Ledbury, in Herefordshire, is one one of those beautiful, historic, little towns where everything in the town centre seems to be hundreds of years old. It's where my mother lives, so while she was ill and I was looking after her I took the chance to wander around and take some new photographs, since most of mine were taken a long time ago, so here are a few for this week's Saturday Snapshot.
The Market House, a distinctive black
and white building, stands on 16 wooden stilts, with narrow steps
leading up to the entrance. It dominates the main street and is
generally regarded as the jewel in the town's architectural crown –
and when you see how impressive all the other buildings are you
realise this one has to be pretty special.
Timber framed, with brick infill, it
was built in the 17th century as a corn warehouse: the grain was
stored inside the raised structure, where it was protected from the
weather and was safe from rats, mice and other vermin, while traders
sold their wares from stalls and shops in the covered area below. A
market is still held there twice a week, which is a nice link with
the past I think.
Work started in 1617, but was not
completed until 1668 because somewhere along the line cash (raised by
public subscription) ran out. Eventually the trustees took money from
legacies set up to provide clothing for the poor, and in return were
supposed to provide 12 sets of garments each year, paid from the
profits made by renting out the Market House. It sounds a pretty fair
deal to me, but I've no idea whether the promise was ever carried
out!
At that stage the house itself had two
floors, and it's possible one was use for storage, and the other for
meetings. But when the Turnpike Act was levied in the early 18th
century, traders couldn't afford to pay the toll gate taxes, so they
brought samples of corn to the market, and the building where they
had previously paid to store grain got emptier and emptier, and had
to be used for wool, hops and acorns for the local tanning industry. I knew very little about the Turnpike Act, or its effect on people, but that's what I like about local history - you like at a building, and think how gorgeous it is, then discover a whole social history attached to it!
It brought in little money and was
rarely full. However, the enterprising Victorians stripped out the
inside, leaving the outer shell intact, and created space for
meetings, exhibitions, sales and performances by travelling theatre
companies. It was also been used as a Town Hall. Today it still
provides a venue for meetings, sales and exhibitions and, more
recently, weddings were held there, but the Disability Access law put
paid to that.
It's thought much of the construction
was undertaken by John Abel, who was appointed King's Carpenter by
Charles I. He was a local man, and a number of Herefordshire
buildings are attributed to him, but there is no evidence to support
the theory that he was involved with Ledbury's Market House. The
wooden supports are made of oak, and were repaired and strengthened
in 2006, when the entire building, including the posts, was raised
into the air with the aid of hydraulic jacks. It was a tremendous
feat of modern engineering, and somewhere I have a photo showing it
surrounded by scaffolding, and perched on metal framework, but I
can't find it anywhere, although I have searched and searched.
For more Saturday Snapshots see Alice's blog at http://athomewithbooks.net/
This house reminds me of Germany, Switzerland or the Alsace region in France. Does this kind of architecture show up in certain regions of England? Here's Mine
ReplyDeletePaulita, quite a number of places have market houses or town halls on 'stilts' but often they are brick buildings with stone pillars, from a later period. I think this one is unusual because it has a timber frame and timber posts.
DeleteI guess we are lucky in England because despite development there are still lots of old buildings all over the country - some Medieval, Tudor, 17th century, Georgian and Victorian.
Fascinating! I like how old traditions are maintained in the UK and would definitely support the market if I lived there. (Perhaps they'd have venison sausages?)
ReplyDeleteSausages made to special recipes, from rare breed animals, are on sale in family butchers just down the road from the market house... didn't see any venison ones though, but I bought home-made game pie for my husband. And steak from local beef cattle!
DeleteSo neat! I love that it has been preserved and still draws the same community activities after all these years and I'm with Paulita. It reminds me of the 'fachwerk' buildings of Germany.
ReplyDeleteI've only been to Germany once, and don't remember seeing anything like this, but I'm curious to see some pictures.
DeleteI love the architecture, and this house on stilts is so impressive. Thanks for sharing the shots and the history.
ReplyDeleteHere's MY SATURDAY SNAPSHOT POST
Laurel-Rain, thank you for visiting!
DeleteThanks for these photos and your descriptions. This house reminds me of a place I visited near the Stonehenge a few years ago: Lacock Village. It's a historical town too, and the buildings are similar to this one here... but not on stilts though. ;)
ReplyDeleteI've been there! I remember it was being very beautiful, and the entire village has been preserved. And isn't a building which used to be an abbey, and was kept by the family who acquired it after the Dissolution?
Deletehow unique! Thank you for sharing your photos, and for the background :) Book Savvy Babe
ReplyDeleteThe townsfolk all think it is very special.
DeleteI've seen these timbered house in Germany but never in England. Thanks for the tour, I will have to check this out the next time I am over there.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by and visiting!
It is worth a visit - it is near Hereford, which is a lovely city, with its own black and white white building, and a cathedral. And there the most unspoilt villages in the area, and you get to Hay on Way (loads of bookshps!), and the Brecon Beacons, and parts of Wales, Shropshire and Gloucestershire and Worcestershire. It would be a fabulous place to stay ! You could even stay in a 400-year-old timbered hotel!
DeleteHow wonderful! I always love it when older buildings are saved and repurposed without destroying the vintage look. Thanks for sharing the history of the Market House.
ReplyDeleteHere's my Snapshot.
Bev, I feel the same way, and it always moves me to think this is still being used by the community.
DeleteLove the history in these old buildings and that they are being preserved for future generations. When I fist looked at the photos I was wondering about the stability of those pillars ... but I see they've been reinforced.
ReplyDeleteLeslie, what you can't see is that when the building was raised off the round in 2006 they gouged out the rotten wood at the base of the posts which had been damaged (mainly by boring wasps I believe), inserted long steel rods through the centre of each, then packed the gap in the base with some special mortar. Not sure if that means the house will stand for another 400 years, but it's god for a few years yet!
DeleteThe only houses I've ever seen on stilts have been near the ocean or on riverfront property. There's something about a building on stilts that makes me uneasy, despite knowing that they have surely checked it for safety. Thanks for sharing all of the history behind it!
ReplyDeleteAlyce, here in England they seem to be have been built like this, mainly in the 17th and early 18th centuries I think, for communal/civic/meeting buildings, with a market below them. In Tamworth, where I live, the Town Hall was built in 1701, and is of brick, balanced on stone pillars around the edge. Way back in time the Butter Market was held in the area surrounded by the pillars, beneath the actual building.
DeleteVery cool architecture! Thanks for sharing the history behind the structure. It sounds like it has had quite the transformation throughout the years!
ReplyDeleteRebecca @ The Key to the Gate
There have been a lot of alterations, repairs over the centuries, but the work seems to have been done without destroying the outer fabric of the building. I think it's pretty amazing that the building still stands, and that is still in use. I wonder if our modern buildings will last as long!
DeleteWhat a beautiful building and as always, a fascinating tale to go along with it. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThank you Sim for dropping by. I am glad there are places like this where the past is preserved, and it is even better when they still have a role to play in the community, rater than being museum pieces.
DeleteWow! I love the graphicness of the dark and light. Beautiful images!
ReplyDeleteThank you Zan.
DeleteIt's gorgeous and I love the history behind it.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you like it!
DeleteI think Ledbury's one of the prettiest towns I've ever visited. Only been once but hope to go again one day. Lovely photos.
ReplyDeleteCath, I am pleased to meet someone who has been there! I think it has to be one of the prettiest towns in England. My parents visited on a day trip and loved it so much they retired there.
DeleteVery cool...thanks for sharing♫
ReplyDeleteThank you for visiting!
DeleteBeautiful building! I'm not much of a traveler so I appreciate the history you provided as well. So interesting!
ReplyDeleteThank you Wrighty, that's kind of you to say so.
DeleteWhat a unique building. Thanks for sharing the pics and the story behind the building. It's amazing that it is still standing and in such good shape, too. Thanks for dropping by my post as well.
ReplyDeleteIt is a pretty unusual building, and very attractive. The while town looks like a museum piece, but all the buildigs are still used.
DeleteSomehow we missed going to Ledbury when we spent a couple of holidays in Heredfordshire a few years ago - sorry now I've seen your photos that we didn't get there - such beautiful buildings.
ReplyDeleteMargaret, if you ever get the chance to go back to that area, do pay a visit, because it really is a delightful place. I am sure you would love it. There are some lovely cafes, connections to John Masefield and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and friendly people.
DeleteWhat an amazing building! Thanks for sharing it with us. :)
ReplyDeleteI love it and, as I said I earlier, I'm continually amazed that it's still there, and still in use.
DeleteI love this! What a cool building to see in town everyday. And thanks for sharing the history with us, it was just as interesting as the building itself.
ReplyDeleteIt's wonderful to have a building with such a snse of the past.
DeletePictures like yours remind me how young my country is in comparison to most of the world.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I would love to take a stroll in Ledbury. Thanks for the virtual one!
That house is so beautiful! It is amazing that it is up on stilts like that, I love it!
ReplyDeleteWe saw similar buildings in rural France, they're so lovely. I always like to imagine the markets held there over time.
ReplyDeleteThat's fantastic. I've never seen a timber framed house on stilts before. I saw a timber framed building in Stratford on Avon with a KFC in it which seemed incongruous somehow.
ReplyDeleteInteresting and beautiful house! Have never seen one like it. Would love to visit England sometime.
ReplyDeleteWhat is it about lovely ol' England that they have all these crazily constructed elegant, history-filled structures?
ReplyDeleteYou make me want to GO THERE and find out!