The tale of two Uffords #atozchallenge

For the letter M I told the sad tale of six houses called Montagu. This time I have two Ufford Halls and thankfully, they are still intact.

The youngest Ufford is a Georgian mansion near Peterborough. The house was built in 1734 by the Duke of Rutland’s younger son, Charles Manner. His son enlarged the hall, added an extra floor and two wings, and the stable block. The house is built using ashlar – precisely cut stone blocks – giving it a smooth finish with no visible mortar. These kind of building blocks could sometimes be scored with a metal comb to create a decorate effect known as mason’s drag.

The house was sold at auction by his nephew to William Leigh Symes, a plantation owner in Jamaica, so you can guess how that was financed. He never lived in the house but leased it for 100 years to tenants.

In 1902 the house was bought, then left to the fourth lord Airedale, who lived in the basement and turned the upper floors into flats. The stable block was turned into a house in its own right. When Lord Airedale died, he tried to hand it over to the National Trust, who declined due to its terrible state of repair. In 2015, after many years of emptiness, a restoration project was started by the current owners.

The second Ufford Hall is in Suffolk and built from timber. Its early features include a cross-beam in the parlour that hasn’t been altered since the 15th century and a Jacobean dog leg staircase. This Ufford hall probably takes its name from the 1st earl of Suffolk, Robert de Ufford who died in 1369 when it was acquired by the Sancroft family until the 18th Century.

William Sancroft was the 79th Archbishop of Canterbury and responsible for overseeing the rebuilding of St Paul’s Cathedral with Sir Christopher Wren. He attended Charles II on his death bed and crowned James II. However, when James was deposed and replaced by a protestant monarch, William couldn’t bring himself to swear an oath of allegiance to the new king and queen (William and Mary), and was removed from office in 1690. But at least he got to retired to his beautiful house in Suffolk.

Now which would you prefer – stone or timber?

 

 

12 comments

  1. Antoinette Truglio Martin · · Reply

    Although the stone looks magnificent, the timber seems cozier. I’d go for cozy.

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    1. Me too, although I would worry about rotten timbers especially by water.

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  2. When you mentioned the precision of the ashlar blocks it reminded me of the stones used to build Machu Picchu in Peru. No mortar at all, just blocks cut so precisely and fit so snuggly that it’s lasted centuries.
    The stone is wonderfully elegant and grand but I do like the homeliness of the timber 🙂

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    1. You see this kind of stonework more in Georgian style houses. They look very refined. I find stone a bit cold.

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      1. Georgian style… interesting. I’ll look up some pictures. I know what you mean about the coldness.

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      2. kevin philbin · ·

        I live in the stone one – – with 15 fireplaces it’s very cozy in winter 🙂

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      3. That’s a lot of wood to burn! Thank you for commenting – I hope I did the house and its history justice. I’m more of a timber fan, probably because I grew up in an East Anglian wool town.

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  3. I love the permanence of buildings in The Old World. One of the charms I hope to explore more fully in the future.

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    1. Having lived in a fourteenth century house for a while, they were definitely shorter in those days – lots of head ducking, but still charming!

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  4. I would want stone exterior with timber price for a warm feeling.
    Facing Cancer with Grace

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    1. Good combination!

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  5. Anonymous · · Reply

    Stone one is mine 😄. That’s not a great view of it now have some lovely pictures of our renovation. The back is actually much prettier and it’s more that cozy, it’s often too hot, thick walls, dual aspect, very lucky to get the sun all day long (when it’s out 😉)

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Comments are always welcome.

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