SOCIAL LIFE.
In the late 18th century and early
19th Tewkesbury supported a number of social
clubs and institutions. That the town was not quite
large enough, or insufficiently enthusiastic, to enjoy
independent cultural activities is suggested by the
history of subscribing libraries there. A library was
started in 1802 but closed soon after. It was revived
in 1814 and lasted until 1823. (fn. 1) Five years later, in
1828, a public library and news room, with new
accommodation, was opened, but there were too
few subscribers and it survived only until 1831. (fn. 2)
The Tewkesbury Reading Society, founded in
1833, (fn. 3) appears to have been revived or given a
broader base in 1838 as the Literary, Scientific, and
Mechanics' Institute. (fn. 4) The library was at the Cross,
between High Street and Barton Street, (fn. 5) and the
Institute organized lectures on a wide variety of
topics. (fn. 6) Nevertheless it was wound up, because of
lack of support, in 1843. (fn. 7)
The theatre in Tewkesbury had no more lasting
success. The history of drama in Tewkesbury goes
back to 1567, when the churchwardens kept and
hired out 'players' gear', (fn. 8) and in 1600 public plays
were one method used to raise money for church
repairs. (fn. 9) The New Theatre mentioned in 1762 (fn. 10)
may have been the barn in the Oldbury that was
used for plays. Later there were temporary theatres
in the fields outside the town, where the elder John
Kemble was once among the performers. A new
theatre was fitted up in 1823 in Oldbury Road,
possibly in the barn used earlier for plays. (fn. 11) For a
short time the theatre was a success, and Kean and
Macready acted there in 1825. From 1827, however,
the theatre declined, and an ambitious programme
in 1835 failed. In 1838 the building was taken into
use as a Sunday school, and from 1847 (fn. 12) to 1870 was
a silk mill. (fn. 13) By 1912 the building was in use as a
cinema. It later became a fire-station, (fn. 14) having been
closed as a cinema presumably about the time the
Sabrina Cinema was opened near the north end of
High Street, in 1934. The Sabrina Cinema was itself
closed in 1963. (fn. 15)
Musical activity in the town centred naturally on
the abbey church, with its three organs. (fn. 16) A music
festival was held in 1840, (fn. 17) and a choral society
formed by 1842. (fn. 18) The former Friends' meetinghouse became, between 1856 and 1863, what was
called a music hall (fn. 19) but appears to have had the
characteristics of a concert hall. (fn. 20) By 1939 it was
known as the George Watson Memorial Hall, after
its former owner, (fn. 21) and in 1964 was held under a
trust deed of 1956. (fn. 22) It was reopened in 1962 after
enlargement and renovation. (fn. 23) In the early 19th
century public dances were regularly held in the
town hall. (fn. 24) A town museum was established in
1960. (fn. 25)
In the period 1771–92 eight friendly societies in
Tewkesbury, including one specifically for women,
were registered at Quarter Sessions; (fn. 26) in 1803 there
were 12 societies with a combined membership of
nearly 800. (fn. 27) In the thirties the Independent
Englishmen's Friendly Society, formed as a splinter
group of the British Standard Society, (fn. 28) became
socially the most prominent of the Tewkesbury
friendly societies. (fn. 29) In all, in the period 1794–1872
the Registrar of Friendly Societies registered 29
societies in Tewkesbury; these included three for
women and one for watermen. (fn. 30) The town supported
a volunteer troop of cavalry from 1803 to 1814, and
a volunteer corps of infantry from 1803 to 1808. (fn. 31)
A small and not very active group of Chartists in the
town broke up in 1839 when the secretary and
treasurer, a journeyman stocking-maker, absconded
with the funds. (fn. 32) Chartists supported the temperance
movement in Tewkesbury, and one of them kept a
short-lived temperance hotel there, 1841–3. (fn. 33)
Horse-races on Severn Ham were established by
1721, when the Prince of Wales gave a gold cup. (fn. 34)
Races were held there annually (fn. 35) until 1813, were
briefly resumed (fn. 36) 1825–8, and were again revived in
1841. The meeting was called the Tewkesbury and
Gloucestershire Races from 1843 to 1845, when no
meetings were held at Cheltenham, but from 1846
the Tewkesbury races appear to have dwindled in
importance. (fn. 37) In 1830 the sporting facilities of the
town included the bowling-green at the 'Bell', a
fives-court at the 'Wheatsheaf', and a quoit-yard
at the Upper Lode. (fn. 38) A rowing club was formed in
1835 (fn. 39) and a cricket club some time before 1845. (fn. 40) In
the 20th century the town had in addition clubs for
bowling, fishing, football, golf, and tennis. (fn. 41)
As a social centre Tewkesbury provided openings
for professional men. It may not be legitimate to
include among them the barbers recorded in the
town in 1327, (fn. 42) 1540 (when there were three), (fn. 43) 1608, (fn. 44)
1733, and 1769, (fn. 45) but surgeons are recorded from
1608 (fn. 46) onwards: there were two in 1784 (fn. 47) and seven
in 1820. Thereafter their numbers dropped. In 1820
there were also three veterinary surgeons. (fn. 48) At least
six apothecaries were recorded in Tewkesbury in the
later 17th century, (fn. 49) and five were listed in 1842. (fn. 50)
A retail druggist who settled in the town in 1789 was
said to be the first of his calling there. (fn. 51)
A notary was settled in Tewkesbury before 1469. (fn. 52)
In the early 17th century Thomas Vaughan practised
law there. (fn. 53) There were five attornies in 1784, (fn. 54)
nine in 1820, (fn. 55) and up to seven solicitors in the early
20th century. (fn. 56) There were two firms of auctioneers
in 1820, (fn. 57) as there were until 1964, and in the mid19th century there were also four surveyors. (fn. 58) In
addition to two local banks, Lechmere's and Hartland's, a provident bank was started in 1818. (fn. 59) The
town had a writing-master in the mid-18th century. (fn. 60)
From 1760 to 1925 there were usually two or more
printers working in Tewkesbury. (fn. 61) Samuel
Harward's chapbooks, printed there 1760–75,
achieved notoriety in the 19th century because they
commanded high prices. (fn. 62) The town had a newspaper from 1853, the Tewkesbury Monthly Record
and General Advertiser, which in 1855 became the
Tewkesbury Weekly Record; (fn. 63) it published its last
issue in 1922. In 1858, when the Record became a
Liberal newspaper, another weekly, the Tewkesbury
Register and Gazette, was founded in the Conservative
interest; the Register became politically independent
in 1930, the year after it was sold by its local owner
to W. H. Smith & Co. (fn. 64) The Register survived in
1964, having been acquired in 1961 by the News of
the World. (fn. 65) The Tewkesbury Magazine and Literary
Journal, started in 1843, ran to only three issues. (fn. 66)
Its size and position naturally gave Tewkesbury a
large number of inns. In 1533 4 inns and 16 taverns
were recorded, (fn. 67) and in 1781 there were 9 inns and
an additional number of taverns. (fn. 68) In 1820 there
were 15 taverns as well as the 9 inns, (fn. 69) and in the
later 19th century the declining importance and
prosperity of the town were not reflected by a fall in
the number of inns: in 1870 there were 22 inns and
12 beer-shops besides. (fn. 70) The number of licensed
premises was 35 in 1891, (fn. 71) but thereafter fell. The
inns that survived a long while included the 'George',
recorded in the late 16th century (fn. 72) and the late 19th, (fn. 73)
and the 'Wheatsheaf', an inn in 1744 (fn. 74) and 1939 (fn. 75)
and a coffee-house in 1964. Surviving as inns in
1964 were the 'Swan', recorded in its modern
position in the mid-16th century, (fn. 76) the 'Plough',
recorded in 1644, (fn. 77) and the 'King's Head', recorded
in 1707. (fn. 78) Three inns, the 'Bell', the 'Mason's Arms',
and the 'Hop Pole', (fn. 79) were mentioned in 1770, but
each of them by a different name. (fn. 80) Several innnames are known to have been applied at different
periods to different inns: thus the 'White Hart', a
name recorded in 1538, (fn. 81) was incorporated into the
'Swan', a large coaching inn, between 1770 and
1833, (fn. 82) and was not the same as the 'White Hart' of
1891; (fn. 83) the great hospice called the Crown or New
Inn and leased by the abbot and convent of Tewkesbury in 1530 was on the south side of Church Street
west of Gander Lane, (fn. 84) perhaps on the site of Abbey
Lawn House (demolished 1964), and was not the
same as the New Inn of 1770, which later became the
'Hop Pole', (fn. 85) and another New Inn was licensed in
1891. (fn. 86) A tavern in Southwick was recorded in
1541; (fn. 87) soon after the Crimean War the Odessa Inn (fn. 88)
was opened where the main road crosses the southern
boundary of the parish, and Gubshill Manor was an
hotel by 1931. (fn. 89) In the early 16th century brewers
and alehouse-keepers in the Mythe were presented
in the hundred court. (fn. 90) An alehouse in the Mythe in
1598 was licensed, though disorderly; (fn. 91) it may have
been a precursor of the 'Admiral Benbow', which
in 1788 stood in the meadow near the Long Bridge. (fn. 92)
Buildings.
Manor-houses, churches and
chapels, other buildings of a public nature, and the
domestic buildings of the hamlets, are described
elsewhere in this account. (fn. 93) The old houses of the
town, occupying a large proportion of the frontage
of the three main streets, have attracted much
attention, particularly for the many examples of
timber-framing. The intermingling of Georgian
brick fronts among the older timber-framed houses
is a characteristic feature of the main streets. In
addition, historical interest has been drawn to the
complex of buildings of the abbey precincts and to
the location of the supposed Holm Castle.
The supposed castle. The earliest known
reference to a castle at Tewkesbury is in Leland's
Itinerary, which places the castle at Holm Hill, the
high ground south of Swilgate Bridge. In Leland's
time some ruins of the bottoms of walls were visible,
and people remembered parts of a castle standing. (fn. 94)
By the end of the 16th century there were hardly
any remains to be seen. (fn. 95) It has been suggested that
in 1471 the Lancastrian forces tried to exploit the
castle ruins as a defensive position. (fn. 96) It is likely,
however, that the ruins which Leland saw were
those not of a castle but of a large house. There is no
better evidence than Leland's for the existence of a
castle, which can hardly be reconciled with the
complete absence of any reference to the castle from
the usual medieval records, particularly from the
Pipe Rolls of the late 12th century and early 13th
when Tewkesbury was in the possession of the
Crown. (fn. 97)
The large house whose ruins Leland saw was
perhaps not in the same position as the hall recorded
in 1086, (fn. 98) which is likely to have been the precursor
of the 'splendid house' of the Earl of Gloucester
which Waleran Earl of Worcester destroyed in
1140. (fn. 99) It is possible that the house destroyed in 1140
was rebuilt as the stables which became the earl's
barton that gave its name to Barton Street, (fn. 100) while
a new residence was built on Holm Hill. The new
chimneys and windows made in 1201 (fn. 101) may have
been for such a house, making it a fit house for King
John's Christmas in 1204. (fn. 102) The Earl of Gloucester's
household at Tewkesbury was recorded in 1221, (fn. 103)
and the repairs ordered in 1241 for the greater and
lesser chapels at Tewkesbury were part of repairs
to be carried out on the buildings of the earl's
residence. (fn. 104)
Surveys of the manor in the period 1296–1375
make no mention of a castle, but the house at Holm
Hill was recorded in 1296 as the chief court, with
other buildings, gardens, and a dovecot. (fn. 105) From 1307
it was described as the chief messuage, (fn. 106) and its
value declined, being allegedly nothing beyond the
outgoings in 1337 and 1375. In 1327 and 1359 the
chief messuage was associated with a vineyard and
fishpond, and the dovecot continued to be recorded. (fn. 107)
It is therefore likely that the gardens recorded in the
15th century and early 16th (fn. 108) in association with a
dovecot and a vineyard were in or around the ruins
of the chief messuage and its buildings. By the late
14th century the house had been replaced as a
residence by the one on the site of Tewkesbury
Park. (fn. 109) The house in the Mythe called King John's
Castle is described below. (fn. 110) William Fisher 'of the
Castle in this town', buried in 1685, (fn. 111) may have
occupied an inn or tavern.
The abbey precincts. Of the buildings in the
precincts of Tewkesbury Abbey, the church and the
range of buildings running west from its west end
survive. The church is described below. The main
conventual buildings, south of the church, were
badly damaged by fire in 1178, (fn. 112) and were demolished
at the Dissolution; the buildings then deemed
superfluous included the cloisters, chapter-house,
misericord, two dormitories, infirmary, and various
lodgings and offices. (fn. 113) Part of the fabric of the
cloisters survives against the south wall of the
church, but in 1830 any other visible remains of the
demolished buildings were obliterated when the site
was levelled. The range of buildings running west
from the church was listed for retention, including
the Newark, the former abbot's lodging, the hostelry,
the great gate with the lodging over it, and various
offices. The Newark, which may have been the new
abbot's lodging, was probably what survives as
Abbey House. (fn. 114) The house is a stone building, on a
rectangular plan, which has been considerably
altered at several periods. It retains, however, on the
north side an upper oriel window of the early 16th
century built into an earlier wall containing windows
which from their tracery appear also to be earlier.
The oriel window is embellished on the outside with
carvings of coats of arms and a monogram, and with
an inscription of which the word misericord' is
legible. By 1795 the embattled parapet of the north
wall had been replaced by the eaves of a new roof,
and c. 1825, apparently following the sale of the
estate of which the house formed part, (fn. 115) the south
front was remodelled and the interior modernized.
Further alterations and extensions were made in the
late 19th century, when the vicars of Tewkesbury
began to live in the house, (fn. 116) and further alterations
were being undertaken in 1964.
West of Abbey House the two-storied stone gatehouse was built in the late 15th century or early 16th.
By 1849 it had become much dilapidated, and was
restored in that year as a faithful reconstruction of
the original; (fn. 117) the architect was John Medland, and
the masonry work was done by Thomas Collins, (fn. 118)
who was later to restore many other buildings in the
town. Doors of carved oak were added in 1855. (fn. 119)
West again of the gatehouse is part of a timberframed barn that is likely to represent the almonry
barn, and two cottages, which contained medieval
and 16th-century work, (fn. 120) may survive from the
almonry house; both the barn and the house were
recorded in 1632. (fn. 121)
East of the abbey church, the abbey precinct
included the Workhey gate, with a room over it (fn. 122) and
a house adjoining it, both scheduled to be demolished
at the Dissolution, (fn. 123) while the churchyard to the
north of the church contained a free-standing belfry
and several houses or rooms. (fn. 124) The belfry was a
square stone tower with a pyramidal roof behind an
embattled parapet. In the early 19th century it had
a pointed doorway, square-headed windows, and
15th-century belfry-lights. There was a large crack
in one wall, (fn. 125) and in 1816 the tower, which had been
used as a gaol, was removed to provide a site for the
National school. (fn. 126)
On the farther side of Church Street the abbey's
buildings included the Abbey Mills (fn. 127) and the abbey
barton or barn, and perhaps near-by stood the abbey
furnace-house and tan-house that in 1542 were
scheduled for demolition. (fn. 128) The location of the abbey
barton is clear from a grant of 1557, (fn. 129) and there is
little doubt that it was the building, at the lower end
of Mill Street, of which the lower parts of the heavily
buttressed stone walls have survived. In 1540 it was
used partly as a prison for the abbot's fee. (fn. 130) In the
early 20th century it housed the fire engine, (fn. 131) and in
1964 part of it was used as a pottery. A wall running
south-west from the barton includes fragments of an
ancient stone wall that may have marked the edge of
both the town and the abbey precincts.
Domestic buildings of the town. A stonevaulted cellar under Nos. 89–90 Church Street
appears to be the earliest survival of domestic
building. It was built in the late 13th or early 14th
century, and once comprised two quadripartite bays
with narrow, chamfered ribs and side corbels. The
cellar has been shortened, and the house above is not
earlier than the 16th century. The other cellars in
the town seem to be relatively late, and have heavy,
chamfered ceiling beams. Most of them have a door
to the street and occupy the full width of the building
site.
There are three examples of the larger medieval
town house: Newton House, the eastern part of the
Royal Hop Pole Hotel, and Nos. 81–82 Barton Street.
Each contained a single-story hall wing behind a
storied, or partly storied, range of building along the
street. At Newton House (No. 27 Church Street) the
long south wing, of the early 15th century, contains
part of a hall of two bays divided by a central open
truss with cambered tie- and collar-beam. Large
braces arched to the soffit of the tie-beam were
removed when an upper floor was inserted in the
early 17th century. Surviving mortices indicate the
presence of a strut in the spandrels between the
braces and the side posts. The triangular opening
above the collar-beam has cusped sides. In each bay
an intermediate truss with collar-beam only is
similarly decorated. Curved wind-braces from the
main trusses meet the purlin immediately below the
intermediate trusses. The exposed timbers of the
hall are smoke-blackened. Except for the south end,
of c. 1600, the other bays are contemporary with the
hall but were storied and have plainer trusses. The
ground floor rooms were remodelled in the early 18th
century when the west wall was rebuilt in brick. The
hall was reached from the street apparently by a side
passage through the northern range fronting on
Church Street; the northern range was thoroughly
rebuilt in the 18th and 19th centuries, and the north
end of the hall was cut off in the process.
Nos. 81–82 Barton Street, of two stories and attics,
had a one-bay hall in its street range, and a long
southern wing, apparently 14th-century, with cruck
partition trusses, contained a hall and solar each
of two bays. The two-bay hall had at its north end a
west window of two lights, of which the head
survives, and at its south end an east doorway,
apparently one of two opposed doorways, of which
the two-centred arch survives. Under the solar is a
room with an axial ceiling beam, supported by a
large curved bracket at its southern end. The two
cruck trusses forming the ends of the hall have arched
braces to the collar-beam, and a third at the south
gable-end has widely spaced studs. The central truss
of the hall has a pair of common rafters on each
slope, and the curved braces below the collar-beam
form a two-centred arch, the collar-beam being
rebated at the sides to follow the curve of the arch
braces. The corresponding truss in the solar has a
plain collar-beam without braces. All the rooftimbers, including the unusually large curved windbraces, are heavily smoke-blackened. Upper floors,
partitions, and an axial chimney-stack were inserted
in the 17th century, and the side walls were rebuilt in
brick in the 18th or 19th. The relationship of the
southern wing to the building fronting the street is
uncertain. No. 81 formed a one-bay hall, of which
the floor area extended under the solar in No. 82 as
far as the cross-passage from the street to the back;
the occurrence of such an arrangement elsewhere is
discussed below.
The Royal Hop Pole Hotel, Church Street,
comprises two structurally separate buildings in its
street front. The eastern half consisted of a threestoried, two-bay range jettied towards the street,
with a contemporary hall wing to the north, the
whole apparently of the later 15th century. The
range to the street had a single large room on the
ground and the first floor. The ground-floor room
has exposed ceiling joists and was once lit by a range
of two-light windows; it connects by a four-centred
arched doorway with a wide side-passage, of which
the original street doorway, with carved spandrels,
moulded jambs, and brackets, is a larger version of
similarly placed doorways in other houses of the
town. The first-floor room was of some pretensions,
having had two three-light windows with traceried
heads and an oriel window, replaced in the 17th
century, over the entry to the side passage; the main
ceiling beams have chamfered soffit-nibs. The second
floor was once open to the roof, and the partition
truss had shallow arch-braces to a collar-beam which
had a central boss. The contemporary hall wing is of
three bays; the floor area of the hall extended over all
three, but the bay adjoining the range fronting the
street had an upper story. The upper story was built
above an elaborately moulded bressummer, supported by arched brackets, and there is a waist rail
corresponding in height and in decorative detail in
the east wall of the hall. A similarly enriched wallplate and cornice above indicate the quality of the
hall. The former open truss has a deep arch-braced
collar-beam, with curved wind-braces to single
purlins. A chimney-stack at the north end and an
upper floor with richly moulded joists were inserted
in the earlier 16th century. A two-storied wing
adjoining the north-west corner of the hall wing and
similarly aligned was built in the late 14th century.
The upper rooms were open to the roof, which had a
collar-purlin supported by crown-posts with fourway brackets. The cambered tie-beams are braced
from principal posts in the side walls. An ovolo
moulding cut from the solid runs from each face of
the tie beams and along the upper edge of the wall
plates. Riven lath filling in the internal trusses may
represent an early division of the wing into separate
lodgings.

Tewkesbury, showing domestic buildings
Among the timber-framed houses of Tewkesbury
the 'side-entry' type of plan is frequently identifiable
in medieval buildings and persisted up to the late
17th century. One side of the ground floor formed
a passage leading from the street to the back of the
house, and access to the ground-floor room was by a
central doorway in the partition between the room
and the passage. Early chimney-stacks are usually in
the middle of the back wall, and their relationship to
wings extending from the back suggests that such
wings were an integral part of the plan. Some of the
earlier houses, however, had no original chimneystack, and others had them inserted axially or on a
side wall. Until the late 17th century a winder
staircase was characteristically at the junction
between the front range and the back wing. The sole
surviving example of a timber-framed stair wing
was added in the 17th century to No. 128 High
Street, a house of early 16th-century origin.
The front range of the side-entry houses is usually
two bays wide and one room deep. The larger houses
are jettied at each floor, and the two lower stories
appear to have had long ranges of window openings,
with traceried heads and moulded mullions in some
instances, which until the 16th century were unglazed and closed by internal shutters. Associated
with the elaborate fenestration is the use of close
studding and heavily moulded fascia or bressummer
beams. The close studding, more for effect than for
structural necessity, is apparently confined to housefronts and exposed gable-ends. In contrast, the
framing of side and end walls is usually of large
panels of wattle and daub with long incurved braces
stiffening the structure, a technique used in the 16th
century in a way indistinguishable from that of the
15th. Internally the decorative treatment is usually
more thorough on one of the two lower floors than
on the other, and the choice between the two
presumably depended on whether or not the ground
floor was used for business purposes. Many of the
side passages later provided access to houses built in
back courts or alleys.
There are some smaller side-entry houses, without
jettied first floors, in which one of the two bays was
a hall open to the roof, the floor area of the hall
extending under the upper floor of the other bay as
far as the partition to the passage. From the hall
access to the upper room was presumably by a
ladder stairway, and it may have been from such a
stairway that Margery Hull fell to her death c. 1392. (fn. 132)
All such houses had upper floors added across the
hall bay in the 16th or 17th century. One of them,
Nos. 117–18 High Street had the solar in the jettied
cross-wing on the south and the hall, with low side
walls and steeply pitched roof, to the north of it;
the hall had an open tie-beam truss. By contrast
Nos. 27–29 Barton Street, a more substantial house,
had the solar in the same range as the hall; the hall
contained an arch-braced collar-beam truss. Both
houses had chimney-stacks added in the 16th
century when upper floors were inserted in the halls.
In each house the back wing probably provided
service rooms with a chamber above. No. 105
Church Street was a similar house, with a hall
aligned with the street; the extremely long curved
braces in the end-framing and the slightly curved
chamfered wind-braces to the purlins are characteristic of the early 15th century.
The roofs of most of the houses are parallel to the
street. Notable exceptions are the 'Berkeley Arms'
in Church Street and Nos. 15–16 Church Street, each
of which has a twin-gabled roof at right-angles to
the street, and No. 9 Church Street may once have
been similar. In Nos. 15–16 the second-floor rooms
have remained open to the roof, with a partition
containing blocked doorways between Nos. 15 and
16 and a transverse, framed partition beneath the
central truss of each roof. The intermediate trusses
have arch-braced, cambered collar-beams and
curved wind-braces to the purlins. The front range
and the rear wing were built at roughly the same
time in the late 15th century. In the rear wing the
first-floor room has elaborately moulded ceiling and
cornice beams, and the main ceiling beam was once
bracketed from wall-posts with capitals and shafts;
externally the jettied floors are bracketed from
similar shafts. The second-floor room has ceiling
beams at a higher level than the wall-plate, and in
the roof-space are trusses designed to be seen and
decorated with a moulding corresponding with that
on the first-floor wall-posts. The 'Berkeley Arms',
of three stories throughout, preserves in the groundfloor rooms a series of moulded ceiling beams and
side-posts of the late 15th or early 16th century.
There was formerly a range of twelve window-lights,
with a large central mullion, lighting the ground
floor from the street, and another range at first-floor
level. The rear wing, which is not jettied, retains in
a ceiling a trimmed opening for a stair ladder to the
second floor. Built against the south end of the wing
is a three-bay, two-storied house of the early 16th
century, and beyond it later in the century a twostoried framed barn or warehouse was added,
occupying the whole width of the plot.
Houses with a single gable-end towards the street
and an entrance to one side of the front include
Nos. 6 and 7 Church Street, both heightened from
two to three stories before 1700, and — a wider and
more substantial version — No. 32 Barton Street.
Other examples may once have been part of larger
houses: No. 17 Barton Street, a refronted twostoried building of the 15th century, may have been
the solar wing of one of the adjoining houses, and
No. 50 Barton Street, a two-storied, jettied solar
wing of c. 1500, may have belonged to a hall
represented by the rebuilt No. 49.
Nos. 107–8 Church Street (Cross House),
restored c. 1860 by the builder Thomas Collins, the
then owner and occupier, (fn. 133) comprises at least two
dwellings gabled towards the street and probably a
third gabled towards Tolsey Lane. The ground floor
of No. 107 retains early 16th-century moulded
ceiling beams and joists. The ornate timber screen
in the passage may be reset from elsewhere. No. 108
may have had a side-entry plan which has been
obscured by alterations in the 17th century, when
the tall third story and attics were added, and in the
19th.
Nos. 82–83 Church Street and Nos. 154–5 High
Street preserve in part their late 15th- or early 16thcentury fenestration. The first floor of Nos. 82–83
Church Street has what appears to be a combination
of window-lights and filled panels, each with a
traceried head, in a range extending right across the
front. Each house has a central common chimneystack and is unusual in having no back wing.
Nos. 88–88a Church Street, a late 15th-century
house of side-entry plan, is unusual in having been
jettied out on curved brackets at both the front and
the back, and in having in the exposed framing at the
back large tension braces resembling those at Abbey
Cottages. The jettying at the back results in an
unusual, though apparently early, relationship with
the adjacent small building and in the placing of the
chimney-stack, with two moulded stone fireplaces,
against the side wall of the house.
No. 12 High Street (formerly the Fleece Inn),
though gutted, restored, and refronted with false
framing, had formerly a side-entry plan with the
variant of a chimney-stack on the side wall. The
wing behind, built after the front range, was once
similar in appearance to the house behind the
'Berkeley Arms' and of the same early 16th-century
date, but it has been much altered.
Of the two-storied timber-framed houses many
are of the 16th century, or perhaps of the late 15th.
Originally such houses had the first floor open to the
rafters, the attic floors being later insertions. The
absence of ornamental external framing incorporating quadrant or diagonal struts, as found in contemporary houses in other West Midland towns,
may have resulted from the traditional local use of
close-studding. In High Street the two-storied
timber-framed houses are mostly on the east side and
towards the north end. No. 129 (the 'Nottingham
Arms') was built c. 1500 and has ceiling beams of that
period. The Black Bear Inn is mainly of the early
16th century, with jettied first floor on the east and
north sides; the carved north-east corner-post has
an angle bracket to a dragon beam. Nos. 75–76 and
No. 115 are also of the early 16th century, and Nos.
1–2 Mythe Road, which face down High Street,
are slightly later. In Barton Street two-story houses
predominate: the back wing of the 'Lord Nelson',
like Nos. 27–29, and Nos. 81–82, mentioned above,
is clearly medieval; No. 35 is slightly later, a
reasonably complete example of a side-entry house;
No. 33 is a more pretentious house of the early 16th
century. In Church Street the two-storied houses
include Nos. 57–58, with numbered trusses in the
surviving framed bay. No. 66, at the corner of St.
Mary's Lane, is a mid-16th-century jettied building
with corner-post and dragon beam, its framing of
close-studding intersected by large and small tension
braces. At Nos. 12–15 Mill Street the exposed
framing at the back suggests that the group formed
two houses in the early 16th century. Adjoining No.
15, No. 1 Mill Bank is of the same period and has a
jettied first floor, with moulded bressummers and
sill-rail, and tension braces; at the western corner a
dragon beam and supporting bracket show that the
south-west wall also projected.

Abbey Cottages Ground-plan of a typical unit with medieval walls shown black.
Nos. 34–50 Church Street, known as Abbey
Cottages, represent a continuous terrace of at least
23 timber-framed dwellings built probably in the
15th or early 16th century. (fn. 134) Despite later alterations
the main structure remains almost intact. The
survival of a medieval terrace of such length is most
unusual, if not unique. Most of the row is housed
under a continuous roof, parallel with the street,
and consists of small units with two-storied singlebay fronts. Towards the eastern end, however, the
roof line is interrupted by a three-storied block of
three bays, each bay originally having a front gable.
West of that block were at least fourteen units, but
two were rebuilt in the 18th century (now No. 49)
and half the end house is missing. The fronts were
originally jettied, the overhang being supported on
exposed bullnosed joists and curved brackets. The
jetty has been obscured by a later brick wall,
built about 2 ft. outside the original ground-floor
framing. The open character of this framing suggests
that the front room of each house was designed for
use as a shop. The head-beam had end-brackets and
a single central mortice, perhaps to receive a stud
against which shutters could be secured. Notches
found on some of the principal posts may have
housed a rail to suport a counter. Beside each shopfront was an entrance doorway with an ogee head;
three of them survive. (fn. 135) Each house was 11 ft.
6 ins. wide and two rooms deep. (fn. 136) The front was
two-storied, the upper room being rather longer
from back to front than the shop beneath it. Heavy
smoke-blackening in the back room suggests that
this was a small open hall, rising through both
stories. At roof level a sloping wattle-and-daub
partition converted the back part of the roof-space
into a hood to carry off smoke from the hearth below.
A stair, partitioned off from one side of the hall,
gave access to the single upper room. In at least
some cases there were lean-to extensions behind the
hall, also smoke-blackened internally, which may
have been slightly later than the original structures.
All the houses have been altered or further extended
at the rear to accommodate new staircases; later
chimneys have also been inserted, usually on the
partitions between the front and back rooms. The
seven units to the east of the three-storied group are
similar to those on the west, but the position of the
entrance doorways is reversed, giving plans which
are mirror-images of those already described.
Differences in the design of the front framing of the
upper stories, of which less survives, may indicate a
slightly later date. In general the alterations have
been more various and more drastic in the eastern
part of the terrace. The most westerly house of the
three-storied block is one bay wide and has a
similar plan to those further west; the extra story is
jettied towards the street and is surmounted by a
gable with carved barge-boards. The rest of the
block consists of one much larger house with an
altered two-bay front which originally had twin
gables (No. 40). At its rear are the remnants of an
open hall with, beyond it, two further two-storied
bays which are now derelict.
In the town generally the 16th century and early
17th saw the introduction of larger windows to the
lower floors, still in an unbroken line along the entire
front but glazed, using mullions and transoms, and
often brought forward as a three-sided bay at the
centre. The arched bracket was replaced as a support
for the overhang by a carved console, commonly of
bulbous profile. Attic stories were added, with one
or more gable dormers. Most of the larger sideentry houses were given new timber-framed elevations roughly in the period 1570–1670.
No. 15 High St. (the Ancient Grudge Café) is
perhaps the earliest example of refronting in the
town. A front of herring-bone or chevron framing
was added to a late medieval house which in the
ground-floor front room has heavily moulded ceiling
beams of c. 1530, a ceiling boss carved with the
Agnus Dei, a four-centred moulded fireplace arch
with the initials R.B., and fragments of linenfold
panelling. The rear wing may once have been
divided into hall and service rooms.
No. 132 High St. (formerly the Wheatsheaf Inn)
was built c. 1500 with a three-storied jettied front.
In the mid-17th century it was given a new framed
elevation towards the street set several feet forward
of the original line. The initials J.V. in a decorative
panel above the door lintel may be for John Underhill (d. 1719). (fn. 137) The almost vertical façade is surmounted by a fourth story with an ogee shaped
gable; there are long ranges of mullioned and
transomed windows with a shallow bay at the centre,
and the timber studs have ovolo-moulded edges
and are set forward to achieve a panelled effect.
No. 140 High Street (Clarence House) has studs
in its 17th-century front with comparable embellishment, a groove with a semi-circular head. The
original house was presumably a storied structure
of the early 16th century, gabled towards the street;
it was rebuilt in the third quarter of the 17th century
and further heightened or remodelled a few years
later. The top or fourth story has a flat roof, with a
bold eaves cornice carried on carved modillions, and
bullseye windows. The first-floor room has a
moulded plaster ceiling in four large panels, each
with a heavy garland motif and putti; the ceiling,
the side chimney-stack, and the balustraded stairs
are part of the main alterations of 1650–75.
No. 9 High Street (Keys House or the Old Coach
Office) was originally a three-storied house, with a
two-storied rear wing, built apparently in the early
16th century. It was raised by one story and
embellished in the mid-17th century, with ovolomoulded ceiling beams and door-frames, fourcentred stone fireplaces, and plaster ceilings
decorated with mermaids. The inclined twin gables
with pendants and bracketed oriel windows are a
distinctive feature of the house. Other houses of
16th-century origin and having twin gables are
No. 22 Barton Street and Nos. 91–92 Church Street.
No. 100 Church Street (the Hat Shop) has on the
doorhead the date 1664, (fn. 138) which is that of the entire
front, with its continuous windows to each of the
two stories above the later shop. The whole structure
was rebuilt in the mid-17th century except for the
chimney-stack and the back wing, which was later
truncated. The roof is hipped.
No. 64 Barton Street (the Museum) (fn. 139) was rebuilt
about the same time, but incorporates internally the
framing of an earlier structure. The enlargement
required supporting posts under the projecting bay
window to the first floor; the division of that floor
into two rooms apparently survives from the earlier
house. On the ground floor the room at the east end
of the front is panelled with an arcaded frieze, and
the second-floor room above it has plaster work of
the late 17th century. The house departs from
the plan of the traditional side-entry house in
having a central passageway between two heated
rooms and a staircase, since replaced, in the back
wing.
No. 135 High Street retains its early 16th-century
carved shafts and curved brackets supporting the
overhang by the second and third stories. The fourth
story with a hipped roof is a late 17th-century
recasting of what was apparently a roof with cocklofts of c. 1600. The internal panelling, the corner
fireplaces, and the staircase with twisted balusters
were added c. 1680.
The end of the use of timber-framing in the town,
at least in the more important buildings, was marked
by the refronting in brick of the Tudor House Hotel,
High Street, in 1701. At the end of the 17th century
plaster pargetting was used to conceal the then
unfashionable timber-framing. Cross House was
decorated with plaster reliefs in the form of
medallions and cartouches, and was given angle
quoins; its frontage bore the date 1693. (fn. 140) No. 22
Barton Street retains fragments of pargetting at the
back, including a shield emblem; the date 1694 on
a fireback inside the house may indicate when the
work was done. No. 21 High Street has simulated
ashlar ineffectively superimposed on its jettied front.
The pargetting on No. 140 High Street (Clarence
House) is more restricted but of a high decorative
quality. The date 1696 on the front of the Bell Hotel
may refer to a former pargetting, but the windowframes and glazing, which seem not to be insertions,
are of the later 17th century, and the shallow projection, marked by a plaster cove, at each floor could
accord with the date. The character of the timbers at
the gable-ends gives support to the idea that the
whole building is of one date late in the 17th century.
The Tudor House Hotel, on the west side of High
Street, incorporates a timber-framed building
probably of the 16th century which was enlarged to
the south and with two wings extending backwards
in the earlier 17th century. The large panelled room
in the older part of the building has features — its
size, its height, and opposed doors at the west end —
suggestive of a hall; it was presumably the main
room of the nonconformist academy that occupied
the house in the early 18th century. (fn. 141) The front of
the house was rebuilt in brick to a height of three
stories, with attics under a hipped roof, a modillion
eaves cornice, and mullioned and transomed
windows, in 1701. (fn. 142) In the late 19th century a false
timber-framed front was superimposed. Much of the
internal woodwork, including a fine staircase, is of
the mid-18th century, as is also a brick gazebo at the
end of the garden. The precise date may be indicated
by that on a lead cistern in the garden, 1741, with
the initials T.M.K., perhaps for Thomas Kemble
(d. 1776) and his wife Margaret. (fn. 143) The stone gateway
from High Street to the garden is apparently of the
later 17th century.
Nos. 35 and 46 High Street were altered in the
early 18th century, in each case to accommodate a
spacious flagged entrance hall with staircase in the
back wing of a side-entry house of the early 16th
century. No. 46 was refronted by underpinning the
first floor and cutting back the overhang of the floor
above, a drastic method of achieving a vertical
frontage that was widely adopted in the town.
New brick houses built in the early 18th century
include No. 77 Church Street, a brick house sited in
an unusual way at right angles to the street with a
small entrance court on its west side. It is typical of
18th-century houses in the town in having angle
quoins and projecting brick string-courses interrupted by the key-blocks of the lower windows. No.
97 Church Street, Nos. 138–9 High Street, and the
Duke of York Inn, Barton Street, are buildings of
similar character. Nos. 78–80 Barton Street (formerly
the 'Star and Garter') was built in 1715 (fn. 144) with a wide
central carriageway leading to a rear courtyard which
retains traces of a balustraded gallery; internally the
early 18th-century main staircase and corner fireplaces survive. The Swan Hotel was rebuilt probably
c. 1730 with a wide carriageway to the yard beneath
a Venetian window. Nos. 39–40 High Street, built
slightly later, has a comparatively long frontage, and
its central carriageway, below Venetian windows to
the two upper floors, suggest that it too may have
been an inn; its façade is topped by an eaves cornice
and parapet. A parapet was commonly used in the
period to conceal the line of an earlier roof, for
throughout the 18th century and well into the 19th,
new building was less frequent than a refronting in
brick with a corresponding refurbishing inside.
Characteristic of the larger 18th-century town houses
are Nos. 63 and 79 High Street.