EPW046008 ENGLAND (1934). Isfield Place, Isfield, 1934

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Nearby Images (43)

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Details

Title [EPW046008] Isfield Place, Isfield, 1934
Reference EPW046008
Date September-1934
Link
Place name ISFIELD
Parish ISFIELD
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 544705, 118441
Longitude / Latitude 0.060146155839755, 50.946672499097
National Grid Reference TQ447184

Pins

Oasthouses to the East of Isfield Place, Isfield Grade 2 listed - English Heritage Building ID: 296362 Not listed until 1982 by which time the roof was tiled- it appears to be thatched here. C19. Two square oasthouses in one building. Red brick and grey headers. Tiled roof with 2 separate projections retaining their cowls.

totoro
Sunday 25th of May 2014 07:16:24 PM

User Comment Contributions



Isfield Place - East Sussex TN22 5XR

Grade 2* building - English Heritage Building ID: 296360

A large irregular-shaped house which incorporates part of the mansion of the

Shurley family of the C16, but the main portion is early C17 and was built by

Sir John Shurley. C19 wing to north-east.



Its principal elevation now faces north over the forecourt but it is likely that the mansion originally faced west, away from the road with a principal west front of around 39 metres in length. The relic moat arm to the south-east of the present house (and possibly the two shorter rectangular stretches of water ten metres to the north and north-east of the house, adjacent to the stable) indicate that the 16th-century house was at least partly moated.



In the early to mid-18th-century, the mansion was reduced to a farm house by the demolition of the hall and parlour ranges, leaving only parts of the western walls standing as garden walls. The southern end of house was re-fashioned in Queen Anne style and the south front re-built to form a garden front



The white limestone Renaissance portico on the west front dates from around 1600 but may not be in its original location.



Formal compartmentalised garden laid out from the late-19th century to the west and south of an Elizabethan manor house. There are surviving elements of garden and landscape features from the 16th century onwards.

In the early-20th-century the enclosed gardens to the west and south of the house were transformed into an Arts and Crafts style 'garden of rooms'.

totoro
Sunday 25th of May 2014 07:01:04 PM