 16th century although this can only be proved through the use of dendrochronology.

Phase 2 date is unknown.

Phase 3 and 4 is 18th century

Phase 5 late 18th/early 19th century

Phase 6 is late 19th/early 20th century

Phase 7 is late 20th century

References BGS, 1994, British Geological Survey, 1:50,000, Sheet 237, Solid and Drift Edition, Keyworth Brunskill, R W, 1990, Brick buildings in Britain, London Brunskill, R W, 1992, Traditional buildings of Britain, London PPG15, 1994, Planning and the Historic Environment, Dept of the Environment Planning Policy Guidance 15, HMSO PPG16, 1990, Archaeology and Planning, Dept of the Environment Planning Policy Guidance 16, HMSO

8 APPENDIX 1: Catalogue of Colour Print Photographs

Cat. No Description Scales Note 1 Exterior Elevation 1x2m 2 Exterior Elevation 1x2m 3 Interior of workshop 1x2m 4 Interior of workshop 1x2m 5 Interior of coal shed 1x1m 6 Interior of front room 1x1m, 1x2m 7 Interior door 1x2m 8 Interior doors 1x1m, 1x2m 9 Fireplace 1x1m, 1x2m 10 Interior doorway 1x1m 11 Larder interior 12 Larder interior 13 Kitchen fireplace 1x1m, 1x2m 14 Kitchen interior 1x2m 15 Stairwell 1x2m 16 Cupboard interior 17 Interior roof 18 Room interior 1x1m, 1x2m 19 Room interior 1x1m, 1x2m 20 Internal corridor 1x1m 21 Internal roofline 22 Internal wall 1x1m, 1x2m 23 Internal wall 1x1m, 1x2m 24 Internal wall with crack 1x2m 25 Internal floor 1x1m, 1x2m 26 Internal wall 1x1m, 1x2m 27 Internal wall and ceiling 1x1m, 1x2m 28 Wall beam 29 Wall beam 30 External elevation 1x2m 31 External elevation 1x2m 32 External elevation 1x2m 33 External wall and window 1x1m 34 External wall 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 35 External wall 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 36 External timber framing 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 37 External timber framing 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 38 Front door 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 39 Door sill 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 40 Front door 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 41 Front elevation 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 42 Windows 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 43 Windows 1x1m, 1x2m South facing 44 Coal cellar 1x1m, 1x2m Looking NE 45 Coal cellar 1x1m, 1x2m Looking NE 46 Coal cellar 1x1m, 1x2m Looking NE 47 Coal cellar 1x1m, 1x2m Looking NE 48 Larder 1x1m, 1x2m Looking NW 49 Larder and stairwell 1x1m, 1x2m Looking NW 50 Sill Beam 1x0.3m, 1x0.1m North facing 51 Sill Beam 1x0.3m, 1x0.1m North facing 52 External elevation 1x1.0m, 1x2.0m North facing 53 External elevation 1x1.0m, 1x2.0m North facing 54 External elevation 1x1.0m, 1x2.0m North facing 55 External elevation 1x1.0m, 1x2.0m North facing 56 Internal elevation 2x1.0m, 1x2.0m West facing 57 Internal elevation 2x1.0m, 1x2.0m West facing 58 Internal roof 59 Internal roof 60 Internal roof 61 Internal roof 62 Cupboard 1x1.0m, 1x2.0m Looking SW 63 Fireplace 1x1.0m, 1x2.0m Facing NE 64 Roof beams 65 Dreadnought roof tiles 66 Stud Wall 1x1.0m, 1x0.5m West Facing

9 67 Stud Wall 1x1.0m, 1x0.5m West Facing 68 Hidden Door 1x1.0m, 1x0.5m West Facing 69 Hidden Door 1x1.0m, 1x0.5m West Facing 70 Door Lock 1x0.1m 71 Door Lock 1x1.0m 72 Stud Wall 1x1.0m, 1x0.5m West Facing 73 Stud Wall 1x1.0m, 1x0.5m West Facing 74 Garden Room Wall 1x1.0m East Facing 75 Garden Room Wall 1x1.0m East Facing

10 APPENDIX 2: Catalogue of Colour Slide Images

Cat No Description Scales Note 1 Interior of workshop 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 2 Internal roof 3 Cupboard interior 4 Internal corridor 5 Room interior 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 6 Internal elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 7 Interior roof structure 8 Internal wall with crack 1x2.0m 9 Internal wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 10 Internal wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 11 Internal floor 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 12 External elevation 1x2.0m 13 Room interior 1x2.0m 14 Room interior 1x2.0m 15 Front room interior 1x2.0, 1x1.0m 16 Coal shed 1x1.0m 17 Larder and stairwell 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 18 Front room door 1x2.0 19 Internal corridor 1x1.0m 20 Fireplace 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 21 Kitchen fireplace 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 22 Larder interior 23 Cupboard and stairwell 1x2.0m 24 Interior kitchen 1x2.0m 25 Exterior elevation

11 APPENDIX 3: Catalogue of Monochrome Images

Sheet Cat. No. Description Scale Note

1 3 External elevation 4 External elevation 5 Internal room 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 6 Internal room 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 7 Coal shed 1x1.0m 8 Front room interior 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 9 Front room doorway 1x2.0m 10 Larder and stairwell 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 11 Fireplace 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 12 Internal corridor 1x1.0m 13 Larder interior 14 Kitchen fireplace 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 15 Kitchen interior 1x2.0m 16 Cupboard and stairwell 1x2.0m 17 Cupboard interior 18 Internal roof structure 19 Workroom interior 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 20 Internal elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 21 Internal corridor 22 Internal roof 23 Internal wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 24 Internal wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 25 Internal wall with crack 1x2.0m 26 Internal floor 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 27 Internal wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 28 Internal wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 29 External wall elevation 1x2.0m 30 External wall elevation 1x2.0m 31 External wall elevation 2 2 External wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 3 External wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 4 External wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 5 External wall elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 6 Door 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 7 External elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 8 External elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 9 External elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 10 External elevation 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m South facing 11 Coal shed 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 12 Coal shed 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 13 Coal shed 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 14 Coal shed 1x2.0m, 1x1.0m 17 Sill beam 1x0.3m, 1x0.1m North facing 18 Sill beam 1x0.3m, 1x0.1m North facing 19 External elevation 1x2.0m, 2x1.0m North facing 20 External elevation 1x2.0m, 2x1.0m North facing 21 External elevation 1x2.0m, 2x1.0m North facing 22 External elevation 1x2.0m, 2x1.0m North facing 27 Roof timbers 28 Roof timbers

12 SITE

02000

SITE

01000

SP68000 69000 80HST03/54 80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire, 2003 Building Recording

Figure 1. Location of site within Tetsworth and Oxfordshire. Reproduced from Ordnance Survey Pathfinder 1117 SP60/70 1:25000 at 1:12500 Ordnance Survey Licence AL52324A0001 01700

SITE

01600

SP68800 80 HST03/54

80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire, 2003

Figure 2. Location of site within Tetsworth.

Reproduced from Ordnance Survey

Ordnance Survey Licence AL52324A0001 80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire

Common rafter

Purlin Collar

Queen strut Crown post (later insertion)

Tie beam

Wall post

Curved brace

Post

Floor

0 5m

Figure 3. Internal west facing elevation, bedroom 80HST03/54 80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire N

?

Ground Floor

Phase 1 First Floor

Ground Floor

Ground Floor ?

Phase 2

Phase 3 First Floor

0 10m

Figure 4. Plans, phases 1-3 80HST03/54 80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire N

?

Phase 4 Ground Floor

?

Phase 5 Ground Floor

Ground Floor

Phase 6 First Floor

0 10m

Figure 5. Plans, phases 4-6 80HST03/54 80 High Street, Tetsworth, Oxfordshire N

Hall Bathroom

Dining Sitting Garden Coal Kitchen Toilet room room room shed

Bedroom Ground Floor

Store

Bedroom 3

Bedroom 4 Bedroom 2 Bedroom 1

First Floor

Phase 7

0 10m

Figure 6. Plans, phase 7 80HST03/54 Plate 1. External elevation, South facing, scales; 1.0m, 2m.

Plate 2. Original sill beam, North facing elevation, scales; 0.3m, 0.1m.

80HST03/54 Plate 3. External elevation, South facing, scales; 1m, 2m. Plate 4. The Coal Shed, Looking north, scales; 1m, 2m.

80HST03/54 Plate 5. Timber roof structure, Bedroom 4.

Plate 6. Internal elevation, West facing, scales; 1m, 2m.

80HST03/54 Plate 7. Dreadnought roof tiles, Bedroom 4.

Plate 8. External elevation, North facing, scales; 2m, 1m.

80HST03/54 Plate 9. West facing internal wall showing door behind stud wall, scales 1m and 0.5m.

Plate 10. East facing internal wall showing original fireplace, scales 2m and 1m.

80HST03/54