Horsham District Council
Listed building outline: WYCKHAM FARMHOUSE AND WYCKHAM FARM COTTAGE WYCKHAM LANE STEYNING C170
Legend
- Horsham District Council boundary
- Listed building outlines
WYCKHAM FARMHOUSE AND WYCKHAM FARM COTTAGE WYCKHAM LANE STEYNING C170
- geometry
-
MULTIPOLYGON (((-0.309218 50.905155,-0.309180 50.905139,-0.309191...
- end-date
- entry-date
- 2014-02-05
- listed-building
- 1180686
- name
- WYCKHAM FARMHOUSE AND WYCKHAM FARM COTTAGE WYCKHAM LANE STEYNING
- notes
- reference
- C170
- start-date
- 1980-05-09
- listed-building-grade
- address-text
- organisation
- description
- Former farmhouse and farm cottage. East part, Wyckham Farm Cottage and part of Wyckham Farmhouse, comprises late medieval former open hall-house of 2 bays, altered and lengthened in the early C17, and with 2 parallel ranges to west (Wyckham Farmhouse) added in C18 and c1800. C20 fenestration. East part timber-framed, clad in red brick with some grey headers in English bond, the end bay in English garden wall bond with flint patch below. Horsham stone slab roof with gablets. Brick inserted chimneystack. Two storeys; 4:3 windows. C20 casements. To extreme east is C18 outshot with C20 dormer. Plinth. Early to mid C19 porch converted into window bay. To the west are 2 parallel ranges of red brick in Flemish bond with Horsham stone slab roofs, C20 windows and C20 porch. Wyckham Farm Cottage has a lounge of 2 bays with wide wooden bressumer with marks of crane on stone open fireplace with breadoven with cambered entrance. chamfered spine beam and floor joists of square section. Kitchen retains early C19 basket-grate, copper and breadoven. First floor has exposed tie beams, jowled posts and chamfered beams with lamb's tongue stops. Attic, not accessible at time of survey, reported to have 2 crownposts and smoke-blackened timbers. Wyckham farmhouse contains one bay of timber-framed house on first floor and basement. C18 wings have been gutted in C20. In 1565, John Culpeper died seized of 1/3 of the manor and a 1/3 fee. In 1571, his son Thomas had disposed of it in return for an annuity of four pounds. The existing buildings are shown on an estate map of 1752. (See History of the county of Sussex by T P Hudson Vol VI Part I Bramber Rape).
- uprns
- 200004783099,200004786021
- NAME,NAME_2