Sydenham House
SYDENHAM HOUSE
Listed on the National Heritage List for England. Search over 400,000 listed places
Overview
- Heritage Category:
- Listed Building
- Grade:
- I
- List Entry Number:
- 1164731
- Date first listed:
- 14-Jun-1952
- List Entry Name:
- Sydenham House
- Statutory Address:
- SYDENHAM HOUSE
Location
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Discover moreOfficial list entry
- Heritage Category:
- Listed Building
- Grade:
- I
- List Entry Number:
- 1164731
- Date first listed:
- 14-Jun-1952
- List Entry Name:
- Sydenham House
- Statutory Address 1:
- SYDENHAM HOUSE
The scope of legal protection for listed buildings
This List entry helps identify the building designated at this address for its special architectural or historic interest.
Unless the List entry states otherwise, it includes both the structure itself and any object or structure fixed to it (whether inside or outside) as well as any object or structure within the curtilage of the building.
For these purposes, to be included within the curtilage of the building, the object or structure must have formed part of the land since before 1st July 1948.
The scope of legal protection for listed buildings
This List entry helps identify the building designated at this address for its special architectural or historic interest.
Unless the List entry states otherwise, it includes both the structure itself and any object or structure fixed to it (whether inside or outside) as well as any object or structure within the curtilage of the building.
For these purposes, to be included within the curtilage of the building, the object or structure must have formed part of the land since before 1st July 1948.
Location
- Statutory Address:
- SYDENHAM HOUSE
The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.
- County:
- Devon
- District:
- West Devon (District Authority)
- Parish:
- Marystow
- National Grid Reference:
- SX 42813 83855
Details
SX 48 SW MARYSTOW SYDENHAM
6/183 Sydenham House - 14.6.52 GV I
Manor house. Circa 1600-1612 built for Sir Thomas Wise (qv parish church) incorporating parts of an earlier house. Alterations of 1656 for Edward Wise, some refurbishing of 1698-1709 for the Tremayne family, late C20 repairs and renovations, some in 1937 by Philip Tilden. Stone rubble with scantle slate roof hipped at south end and gabled elsewhere with sprocketted eaves. 5 stone stacks; 2 lateral at the rear (west) side. 1 to the kitchen at the north, 2 to the front projecting wings. Granite dressings. Symmetrical east-facing E-plan with separately roofed additional blocks on the north side. The east front has a 2-storey and attic porch and front projecting north and south wings each having subordinate wings projecting into the front courtyard. The west side of the main range has a second 2-storey and attic porch opposed to that on the east front, and a wing gabled to the west, which is divided between to main stair and closets leading off the main hall and long gallery, the division marked by an external buttress. The 2 additional blocks on the north of the E-plan consist of kitchen wing gabled to the north, and a parlour wing gabled to the north and further gabled to the west in a 3-tier bay. The parlour wing has a projecting stair turret on the north side. The irregular fenestration of the south side of the south wing suggests that this may have been the core of the pre C17 house, although Pevsner suggested that the west (garden) front showed evidence of pre-Reformation masonry. Presumably the basic E-plan and columnar granite mullioned windows date from the 1600-1612 build which Risdon commented on as being so high that the "very foundation is ready to reel under the burden". The mid C17 alterations by Edward Wise were substantial - papers dated 1654 include estimates for "ye building of my house at Sydenham" and refer to cellars, foundations and timber windows. It has been suggested that Edward Wise rebuilt or completed the south end of the main range, but this may have been ruinous in 1831 and the evidence for rebuilding may date as late as the 1930s work by Philip Tilden. Edward Wise altered the fine chimney piece to the hall, made some alterations to the stair hall and may have been responsible for the Ipswich windows in the north and south wings and for some of the internal woodwork. The 1698-1709 work for the Tremayne family appears to be largely internal. In the circa 1840s the 3 bays of the south end of the west front were refenestrated with sash windows. The 1930s work by Philip Tilden appears to have been substantial and involved replacing 1 bay of the sash windows with stone mullioned cross windows and the addition of a first floor oriel window on the south side of the south wing. It would appear that the east wall of the south wing was also rebuilt in the 1930s, and that an early C18 doorway to the west porch was replaced with a C15 granite doorway introduced from elsewhere. 2 storeys and attic. Symmetrical E-plan east front with deep north and south front projecting wings with subsidiary opposed wings projecting into the forecourt. 3-bay main range, north and south wings also 3-bay. The 2-storey porch and 4 wings have plastered gables. Ground floor and first floor windows mostly regular 4-light early C17 granite mullioned windows with high transoms with hoodmoulds and C20 leaded panes. The first floor windows of the east ends of the north and south wings have striking, 1654 (Oswald) timber windows similar to those at Sparrows House, Ipswich They are adaptations of a 4-light ovolo-moulded cross window design with a timber semi-circular head in the upper middle 2-lights with spoke-leading in the semi- circle. The gable windows above them are Venetian with a central arched light set in a rectangular architrave flanked by 2 lower lights. 2 storey early C17 central projecting gabled porch fronted with ashlar masonry with a segmental arched moulded early C17 doorway with carved spandrels flanked by Roman Doric columns on tall rectangular plinths with a flush triglyph frieze below a projecting moulded cornice. Above the cornice, set in a rectangular recess with a moulded barley sugar architrave is the armorial bearings of the Wise family in plaster with a plaster achievement and sculptural plaster mantling. Some ancient colour survives. Above the recess is a 4- light granite mullioned cross window, gable window is a 2-light timber casement with leaded panes. The north wing has two 2-light mullioned stair windows immediately to the west of the subsidiary wing. Both subsidiary wings have timber rectangular gable windows with a diamond-shaped light and diagonal leaded panes. The (west) garden front is asymmetrical with a central 3-stage gabled porch, slate-hung in the gable. To the left of the porch is a 2-bay gabled wing with sprocketted eaves, also slate- hung in the gable that oversails the bay corners. The 2 southernmost bays of the garden front have 12-pane sashes; all other ground and first floor windows are 1- 2- and 4-light granite mullioned windows throughout, those to the kitchen wing are 6- light cross windows with king mullions. A north entrance leads into a passage between the kitchen and the parlour. A further probably C16 arched granite doorway leads into the parlour stair turret and is half-blocked by a C20 chimney. The south side of the south wing has scattered fenestration of 2- and 4-light granite mullioned windows with high transoms, considerable evidence of rebuilding and blocked openings. The 1937 ground floor oriel on the left-hand has a conical slate roof and transomed mullioned lights. Interior. The opposed east and west entrances lead directly into the south end of the hall, the screen no longer exists. The hall has a lateral fireplace with a chimney piece with Roman Ionic columns and an entablature, this probably dates from the 1600-1612 build and was crowned in 1656 by a dated segmental broken pediment with the arms of Edward Wise and his wife with a crest and elaborate mantling. The figures of Adam and Eve lie on the pediment The pediment has been repainted in the C20. Leading off the hall into half of the wing that also contains the main stair is a small room heated from the main hall stack with a stone fireplace. The room was fitted out with a bedstead in an inventory of 1649 when it was described as the "Orrell". The panelled wainscot to the hall is divided by fluted pilasters and has a strapwork frieze above, it may date from the early C17 work of Sir Thomas Wise, or may have been introduced by Edward Wise. Full-height panelling divided by fluted pilasters and crowned by a cornice broken forward over the pilasters fills the north and south walls of the hall and dates from circa 1700, with contemporary panelled doors. The main stair is early C17 with 2 dog-leg flights broken by 2 landings. The elaborately carved pierced balusters are angled to the flights and vertical to the landings and repeated on the wall side. A male and female term applied to 2 of the newels may not be original to the stair but are probably contemporary in date. The flat moulded handrail is interrupted by large square section newels crowned by flat- topped volute finials. The stair hall ceiling is divided into 2, the plaster ceiling to the west is Adam style and is said to have replaced a painted ceiling. To the east the decorated plaster ceiling is circa 1660 (Devon Period Three, French) and presumably for Edward Wise with pomegranates enriching a central oval linked to a similar pomegranate border. A plaster wall frieze consists of shields linked by festoons, all in high relief. 3 contemporary doors leading off the upper landing have strapwork panelling and are crowned with pediments. The parlour panelling is particularly fine. Corinthian pilasters divide the wainscot which has a moulded cornice above a frieze of incised arabesques filled with what is probably gesso, picking out the pattern in white. A second frieze below consists of similar patterns framed by round-headed arches. The overmantel is a more elaborate version of this double frieze. The rooms above the parlour and kitchen have circa early C17 panelling with some fine cockshead hinges to the doors. The heated long gallery above the hall has closets opening off on the west side and a panelled wainscot divided by fluted pilasters. A decorated plaster ceiling was probably once fixed to the 3 chamfered cross beams. In circa 1700 the gallery was partitioned off at the south end forming 2 additional rooms with panelling of circa 1700 which has been stripped of paint. The southernmost room has a contemporary fireplace, the adjoining room preserves its early C17 fireplace, the original long gallery having been heated at 2 points. The 2 ground floor rooms the south of the hall room have circa 1700 panelling with some adaptations by Philip Tilden in the 1930s. The north and south wings have circa early C17 dog-leg staircases with turned balusters, some of the first floor rooms to the wings have bolection-moulded panelling, some have early C17 panelling. The kitchen has a massive stone double fireplace with chamfered segmental arches. Sir Thomas Wise was created Knight of the Bath at the coronation of James I and sheriff of Devon in 1612. His grandson, Edward Wise came to live at Sydenham in 1654 and in 1694 the estate passed by marriage to the Tremayne family and remained in Tremayne hands until the 1930s. In a letter from Anna Bray to Robert Southey the condition of "one wing" of the house in 1831 was described as "in a very ruinous condition". Photographs of circa 1900 in the possession of the present owner show the screens passage marked by a tripartite colonnade screen of Greek Doric columns, probably contemporary with the 1700 panelling in the hall. The house is a remarkable survival of an ambitious early C17 building with little visible alteration after about 1700. A. Oswald, "Sydenham House", Country Life, June 28th, 1956, pp 1420-1423 Mrs Bray, Traditions, Legends, Superstitions, and Sketches of Devonshire on the Borders of the Tamar and the Tave ... in a series of letters to Robert Southey Esq., (1838), Vol. III
Listing NGR: SX4281383855
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
- Legacy System number:
- 92425
- Legacy System:
- LBS
Sources
Books and journals
Bray, A, Traditions Legends Superstitions and Sketches of Devonshire on the Borders of the Tamar and the Tavey, (1838)
Country Life in 28 June, (1956), 1420-1423
Other
Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England, Part 11 Devon,
Legal
This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.
Map
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