NHER 10534 (Building record) - Raveningham Hall
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Summary
Protected Status/Designation
Location
| Map sheet | TM39NE |
|---|---|
| Civil Parish | RAVENINGHAM, SOUTH NORFOLK, NORFOLK |
Map
Full Description
July 1978. Visit.
Georgian; red brick; seven bays, three storeys, three bay pediment with circularwindow. Single storey porch with four columns. Good condition.
(S1) notes vaulted entrance hall with apses and ornamented plaster vaulting on staircase.
E. Rose (NAU), 20 July 1978.
Attached two-storey single-bay wing on each side, and later extension to east.
Listing Grade II* (S2) says built for Sir Edmund Bacon who died 1820. Altered 19th and 20th century, the latter by Somers Clark who made the plasterwork that (S1) thought was original.
Reduced in size after 1947.
See (S2) for detailed description, also of stable block separately listed Grade II.
E. Rose (NAU), 27 November 1989.
30 March 1995. Visit to see roof.
The roof is in the form of four ridged ranges in a square, with unusual timber struts, and brown glazed pantiles. In the central well is a later glass and wood attic. The chimney stacks have horizontal skintlings and ornamented pots.
The pediments and dormers project forward in lead; the pediments also have horizontal skintlings.
The circular window in the centre lights only a space in front of the roof slope through which two rainwater channels flow. The Somers-Clarke entrance porch is dated 1905. Present Lord Bacon believes the house was built around 1750, but the skintlings support (S1) and (S2) in a date after about 1770 to 80.
E. Rose (NLA), 31 March 1995.
February 1997. Visit. Stable block inspected; (S2) description confirmed. The bricks have narrow and irregular horizontal skintlings confirming a date of about 1770-80, as for the hall. Most unusual is the roof structure, a sort of hammerbeam with the projecting beams at first floor level and mortised into the uprights rather than supporting them, the uprights mortised to the principals and having a slot in the side opposite the hammerbeam; perhaps the end of the tenon but looking like an attachment in case a tiebeam was later required!
E. Rose (NLA), 28 February 1997.
Press cutting (S3) in file.
Architectural plans (S4) in file shows picture of three bay garage building stated to be shown as identical on an illustration of 1900 and thus an early example. Permission sought for demolition 2006.
E. Rose (NLA), 10 April 2006.
Associated Sources (10)
- --- SNF48786 Aerial Photograph: Edwards, D.A. (NLA). 1995. TM3996/AL - AQ.
- --- SNF13635 Aerial Photograph: TM3996 C-E,J,L-N,P,Q,W-X,Z.
- --- SNF7576 Monograph: Pevsner, N and Wilson, B. 1999. Norfolk 2: North-West and South. The Buildings of England. 2nd Edition. p 599.
- --- SNF57722 Record Card: NAU Staff. 1974-1988. Norfolk Archaeological Index Primary Record Card.
- --- SNF57204 Record Card: Ordnance Survey Staff. 1933-1979?. Ordnance Survey Record Cards. TM 39 NE 20.
- --- SNF8804 Secondary File: Secondary File.
- <S1> SNF7580 Monograph: Pevsner, N. 1962. North-West and South Norfolk. The Buildings of England. 1st Edition. pp 289-290.
- <S2> SNF48662 Designation: Historic England. National Heritage List for England. List Entries 1306263 and 1373191.
- <S3> SNF463 Newspaper Article: Eastern Daily Press. 1993. Open days for the weekend. 16 July.
- <S4> SNF49212 Drawing: Various. Various. Architectural plans.
Site and Feature Types and Periods (5)
Object Types (0)
Related NHER Records (0)
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Record last edited
Jul 23 2018 2:29PM