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This legacy version of the site is not maintained. An updated version of the Chobham description and history site can be found at www.chobham.info |
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The Parish of Chobham is remarkably rich in old and beautiful houses. No fewer than forty-seven are included in the Certified Statutory List published by Surrey County Council as buildings of special architectural or historic interest. These are in addition to some twenty falling within the Conservation Area in the centre of the village. Indeed Chobham can be considered as much a repository of yeoman dwellings as are many of the famous Kent Wealden villages. Naturally extensions and alterations have taken place to all houses and cottages down the centuries, but in general have not masked nor spoiled the basic characteristics of their oldest portions. Click on a title on the left for detailed information on a selection of Chobham houses and a list of medieval houses. The following selection of houses and cottages around Chobham has been chosen as being good examples of a particular architectural style and their visibility from the road. Perhaps the oldest style still evident today is the 'open-hall' type of house. From
medieval times until the middle 16th C, a farmer's house would often be a simple
single-storey single-roomed house somewhat in the style of a barn - an open-hall house.
The farmer's family would live at one end of the room, the servants at the other. In the
middle was an open hearth without a chimney, the smoke from which escaped through vents
(gablets) in the roof ends. In the late 16th century it became normal practice to partition off one bay of the house - the 'smoke bay' to take the smoke directly up to the roof space. After the 16th century, smoke bays developed into chimneys. Gracious Pond Farm appears to have followed all these stages of development, from open-hall to smoke-bay to chimney. The earliest houses that we have were made by constructing a timber box-frame and then filling the wall spaces with wattle and daub. Unfortunately the wattle tended to rot and little has survived in external walls. Brick nogging has been the usual replacement, as in Gracious Pond Farm.
By the early 18th century, timber framing had given way to brick construction.
Whilst farmhouses developed in style and size to match the growing prosperity of Chobham's yeoman farmers, the cottages of the poor remained humble. Turf-walled single-roomed huts were common amongst the poorest families. These dwellings were very simple indeed - a hanging blanket served for the door and usually there were no windows at all. Fortunately, perhaps, none have survived in their original state. Another simple method of building was 'cob' - a mixture of clay and some binding material such as heather was used to form the walls. It is said that the walls of these simple single-storey cottages could be put up in a single day. Two cottages believed to be of cob construction can still be found on the southern edge of the Common. |
| © David Stokes. This page last updated: October 24, 2003 |