Woodbridge Farmhouse Farway, England

Listed Building Data

Woodbridge Farmhouse has been designated a Grade II* listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1163559
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II*
Date Listed
8 March 1988
Name
WOODBRIDGE FARMHOUSE INCLUDING FORMER STABLES ADJOINING SOUTH-WEST
Location
WOODBRIDGE FARMHOUSE INCLUDING FORMER STABLES ADJOINING SOUTH-WEST, WOODBRIDGE LANE
Parish
Farway
District
East Devon
County
Devon
Grid Reference
SY 18802 95234
Easting
318802.0000
Northing
95234.0000

Description

Farmhouse. Probably early or mid C16 with major later C16 and C17 improvements, late C18-early C19 stable block. Colour-washed local stone rubble, maybe with some cob, and probably Beerstone ashlar dressings; stone rubble stacks with plastered chimneyshafts, one of which has soffit-moulded coping and is probably Beerstone ashlar; thatch roof.

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

SY 19 NE FARWAY WOODBRIDGE LANE

3/94 Woodbridge Farmhouse including - former stables adjoining to the south-west - II* Farmhouse. Probably early or mid C16 with major later C16 and C17 improvements, late C18-early C19 stable block. Colour-washed local stone rubble, maybe with some cob, and probably Beerstone ashlar dressings; stone rubble stacks with plastered chimneyshafts, one of which has soffit-moulded coping and is probably Beerstone ashlar; thatch roof. Plan and development: formerly a 4-room-and-through-passage plan built down a gentle slope alongside the lane to the north-west. Downhill at the left (north- east) end there is a kitchen with a gable-end stack. Between this kitchen and the passage there is an unheated room, probably a former dairy/pantry. There is a corridor along the front between passage and kitchen and at some time the passage front doorway was blocked and a new doorway inserted to left, onto the corridor in front of the dairy/pantry. The hall is above (right of) the passage and it has an axial stack backing onto the passage and a newel stair turret projecting to rear at the upper end. At the right (south-west) end there is an unheated inner room. The stables stand at the right end, set forward from the main house and connecting only at the front end corner. Since the roofspace is inaccessible it is not possible to determine the early layout of the house in detail. Nevertheless it seems very likely that it began as some form of open hall house, probably heated by an open hearth fire. The earliest feature exposed is an oak screen with a shoulder-headed doorway which is early C16. The house was progressively floored over and the fireplaces were inserted in more than one stage between the mid C16 and mid C17. One confusing element of the layout is the fine ceiling in the kitchen. The large fireplace here has an oven but so too does the hall fireplace. It may be that the original lower end kitchen was upgraded to a parlour in the early C17 when the hall was floored over and, at the same time, the hall became the kitchen. The house is now 2 storeys throughout, the stables are single storey and there is a woodshed on the left end of the house. Exterior: irregular 2-window front. The left ground floor window is an early C17 oak 3-light window with ovolo-moulded mullions. Above it is a contemporary 2-light window with chamfered mullions. Both right windows are later casements within early C17 oak frames with their chamfered mullions removed. The ground floor one here maybe as early as the C18 having flat-faced mullions and containing rectangular panes of leaded glass. Both first floor windows have C17 oak sills, they are chamfered with scroll stops. There is a third small ground floor window in the blocking of the original passage front doorway. The present main front door is immediately left of this and it contains a C19 plank door. Another similar doorway has been inserted at the right end to the inner room. The roof is gable-ended to left and hipped to right. The stable block on the right end contains 2 front doors and in the left end a late C18 - early C19 oak window with flat-faced mullions and containing rectangular panes of leaded glass. Its roof is hipped both ends. The leanto woodshed at the left end contains a presumably reset early C17 2-light oak window with ovolo-moulded mullion. The rear of the main house contains mostly C19 and C20 casements with glazing bars except for 2 first floor windows. Over the passage rear doorway is an early C17 oak window with chamfered mullions; it was 4 lights but the middle mullion has been removed. The outer lights contain rectangular panes of leaded glass. Immediately to right is another late C18 - early C19 flat-faced mullion window, also with leaded panes of glass. The passage rear doorway has evidently been reduced in width to accommodate the present C19 plank door. Good interior: the service end kitchen has a good late C16 4-panel ceiling of richly-