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Site Details

Houghall House (Houghall)

Houghall ©  Ryder, P 2006
Houghall © Ryder, P 2006

Houghall © Ryder, P 2006
Houghall © Ryder, P 2006

Houghall © Ryder, P 2006
Houghall © Ryder, P 2006

Houghall © Ryder, P 2006
Houghall © Ryder, P 2006

Houghall © Ryder, P 2006
Houghall © Ryder, P 2006
Houghall Farm, stands on the west side of the broad flood plain of the Wear, 2 km to the south of Durham City, and can only be approached by 1.5 km of minor road from the A177. In the medieval period it lay on one of the main roads into Durham; today, despite a cluster of modern buildings nearby, it still has an air of remoteness shared by the rather similar site of Low Butterty on the other side of the river.

Houghall was granted to the Herrington family in the 12th century and then in1260 to the Prior and Convent of Durham; during the term of office of Prior Hoton (1290-1308) a manor house is said to have been built here; a new house costing £12 1s 4d was built by Prior Fossor in 1373. The Bursar of the Priory held Houghall, and his account rolls (from 1300 until the 1530s) mention the Aula (hall). Grangia (barn), Granarium (granary), Bovaria (cow shed), Stabulum (stable) and Ustrina (lime-kiln); in the 15th century the farm was leased out; after the Dissolution the land transferred to the Dean and Chapter and continued to be tenanted Sir Arthur Hazelrigg, the Parliamentarian, made Houghall his home in the 1640s. In the 20th century the farm was acquired by Durham County Council, and became a College of Agriculture. The old farmhouse, largely of 17th century date, was pulled down in 1962. The surviving old buildings are now in good condition, and form part of the East Durham and Houghall Community College Small Animal Care Unit.

The coat of arms of one of its owners is carved above its door.

D1170
Post Medieval (1540 to 1901)
Elizabethan (1558 to 1603)
Stuart (1603 to 1714)
Victorian (1837 to 1901)
Medieval (1066 to 1540)
Desk based assessment of Houghall House 2002
Evaluation of Sword Findspot, Houghall College 1996; Archaeological Services University of Durham


Source of Reference
Local History of Houghall

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Please note that this information has been compiled from a number of different sources. Durham County Council and Northumberland County Council can accept no responsibility for any inaccuracy contained therein. If you wish to use/copy any of the images, please ensure that you read the Copyright information provided.

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