The Tudor Hall House
The Museum building is part of a late 15th century hall house probably built for a merchant
around 1480. Much of the original timber structure of the roof above the central hall, the
carved arch-braced truss, and part of the solar wing can still be seen. The upper half of the
original hall window also remains at the rear of the house. A detailed cut-away model on display
shows the likely structure of the house in about 1500.
Archaeological investigation of the floor of the hall has revealed a central hearth which would
have been used to heat the house before the chimney stack and fireplaces were added in about 1580.
The construction of this hearth and surrounding tiles can be viewed through a glass panel in the floor
of the museum.
When the chimney was built, a first floor room was created within the hall and following this a gable
window was added to this room. Later alterations to the house included brick infill between the
structural timbers, remodelling the ground floor fireplace, the addition of a staircase and doorways
cut through the structure to connect the first floor rooms.
The original house is currently divided between the museum and the adjacent property, although part
of the solar wing was demolished in the 19th century.
Visitors to the museum can follow numbered information panels to find out more about the construction
of the building.
|