Exterior view of a timber-framed building linked to a brick building by a gate, on two sides of a courtyard on the Belhus Park estate

Date:
1924
Location:
Belhus, Aveley, Purfleet, Thurrock
Reference:
BB060080
Type:
Photograph (Negative)
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Description

The Belhus estate was inherited through marriage by John Barrett, who rebuilt the house near to his death in 1526. The eastate was given the license to become a park in 1618, and the architect Sanderson Miller (1716-80) and landscape designer Lancelot Brown (1716-83) worked on a project to improve the park between the years 1744 and 1777, led by Thomas Barrett-Lennard (Lord Dacre). The house was occupied by the military and suffered bomb damage during the Second World War, and was demolished in 1957. The park is still in use today, and owed by the local authority. The image shows a single-storey timber-framed building with large door, with a gate on the right side that connects it to a range of brick buildings. In the background is the gabled end of a building, possibly house, with a single-storey section in the middle, and a two-storey building with attic rooms on the right, with a door that opens onto the courtyard. These may be out-buildings, stables or kitchens for Belhus House.

Content

This is part of the Series: KON01/01 Negatives; within the Collection: KON01 Judge Edwin Max Konstam Collection

Rights

© Historic England Archive

People & Organisations

Photographer: Konstam, Edwin Max

Keywords

Post Medieval Manor House