Barmoor Castle (Lowick)
[NT 99723988] Barmoor Castle. (1)
The house was begun in 1801, but it is said that old walls of a tower house were made use of and a Jacobean porch was re-used. (2)
Barmoor Castle shows no external traces of antiquity, although the porch on the east side is built of re-used masonry as described above. Mr Sitwell, the owner, thinks that the tower-walls are incorporated internally. (3)
Barmoor Castle, building of classical character in castellated Tudor dress, built mainly in 1801 to the designs of Patterson of Edinburgh but incorporating medieval, 16th and 17th century masonry. Grade 2*. (4)
Banqueting wing roofless and decaying at time of survey. (5)
Formerly a seat of the Muschampe family, licence to crenellate was granted in 1341 and the building was described in 1415 as a fortalice. By 1541 it was 'on extreme decaye and almoste ruynous for lack of reparacions'.
In its present form the building is a country house in a castellated Gothick style, designed in 1801 for Francis Sitwell by John Paterson. Building, in several campaigns, spanned most of the 19th century and it was not completed until 1892. At the time of writing it is standing derelict and empty, with the north wing a roofless ruin. Restoration is apparently planned.
It is not clear how much earlier fabric is incorporated in the present largely 19th century building. Externally, the south end of the house (towards the service court) shows two sections of a chamfered plinth of possible medieval date. The return at the east end of the plinth shows that the present east front of the house stands about 0.6m outside the line of that of the earlier building. There are also remains of a plinth at the south end of the west wall of the main three storey block. The main block has some very thick (up to 1.5m) walls, but the only one with features of any age is the north wall of the block (now within the lower north wing) which has a large fireplace at ground floor level. This has a chamfered segmental arch 2.24m wide, with an old bread oven in its west jamb.
The remainder of the building has not been examined in detail, many of the walls are hidden by plaster. It is quite likely that further pre 19th century fabric survives, although its extent is difficult to determine. (6)
In 1341, Thomas Muschamp obtained a licence to build a crenelated tower, but it faied to keep out raiders in 1367. In 1514, it was serviceable and capable of lodging 30 horsemen, but by 1541 was ruinous. In 1801 a mansion grew around the tower, but by the 1980s this was ruinous. Now being renovated with the intention of turning it into holiday flats. (7a)
The house was begun in 1801, but it is said that old walls of a tower house were made use of and a Jacobean porch was re-used. (2)
Barmoor Castle shows no external traces of antiquity, although the porch on the east side is built of re-used masonry as described above. Mr Sitwell, the owner, thinks that the tower-walls are incorporated internally. (3)
Barmoor Castle, building of classical character in castellated Tudor dress, built mainly in 1801 to the designs of Patterson of Edinburgh but incorporating medieval, 16th and 17th century masonry. Grade 2*. (4)
Banqueting wing roofless and decaying at time of survey. (5)
Formerly a seat of the Muschampe family, licence to crenellate was granted in 1341 and the building was described in 1415 as a fortalice. By 1541 it was 'on extreme decaye and almoste ruynous for lack of reparacions'.
In its present form the building is a country house in a castellated Gothick style, designed in 1801 for Francis Sitwell by John Paterson. Building, in several campaigns, spanned most of the 19th century and it was not completed until 1892. At the time of writing it is standing derelict and empty, with the north wing a roofless ruin. Restoration is apparently planned.
It is not clear how much earlier fabric is incorporated in the present largely 19th century building. Externally, the south end of the house (towards the service court) shows two sections of a chamfered plinth of possible medieval date. The return at the east end of the plinth shows that the present east front of the house stands about 0.6m outside the line of that of the earlier building. There are also remains of a plinth at the south end of the west wall of the main three storey block. The main block has some very thick (up to 1.5m) walls, but the only one with features of any age is the north wall of the block (now within the lower north wing) which has a large fireplace at ground floor level. This has a chamfered segmental arch 2.24m wide, with an old bread oven in its west jamb.
The remainder of the building has not been examined in detail, many of the walls are hidden by plaster. It is quite likely that further pre 19th century fabric survives, although its extent is difficult to determine. (6)
In 1341, Thomas Muschamp obtained a licence to build a crenelated tower, but it faied to keep out raiders in 1367. In 1514, it was serviceable and capable of lodging 30 horsemen, but by 1541 was ruinous. In 1801 a mansion grew around the tower, but by the 1980s this was ruinous. Now being renovated with the intention of turning it into holiday flats. (7a)
N1954
FIELD OBSERVATION, Ordnance Survey Archaeology Division Field Investigation 1967; D King
HERITAGE ASSESSMENT, Barmoor Castle, chemical analysis of window glass 2013; English Heritage
ARCHITECTURAL SURVEY, Investigation by RCHME/EH Architectural Survey ; RCHME
DESK BASED ASSESSMENT, Barmoor Castle Country Park ; Pre-Construct Archaeology
HERITAGE ASSESSMENT, Barmoor Castle, chemical analysis of window glass 2013; English Heritage
ARCHITECTURAL SURVEY, Investigation by RCHME/EH Architectural Survey ; RCHME
DESK BASED ASSESSMENT, Barmoor Castle Country Park ; Pre-Construct Archaeology
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