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Woodham Walter Hall: an early C16 house and its associated garden earthworks

A Scheduled Monument in Woodham Walter, Essex

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.7272 / 51°43'37"N

Longitude: 0.6239 / 0°37'26"E

OS Eastings: 581313.01407

OS Northings: 206424.365165

OS Grid: TL813064

Mapcode National: GBR QM2.NL0

Mapcode Global: VHJK4.RVP9

Entry Name: Woodham Walter Hall: an early C16 house and its associated garden earthworks

Scheduled Date: 25 June 2010

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1021442

English Heritage Legacy ID: 35552

County: Essex

Civil Parish: Woodham Walter

Traditional County: Essex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex

Church of England Parish: Woodham Walter

Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford

Details

The monument includes the remains of Woodham Walter Hall: an early C16 house,
house platform and associated garden earthworks; it also includes the buried
remains of Woodham Walter old church, and a section of road to the north of
that, both of which appear on aerial photographs.

The monument lies about 600m south south-east of Woodham Walter village on
glacially laid gravels. The construction of the house platform and the garden
landscaping make use of the sides of a valley sloping down to a small stream
that flows north into the River Chelmer.

Woodham Walter Hall stood on a rectangular platform measuring 80mx60m, built
out from the west side of the valley, with deep ditches to north, south and
west, and rising 3.5m above the valley bottom to the east. The house occupied
an area of about 40mx25m on the west side of the platform. A brickwork
revetment laid in English bond with diaper work survives to a maximum height
of 2m along the west and north sides of the platform. At the north-west
corner is a tower, its exposed rubble core containing early C14 brickwork and
fragments of worked stone. Other features of the wall footings include
buttresses to both west and north, as well as a possible garderobe chute to
the north. On the south side of the platform is a cellar measuring about
8mx6.5m and up to 2m deep, with facing brickwork standing up to 1.4m. To the
north-west of the cellar plain glazed tiles were uncovered in the course of
scrub clearance. Slight earthworks on the house platform to the east of the
house indicate a formal garden of terraces and walkways, before the bank
slopes down to the lower gardens and the valley bottom, where low earthworks
indicate further terraces and walks.

At the south-west corner of the house platform is a walled garden, 39mx37m.
The wall of the house would have formed its north side, and brick foundations
survive on the other three sides, with a scatter of brick rubble at the
south-west corner visible in the arable field. The layout of the garden was
formal, with diagonally crossing paths meeting at a central oval hollow. On
the south side a breach in the wall indicates access to gardens in the arable
field to the south. There are slight earthworks visible in this field, but
very degraded by ploughing, and this area is not included in the scheduling.

Further earthworks to the north, east and south-east of the house platform
suggest more informal landscaping, in which the management of water and water
features played an important role. The stream, which now runs along the
valley bottom, was diverted from its course and directed along the east slope
of the valley, retained by a clay bank. Although the retaining bank is now
breached to allow the passage of a smaller stream rising from a spring to the
east, the course of this stream was continuous as late as the 1922 OS map.
Two dams controlled its flow to create a large expanse of water measuring
c80mx180m immediately to the north of the house platform. The first dam is
170m long and 30m across at its widest point and 4m high; the second, about
80m to the north, measures 150m long and 21m wide and 5.5m high; both dams
are now breached where the stream passes. These dams afforded both access and
vistas across the site; the view from the north dam would have afforded a
particularly fine prospect of the house, seen across a stretch of water.
Further views across the valley from both east and west were provided by
prospect mounds, one forming an island in the ditch to the south of the house
platform, with probable access from the south-east corner of the walled
garden. About 70m to the north on the east side the valley, at the east end
of the south dam, is a second mound, with a stream curving around its east,
south and west sides.

The main access route appears to have been from the west, along a road
visible on aerial photographs as a pale cropmark running in a straight line
from the road that joins Woodham Walter village to the Maldon road. The road
enters the south dam which here forms a bank between the broad expanse of
water to the north and the wide house platform ditch to the south. After
about 90m the bank turns back on itself to form a projection into the ditch
to the north of the house platform. The end of this spur is the most likely
location for a bridge to the house platform, although no physical evidence
for this survives. The north dam is breached at its west end by a sinuous
depression, possibly an overflow leat which would have filled the shallow bay
to the north of the dam, creating a second expanse of water; part of this is
included in the scheduling, but the section in the arable field to the north,
degraded by ploughing, is not included. An early C19 house, Falconers Lodge,
stood on the north dam until its recent demolition; other structures to the
north have also been demolished. Smaller water features include two ponds
oriented north to south terraced into the slight slope of the west side of
the valley to the south of the house platform. The larger south pond measures
38mx8m and is filled with water. Slight features in the ditch north of the
house platform are also interpreted as a string of small connected ponds
running west to east along the ditch bottom, which could have been viewed
from the windows of the house directly above.

About 20m to the west of the house platform and its outer ditch, and
immediately to the south of the access road described above, is a small
rectangular building, visible as a cropmark. The building is oriented
west-east, and is thought to be Woodham Walter old church, demolished in 1562
and replaced by a new church to the north. The reason given for its removal
was its state of repair and its inconvenient distance from the village.
Surface finds here include building stone, peg tiles, floor tiles and Roman
tiles. Two fragments of late C12 or C13 grave covers were found in the field
immediately to the west of the house in the 1980s. Both old and new churches
were and are dedicated to St Michael the Archangel.

The scheduled area of the house and its immediate garden landscaping lay at
the centre of a deer park, and seem to have formed part of a wider managed
landscape. The deer park is known to have been in existence in 1237, when the
manor of Woodham Walter was held by the Fitzwalter family. In 1431 the estate
passed by marriage to the Radcliffe family, and in 1529 Robert Radcliffe,
courtier and loyal servant to Henry V111, was granted the title of Earl of
Sussex; he died in 1542 and was succeeded by his son Henry. In 1573 Elizabeth
I granted New Hall, Boreham, to the third Earl, Thomas, and this seems to
have become their principal seat. In 1622 the deer park at Woodham Walter was
disparked, and the land turned to agricultural use. The house was demolished
in the late C17. Evidence from the brickwork and pottery found when the
platform was cultivated in 1973 indicate a date for the house and its
occupation between the late C15 or early C16 and later C17. It seems most
likely, then, that the house was built and the gardens landscaped as a single
event by either the first Earl of Sussex, Robert Radcliffe, or his son.

The scheduling is intended to protect the remains of the hall and its
surrounding garden earthworks, as well as the buried remains of the church
and a section of the road in the arable field to the west. Apart from the
remains associated with the hall, all upstanding structures, including fence
posts, are excluded from the scheduling, although the ground beneath them is
included.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

Gardens have a long history in England. The earliest recognised examples are
associated with Roman villas, while during the Anglo-Saxon and medieval
periods, herb gardens were planted, particularly in monasteries, for medicinal
purposes. The major development in gardening took place in the late medieval
and early post-medieval periods when the idea of the garden as a `pleasure
ground' developed.
Gardens of medieval and early post-medieval date take a variety of forms. Some
involved significant water-management works to create elaborate water gardens
which could include a series of ponds and even ornamental canal systems. At
other sites, flower gardens were favoured, with planting in elaborately
shaped and often geometrically laid out beds. Planting arrangements were
often complemented by urns, statues and other garden furniture. Such sites
were often provided with raised walkways or prospect mounds which provided
vantage points from which the garden design and layout could be seen and fully
appreciated. Whilst gardens were probably a common accompaniment to high-
status houses of 16th century and later date, continued occupation of houses
and related use and re-modelling of gardens in response to changing fashions
means that early remains rarely survive undisturbed.
Gardens provide a valuable insight into contemporary aesthetics and views
about how the landscape could be modified to enhance the surroundings of a
house and symbolise the social hierarchy. Their design often mirrors elements
of the design of the associated house, particularly following the symmetry of
the buildings. Gardens were probably not uncommon in the medieval and post-
medieval period, but the exact original number is unknown. Fewer than 500
surviving examples of all types have now been identified. In view of the
rarity of surviving examples, great variety of form, and importance for
understanding high-status houses and their occupants, all examples of early
date retaining well-preserved earthworks or significant buried remains will be
identified to be nationally important; those not in use will be considered for
scheduling.

Country houses of the late Tudor and early Jacobean period comprise a
distinctive group of buildings which differ in form, function, design and
architectural style from country houses of both earlier and later date. They
are the product of a particular historical period in which newly emerged
Protestant elite, mostly with close contacts at court, competed with each
other to demonstrate wealth, taste and loyalty to the sovereign. About 5000
country houses are known to have been standing in 1675; of these about 1000
are thought to survive, although most have been extensively altered or
rebuilt in subsequent centuries to meet new demands and tastes. Country
houses of this period provide an insight into politics, patronage and
economics in the early post-medieval period. All examples with significant
surviving archaeological remains are considered to be of national importance.

Woodham Walter Hall is an early C16 house and garden that seems to have been
created as an integrated designed landscape. Its scale and complexity
exemplify the ostentation of the new social and political elite, with the
continuing rise in the fortunes of the Radcliffe family resulting in their
eventually relinquishing the house in favour of the grander New Hall,
Boreham. This relatively brief period of occupation means that the garden
retains its early C16 form; a rare and intact survival from this period, it
illustrates the development of the garden aesthetic between the medieval and
the post-medieval period. Fragments of more detailed information may also
survive, for example garden furniture such as statuary, as well as remains
relating to the construction of garden features and to the management of
water courses. There may also be surviving evidence of earlier occupation and
landscaping. Lower lying areas will hold waterlogged deposits containing
palaeobotanical evidence, providing information on the natural and cultivated
environment. The remains of the church will provide evidence of its date of
construction, and its form and fabric.

Source: Historic England

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