Seechem Manor / Rowney Green House / Seechem

Date:
27 Jul 2000
Location:
Seechem Manor, Alvechurch, Bromsgrove, Worcestershire
Show all locations
Rowney Green House, Alvechurch, Bromsgrove, Worcestershire
Seechem, Alvechurch, Bromsgrove, Worcestershire
Reference:
IOE01/02416/18
Type:
Photograph (Digital)
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Description

This information is taken from the statutory List as it was in 2001 and may not be up to date.

SP 07 SE ALVECHURCH

7/4 Seechem

II

The entry shall be amended to read:

SP 07 SE ALVECHURCH -

1655-0/7/4 Seechem Manor 16/07/86

- II*

House. Late C15 [dendro-dated 1474]; extended and remodelled circa late C16 [cross-wing dendro-dated 1595]; remodelled again circa early to mid C17, C18 and circa 1840.

Timber-framed, partly stuccoed and partly rebuilt in brick. Clay plain tile roofs with gabled ends, parlour wing with deep verges with ornate pierced bargeboards. Brick lateral and axial stacks with diagonally-set shafts. PLAN: T-shaped plan..2-bay open hall, the low end cross-wing demolished, the solar cross-wing replaced by parlour cross-wing in circa late C16, when a floor and stack were inserted into the open hall. The parlour cross-wing, originally of five bays at least [now reduced to four bays], was remodelled in early to mid C17.

Timber-frame partly replaced in brick in C18 and parlour cross-wing refashioned in circa 1840.

EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and attic. N.E. front: four framed bays with exposed timber-framing, close-studded on ground floor, square-framing above with tension-braces and 5-light moulded mullion window under eaves to right, ground floor window below and first floor window to left blocked, small 2-light casement to ground floor on left; to left of centre stuccoed projecting gabled bay with ornate openwork bargeboards, deeply chamfered window openings, small single-light attic window and 4-light mullion-transom first floor window with hoodmould, below which is porch with gabled parapet, diagonal buttresses with set-offs, chamfered pointed arch with hoodmould and lancets to sides. The right-hand [N.W.] gable end has similar bargeboards and close-studding in the gable, 4-light mullion-transom first floor window with hoodmould and canted bay window on first floor; right-hand return a large lateral brick stack with stone quoins, set-offs and two diagonally-set shafts; wing to right [S.W.], former hall, painted brick with brick dentil eaves, two 3-light casements with glazing bars in segmentally arched openings and central doorway with C19 gabled canopy. S.E. elevation has two small single-light windows, large 3-light window to right and two gabled dormers, all with small-paned casements; doorways to left and right with gabled canopies; gabled cross-wing on right with exposed truss and storey-posts at comers. INTERIOR: Substantial remains of carpentry and joinery from all principal building phases. Kitchen and hall have inserted floor in former open hall with chamfered axial ceiling beams with step stops in the kitchen and convex stops in the hall and large axial stack between the two rooms with large back-to-back fireplaces with sandstone jambs and timber bressumers, the hall's with moulded shelf [and inside later inserted hood made from re-used panelling], panelled doors to left and right, another panelled door to stairhall with carved doorhead and corner cupboards. The inserted stack in the hall has a curing chamber. Good circa early C18 open-well staircase rising to attic with turned balusters, moulded handrail and square newels with ball-finials. Great chamber over parlour has chamfered ceiling beam with straight-cut stops and central boss, C17 panelling, evidence of internal porch and fireplace with fine overmantel with arched panels and Tuscan engaged colonnettes. Cross-wing attics have exposed queen-post roof structure with short straight wind-braces and staggered purlins. Medieval smoke-blackened roof structure exposed in hall chambers; 2-bay hall has central open truss and truss at high end with arch-braced cambered tie-beam, raking struts and curved wind-braces, queen-post truss at low end of hall. NOTE: Seechem Manor was formerly known as Rowney Green House. It is not known who built the Medieval house, but it came into the possession of the Milward family in the late C16 and it was probably Thomas Milward who remodelled and extended the house in circa 1595.

SOURCE: Price, S.J. and Molyneux, N., Seechem Manor, report; 1985.

------------------------------------

SP 07 SE ALVECHURCH CP -

7/4 Seechem

- II

House. Probably C15 with mid-C17 addition, partly clad in early C18, partly remodelled early C19, with some late C20 alterations. Stuccoed timber-frame and painted brick cladding timber-frame. T-plan, four framed bays aligned north-west/south-east. C17, the stem extending to south-west of three bays including two-bay former open hall. North-west front: gabled cross-wing to left of two storeys with attic lit by gable-end window, one window: 4-light casement with square label, ground floor: canted bay window with hipped slate roof; lateral stack of brick with stone quoins has two diamond-plan shafts; early C19 gabled two-storey porch on left-hand return front; hall range: one storey with dentilled brick cornice, two windows: 3-light casements with segmental heads; roughly central entrance has a C19 tiled and gabled canopy, C17 boarded door; leads into baffle-entrance against stack which has two diamond shafts. Interior: roof of hall is smoke-blackened with steeply cambered tie-beams, arch braces and two raking struts. There is a sandstone block (apparently re-set) bearing the date l688 in the present kitchen (south-west room of hall range).

Listing NGR: SP0520172756

Content

This is part of the Series: IOE01/1407 IOE Records taken by David Molyneux; within the Collection: IOE01 Images Of England

Rights

© Mr David Molyneux. Source: Historic England Archive

This photograph was taken for the Images of England project

People & Organisations

Photographer: Molyneux, David

Rights Holder: Molyneux, David

Keywords

Brick, Clay, Stucco, Tile, Timber, Medieval Manor House, Tudor Domestic, House, Dwelling, Cross Wing House, Monument (By Form), Hall House, Open Hall House, Timber Framed House, Timber Framed Building