Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T15:45:18.584Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The lobby-entry house: its origins and distribution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 April 2016

Extract

This paper discusses the origin and diffusion of a particular type of very common small house that is characterized by what has come to be known as the lobby-entry plan. It was built in great numbers in the seventeenth century in much of England, and, though superseded by more modern types, continued to be built at least until the middle of this century. The subject, the history of vernacular architecture, is not usually associated with Howard Colvin. Nevertheless, in 1961 he published an account of Haunt Hill House at Weldon in Northamptonshire, a lobby-entry house that clearly shows how artificial the boundary between vernacular and polite architecture really is, if it exists at all; and the same is shown by some of the buildings discussed below.

Type
Section 6: A Miscellany of Building Types and Some Definitions
Copyright
Copyright © Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain 1984

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Notes

1 ‘Haunt Hill House, Weldon’, Studies in Building History, ed. Jope, E. M. (1961), p. 225.Google Scholar

2 ibid., pp. 225-26.

3 Ibid., p. 226. a

4 Hewett, C. A. ‘The development of the post-medieval house’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 7 (1973), 60-78 Google Scholar; Gravett, K. W. E. ‘Whitehall, Cheam’, Surrey Archaeological Collections, 63 (1966), 13849 Google Scholar; Quiney, A. P. ‘Whitehall, Cheam: an earlyjettied house reconsidered’, ibid., 74 (1983), 135-40.Google Scholar

5 Pantin, W. A. ‘Medieval Inns’, Studies in Building History, ed. Jope, E. M. (1961)Google Scholar, fig. 9.6.

6 Mercer, E. English Vernacular Houses (1975), pp. 60-63.Google Scholar

7 Swain, E. R. ‘Divided and galleried hall-houses’, Medieval Archaeology, 12 (1968), 12745.Google Scholar

8 Summers, N. ‘Old Hall Farm, Kneesall’, Transactions of the Thoroton Society, 76 (1972), 17-25.Google Scholar

9 Mercer, p. 62.

10 Parkin, E. J. ‘Cobb’s Hall, Aldington, and the Holy Maid of Kent’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 86 (1971), 1524.Google Scholar

11 Neame, A. The Holy Maid of Kent (1971).Google Scholar

12 PRC 32/15/45-46.

13 Hasted, E. History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, 111 (1790), 457.Google Scholar

14 ED 136-38, 142 and 1206-10.

15 PRO E 305 i/Ai4a.

16 Hasted, 111, 456-58.

17 Parkin, fig. 2.

18 Cowper, W. S. ‘Some timber-framed houses in the Kentish Weald’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 29 (1911), 169-205.Google Scholar

19 Meirion-Jones, G. I. ‘The domestic buildings of Odiham, Hampshire’, Folk Life, 9 (1971), 108-34.Google Scholar

20 McCann, J. and Johnson, I. ‘Whiteheads, Hatfield Broad Oak’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 14 (1980), 189-97.Google Scholar

21 Mercer, p. 156.

22 Op. cit.

23 Suffolk Record Office C 6/1/7 PP- 269-70.

24 Johnson, I. ‘Hill Farm, Laxfield: a lobby-entrance house of the late seventeenth century’, Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History, 35 part 1 (1981), 53-59.Google Scholar

25 RCHM, Cambridgeshire Vol. 1, West Cambridgeshire (1968), p. 88.

26 Jones, S. R. ‘Houndhill, Worsbrough’, Archaeological Journal, 137 (1980), 442-44 Google Scholar; Elmhirst, E. Peculiar Inheritance: a history of the Elmhirsts (1951).Google Scholar

27 Mercer, p. 60.

28 Cummings, A. L. The framed houses ofMassachusetts Bay, 1625-1725 (1979), p. 16.Google Scholar

29 Smith, P. ‘The architectural personality of the British Isles’, Archaeologia Cambrensis, 129 (1980), 1-36.Google Scholar

30 Op. cit., p. 17.

31 Roberts, D. L. ‘The vernacular building of Lincolnshire’, Archaeological Journal, 131 (1974), 298308.Google Scholar

32 Wood-Jones, R. B. Traditional Domestic Architecture in the Banbury Region (Manchester, 1963)Google Scholar, chapter 7.