Lower Sessland Farmhouse Including Cob Walls Adjoining to North West and South West

LOWER SESSLAND FARMHOUSE INCLUDING COB WALLS ADJOINING TO NORTH WEST AND SOUTH WEST, SESSLAND LANE

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Overview

Heritage Category:
Listed Building
Grade:
II*
List Entry Number:
1170877
Date first listed:
22-Feb-1967
List Entry Name:
Lower Sessland Farmhouse Including Cob Walls Adjoining to North West and South West
Statutory Address:
LOWER SESSLAND FARMHOUSE INCLUDING COB WALLS ADJOINING TO NORTH WEST AND SOUTH WEST, SESSLAND LANE

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Official list entry

Heritage Category:
Listed Building
Grade:
II*
List Entry Number:
1170877
Date first listed:
22-Feb-1967
Date of most recent amendment:
04-Mar-1988
List Entry Name:
Lower Sessland Farmhouse Including Cob Walls Adjoining to North West and South West
Statutory Address 1:
LOWER SESSLAND FARMHOUSE INCLUDING COB WALLS ADJOINING TO NORTH WEST AND SOUTH WEST, SESSLAND LANE

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.

Understanding list entries

Corrections and minor amendments

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.

Understanding list entries

Corrections and minor amendments

Location

Statutory Address:
LOWER SESSLAND FARMHOUSE INCLUDING COB WALLS ADJOINING TO NORTH WEST AND SOUTH WEST, SESSLAND LANE

The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

County:
Devon
District:
West Devon (District Authority)
Parish:
South Tawton
National Grid Reference:
SX 67834 97549

Details

SX 69 NE SOUTH TAWTON SESSLAND LANE

1/196 Lower Sessland Farmhouse including cob walls adjoining 22.2.67 to north-west and south-west (formerly listed as Sessland) II*

Farmhouse, a Dartmoor longhouse type. Early C16 with major later C16, C17 and early C18 improvements, the latest probably associated with a date of 1715. Plastered cob on stone rubble footings, some large blocks of granite ashlar shows to rear; local stone rubble stacks and chimneyshafts; thatch roof, a lot replaced with corrugated iron. Plan and development: T-shaped plan. The main block faces south-west and is built down the hillslope. It has a 5-room-and-through-passage longhouse-type plan. The 2 rooms uphill at the left (north-western) end are now used as a separate cottage. There is an axial stack between the 2 rooms and another axial stack backs onto the former inner room. This inner room (above the hall) is small and unheated, probably a former dairy. The hall has a large axial stack backing onto the passage and a full height projecting window bay to rear. Also a winder stair to the passage chamber at the front lower end of the hall. Shippon with hayloft over on lower side of passage. Parlour block with projecting gable-end stack projects forward at right angles to front of hall. To rear of the hall, immediately left of the hall bay, there is an open-sided pumphouse with a chamber over. It looks like (and was probably intended to look like) a 2-storey porch but the passage rear doorway is left of it. This is a very interesting farmhouse with a long and complex structural history. The late medieval core was a 3-room-and-through-passage plan longhouse. This house was open to the roof, divided by low partitions and heated by an open hearth fire. The inner room was probably floored over in the mid C16. The hall fireplace was inserted with the passage chamber in the late C16. The hall was floored over in the aid C17 with the building of the hall window bay. The pumphouse and parlour wing are also probably mid C17, the latter containing the main stair. The parlour was the main focus of an early C18 refurbishment. The shippon was refurbished in the mid C17. The 2-room cottage at the upper end was not available for inspection at the time of this survey but it too is thought to be C17 and is said to contain the former kitchen. House is 2 storeys. Exterior: irregular 3-window front to left of the parlour block, all C19 and C20 casements with glazing bars. Passage front doorway immediately left of the parlour contains a C19 door behind a C20 porch. The roof is gable-ended. The rear elevation is the more interesting. Here what survives of the C19 plaster is incised as ashlar and some of the windows retain parts of their C17 oak frames. The hall bay is gabled; so too is the pumphouse, the upper room of which is supported on roughly-squared monolithic granite posts. The pumphouse chamber shelters the well and there is a trough and lead pump there. The trough is a C20 replacement although the original granite one lies nearby. The shippon cow door is left of the passage rear doorway and it contains a late C16-early C17 oak frame with segmental head and chamfered surround. Hayloft loading hatch directly above. Shippon contains a series of tiny windows on each side most of them now blocked but some still with C16 or C17 oak frames. 2 windows to shippon in end wall, the larger one is the dung hatch. Drain is still in operation. Good interior: hall has large granite ashlar fireplace with hollow-chamfered surround. The mid C17 axial beam is soffit-chamfered with scroll-bar-scroll stops. Dairy has a plain axial beam of indeterminate date. The parlour is particularly good. The mid C17 crossbeam has plain soffit chamfers. Contemporary stair rises along wall of main block dividing at the top to the chambers over the hall and parlour. Closed string stair with square newel posts and ball caps, moulded flat handrail and turned balusters. Early C18 chimneypiece with bolection surround and panelled chimneybreast. Alongside to right a full height cupboard with panelled doors and dentil cornice. 2 other contemporary cupboards in the same room. Several 2-panel doors around the house of same date and, like the cupboard doors, hung on H- hinges. It may be that the parlour is wholly early C18 but the 2-bay roof A-frame has a pegged lap-jointed collar with dovetail halvings which must be mid C17. The oak doorframe to the pumphouse chamber has a narrow ovolo-moulded surround with ramshead stops and contains a plank door with 2 applied panels; it is complete with all its fittings including the wooden handle. The gable end truss of the pumphouse chamber is a most unusual jointed cruck with the tongue of each cruck post extending far up the principals and halved into them. Roof of main block is carried on original side-pegged jointed crucks with cambered collars. All the roof structure including the purlins, common rafters and the thatch where it survives is heavily smoke-blackened. The cottage was not available for inspection but, if the main house is anything to go by, probably contains much C17 carpentry and other detail. The shippon is still used although the doorway through from the passage is now blocked. It has a cobbled floor with granite kerbs to the central drain and some granite slabs with holes for the tethering posts. The roof has been much mended, but essentially is still made up of mid C17 A-frame trusses with dovetail-shaped pegged lap-jointed collars. From the front of the shippon a high cob wall with tile coping projects forward and returns a short distance along the front of the garden. Another similar extends north-westwards from the left end but the section between these two has been rebuilt in the C20. There is, in the RAM Museum Exeter, a wrought iron door knocker inscribed with the date 1715 and the initials of William and Mary Oxenham from this farmhouse. It may date the early C18 modernisation of the house. Devon SMR mentions an oak screen but Lega-Weekes mentions one only in a second house close by to the north-east which has now collapsed. Lower Sessland is very important multi-phase Devon farmhouse. It is both attractive and well-preserved containing high quality work from all the major building phases. It is also remarkable for having a well-preserved shippon still in use. Also the C17 pumphouse is a most unusual feature. Source: Ethel Lega-Weekes. Neighbours of North Wyke, Part II. Trans. Devon. Assoc. 34 (1902) p 647 & plates facing ps 635 and 647.

Listing NGR: SX6783497549

Legacy

The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

Legacy System number:
94996
Legacy System:
LBS

Sources

Books and journals
Transactions of the Devonshire Association in Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 34, (1902), 647

Legal

This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.

Ordnance survey map of Lower Sessland Farmhouse Including Cob Walls Adjoining to North West and South West

Map

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End of official list entry

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