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Low Hartleycleugh Bastle(s)

In the civil parish of West Allen.
In the historic county of Northumberland.
Modern Authority of Northumberland.
1974 county of Northumberland.
Medieval County of Northumberland.

OS Map Grid Reference: NY803487
Latitude 54.83309° Longitude -2.30807°

Low Hartleycleugh Bastle(s) has been described as a certain Bastle.

There are major building remains.

This is a Grade 2 listed building protected by law*.

Description

Bastle house, late C16 or early C17, with early C19 byre/hayloft to north. Rubble with dressings; stone slate roofs. Bastle 2 storeys, 4 irregular bays. Blocked ground-floor doorway with worn lintel inscription; small 4-pane window to right. 1st floor chamfered doorway blocked with later window inserted; to left 2 2-light mullioned windows, one enlarged and the other blocked; to right a small chamfered window. Byre/hayloft to right has boarded door and 2 fixed windows on ground floor; boarded pitching door and slit vents above. Left return shows original byre entrance of bastle, with heavy lintel, blocked and window inserted; above and to left a second blocked door. Rear elevation obscured by C20 lean to. Interior altered. C20 shed to far right not of interest. (Listed Building Report)

Uncertain bastle, 12.7m x 7.6m. Side walls 0.95m thick, end wall 1.2m thick. Byre entrance on ground floor. First floor doorway in long wall (Pers Comm, P F Ryder, 1986).
A rather unusual bastle, the best preserved in West Allendale. Overall measurements are 11.7m by 6.8m, it has adjacent pairs of upper and lower doorways both in the east wall and in the south end; the doorways are all square headed with chamfered surrounds. The lintel of the lower door on the east has remains of an incised inscription which might be legible with oblique lighting. At first floor level there are four windows on the east, a small fire window at the south end (now blocked, and only easily visible internally), then two (one enlarged, one blocked) perhaps originally each of two lights, and a fourth smaller one north of the door, probably another fire window. Inside, concrete refacing and reinforcement means that there is little to see at basement level other than a change in alignment of the east wall, somewhat south of centre, which might indicate the position of a removed cross wall. There are evidences of a firehood - various sockets in the wall - at the south end; similar evidences at the north end may be hidden by plaster. The roof structure is of some interest, consisting of three old trusses, each of principal rafter form with a collar. The southernmost is of better quality with a more massive chamfered tie beam with various mortices and pegholes.
The upper floor was used as living accommodation within the last 50 years; the walls retain plaster and remains of wall paper.
The duplication of doorways to hearth positions and the hints of a removed cross wall, seem to imply that this building was built as a possibly unique semi-detached pair of bastles. There is an adjacent 19th century farm building to the north (Ryder 1994-5). (Northumberland HER)
Comments

Like some other 'semi-detached' peel-houses the question of how these functioned is some mute. Presumably two generations of the same family, working the same holding, had separate living accommodation. The same is probably true for some closely associated pairs or small groups of peel-houses.
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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*The listed building may not be the actual medieval building, but a building on the site of, or incorporating fragments of, the described site.
This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:21:28

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