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APPENDIX
INVENTORY OF ELIZABETH
COGGAN, 13TH OCTOBER, 1743
true and perfect inventory of all and singular the goods and chattells
and credits of Elizabeth Coggan late of Stocklinch Magdalen in the county
of Somerset widow deceased taken and appraised by John White and Robert
Rush the 13th day of October 1743:
| In
the Kitchen |
|
|
|
| One
tableboard |
0
|
2
|
6
|
| 13
pewter dishes |
2
|
2
|
0
|
| 13
pewter plates |
0
|
10
|
0
|
| Two
brass kettles and a skehatt |
0
|
7
|
0
|
| Two
crocks and two pottage crocks |
0
|
11
|
0
|
| Three
crocks |
0
|
4
|
0
|
| One
clock and lead weights belonging |
2
|
10
|
0
|
| Two
joint stools |
0
|
3
|
0
|
| One
cupboard |
0
|
1
|
0
|
| One
dresser and tax |
0
|
5
|
0
|
| One
pesle and mortar and 14 pewter dishes |
0
|
5
|
0
|
| In
the Hall |
|
|
|
| Three
half hogsheads |
0
|
12
|
0
|
| One
cheese press and leaden bed |
0
|
10
|
0
|
| Two
quarter barrels |
0
|
5
|
0
|
| One
buckett, two pails and one hogshead |
0
|
15
|
0
|
| Two
half hogsheads |
0
|
8
|
0
|
| In
the Hall chamber |
|
|
|
| Two
beds and furniture thereunto belonging |
4
|
0
|
0
|
| Four
coffers and three boxes |
1
|
0
|
0
|
| Wearing
apparrell |
3
|
0
|
0
|
| Two
tablecloths - seven napkins |
0
|
15
|
0
|
| One
iron press and six pair of cloth shears and other things thereunto
belonging |
10
|
0
|
0
|
| Lumber
goods and goods forgotten |
1
|
0
|
0
|
| A
leashold estate |
60
|
0
|
0
|
| |
£89
|
5
|
6
|
(Either the goods
had been assembled from a number of rooms into a few or Mrs. Coggan was
only occupying part of the house. From the succeeding lease, granted less
than three weeks later, it appears that the new lessee was already in
possession).
Abbreviations in the
inventory have been expanded.
NOTES AND REFERENCES
References to Somerset
ArchaeoL and Natur. Hist. are abbreviated to SAS.
- Somerset Record
Office D/Blil, by permission of the Clerk to the Trust. We are also
indebted to him for allowing access to two vacant properties.
- Somerset Record
Office DDISP, communicated by Miss T. Munckton.
- For a brief account,
Hall, Sir R. de Z., 'Post-medieval land tenure in Preston Plucknett',
SAS, 105, 1961, at pp. 127-8.
- See note 2.
- Only one cruck
frame, visible from the outside, is known in Somerset. This, at Redbridge
Cottage, Standerwick (communicated by Commander E. H. D. Williams, o.B.E.),
is in the Wiltshire tradition.
- Dr. N. W. Alcock,
F.S.A. (verbal communication) knows of Devonshire houses where the lower
purlins are similarly placed and there are no wallplates. On a grander
scale, the principle is the same in the great jointed- cruck barn at
Preston Plucknett, Yeovil; here there are four rows of purlins.
- These thick, projecting
end walls have been found elsewhere, but so far in a narrowly confined
area. There are several in Barrington, a mile to the north, e.g. Allenbury
Cottage and Brownsells; one at Colliers, Isle Abbotts, 3 miles NNW (to
which we were introduced by Mrs. P. A. Langmaid); and now, faced in
stone, at Weylands, West Lambrook, 2 miles "W.
- R. C. Edrnunds,
who has restored several medieval Somerset houses, has never seen sill-plates.
His present house, Longcroft, Sea, Ilminster, has an upright resting
on a stone, and the same was seen to be the case at Allenbury Cottage,
Barrington, when the house was stripped before restoration. Other examples
have been noted by Commander Williams and ourselves further west in
Somerset.
- Examination of
Vinces, Barrington, with the builder who was restoring the house, led
to the conclusion there that the rubble front wall was original, though
the others were of cob.
- Walrond, L. F.
J., 'An early jointed cruck building at South Bradon', SAS, 114, 1970,
68-73. Also 'Bwcham's Cottage, Pitney', SAS, 97, 1952, 79-91.
- A timber-framed
back wall at Cuffs Orchard, Isle Abbotts, and a wing at Weylands, West
Lambrook, both with fairly close studding, are considered to be fairly
late Cl 6. There is also a timber-framed back wall at Mannings, Stocklinch,
but this may he as late as Cl S.
- Also at Weylands,
West Lambrook, where the structure has substantial vertical framing
between tie-beam and collar.
- Other structures
have been seen: FHI. Knapp House and Vinces, Barrington; Sedgemoor Inn,
Westonzoyland, with Commander Williains, who has studied it more fully,
and H. D. 0. Humphreys, a chimney in whose own house at Othery has,
at the least, a timber-framed front. FH2. Allenbury Cottage, Barrington;
Tudor House, Broadway; Colliers and Monks Thatch, Isle Abbotts., Weylands,
West Lambrook (built in a smoke bay). We have also had from the owner
a report of a former FH2, destroyed by fire, in Haselbury Plucknett;
here the basic filling between the horizontal rods was of turves. Development
in Worcestershire is discussed by Charles, F. W. B., Mediaeval cruck-building
and its derivatives, 1967, p. 17 and passim.
- Fox and Raglan,
Monmouthshire Houses, 11, 1953, p. 87, also found several houses with
'keeled' stops in one parish. The other known Somerset instances are
at Sea Mills Farmhouse, 1 miles SW of Ilminster, and Tudor House, Broadway,
3 miles WNW of Ilminster. In these two cases, there are boldly fielded
panels, with similar stops, at the centre of beams.
- A truss at the
former Butleigh Court may be compared, SAS, 114, 1970, fig. 2 on p.
52.
- Original upper
rooms in small houses of this period may turn out not to be very rare.
For comparison are Colliers, Isle Abbotts (with jettying into the hall)
Longeroft, Sea and The Chantry, Stocklinch (neither certain, both probable).
Commander Williams has communicated evidence of a jettied room at Hagley
Bridge Farm, Ashbrittle.
- For post-medieval
timber-framing, above, note 1 1. A closely parallel end frame is at
Farndon Thatch, Puckington 1 mile NW, where there is an interesting
detail of a reversed ogee brace from sill to tie-bearn.
- The type is illustrated
in Barley, M. W., The Englishfarmhouse and cottage, 1961, Plate Xa,
and fig, Cl on p. 104. We have seen a number of other houses of, or
based on, this plan.
- A doorway with
shouldered head was found by Sir Cyril Fox at Burrow, Wootton Courtney,
and is illustrated in SAS, 95, 1950, fig. 1. With Lord Raglan, Monmouthshire
houses, he proposed a date of c. 1500. In Devonshire, without such a
date being discarded, substantially later ones have been established,
see Alcock, N. W., Trans. Devon Ass., 101, 1969, p. 102 and Jonos, S.
R., Ibid., 103, 1971, P. 40. Others known in Somerset are at Vinces,
Barrington; Orchard Cottage, East Coker (end entrance); Colliers, Isle
Abbotts (one post); Butleigh, a farm building where it is uncertain
whether the door is original or inserted. The Royal Commission for Historical
Monuments Inventory for Dorset dates Naish Farmhouse, HolwcU, with two
such doorways, to the 15th century.
- The central truss
of the open hall at South Bradon (note 10) also had a tie-beam resting
on posts.
- From a lease of
1742 in the llchester Almshouse Trust records.
- The trusses have
a curious lack of uniformity. The disposition of studs is:
| |
Tie-beam
to collar
|
Collar
to upper collar
|
To
apex west
|
| West |
6
|
2
|
-
|
| Central |
4
|
3
|
2
|
| East |
No
tie-beam
|
4
|
-
|

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