Burnlaw Farmhouse (Allendale)
(NY 79085750) Burnlaw. (1)
Burnlaw is a farmhouse incorporating the remains of a bastle house, with 17th century (datestone T.S.1662) and later additions.
In the cellar is a small, domestic chapel, which was probably used as a Quaker meeting house. See sketch plan, and G.Ps. AO 56/358/4 and 5 for north and south east aspects. (2)
Correctly described. Not outstanding. (3)
NY 791575 Remains of bastle. (See Type Site NY 88 SE 14). The original building appears to have been a bastle measuring 43.5 feet by 23 feet internally. Against the North-East side is a two-storey building dated 1662. (4)
Burnlaw Farmhouse. Grade II listed building. 16th or early 17th century bastle, remodelled and extended later 17th century, extended 18th century, altered 19th century. (5)
Burnlaw Farm lies on the hillside overlooking the confluence of the East and West Allen rivers. The farmhouse shows several interesting phases of development.
The original bastle has been quite sizeable, 13.3m by 7.4m externally. The north (downhill) end is rendered, but the central round arched byre doorway is visible as a recess, with some of its megalithic dressings showing through the render. The east side of the house (where the ground level is higher) shows typical elongate roughly shaped bastle quoins, and some original rubble fabric; a patch of later rubble above the northern ground floor window may indicate the position of the original upper door, whilst there appears to be a small slit window, now blocked, above the present door.
Internally, there is a small cellar at the level of the bastle basement; its dimensions are such as to suggest that the walls have been thickened internally when the house was heightened, although there does appear to be a blocked slit vent on the east.
The first addition to the bastle may have been the wing on the west, of two bays and two-and-a-half storeys, forming a T-plan with the earlier building. This does not appear to have been particularly defensible, having, on the north, a ground floor doorway with a flat pointed head within a square frame (the lintel inscribed 'T S 1662') and an adjacent two-light mullioned window; above are two more two-light windows, and smaller chamfered windows to the attic (the top floor is a late 20th century addition).
The main block (the bastle) was itself remodelled in the late 17th or earlier 18th century, being heightened so that its east elevation became of two-and-a-half storeys and five narrow bays, with two-light mullioned windows to the lower floors and a single chamfered window to the attic in the centre bay. Whilst the remains of these windows are not dissimilar to those of the 1662 wing, inside the surviving panelling in the southern ground floor room, and the central closed string stair with its flat splat balusters, look more of early 18th than mid 17th century type. A round headed recess in a small lobby behind the stair may have been a doorway giving access to the first floor of the west wing.
In the northern ground floor room of the main block is an 18th century fireplace built beneath an earlier bressumer, which may relate to this phase (or just conceivably, the earlier bastle); it probably carried a firehood.
A single bay house or cottage, of two storeys, and a farm building beyond, also of two storeys but lower, were added on to the south end of the original bastle in the later 18th century. The cottage has a rear (west) outshut; both front and back doors have wave moulded surrounds (the northern ground floor fireplace in the main block has a similar moulding); the cottage still has mullioned windows, and the farmbuilding chamfered windows in the 17th century style, although their tooled and margined dressings are of 18th century character.
In the main block, the southern first floor room has a basket arched fireplace of mid to late 18th century type.
In the early 19th century, perhaps in 1826 (the southern ground floor window formerly had a pane of glass with the scratched inscription 'Somerset Brown Maughan May 8th 1826'), the main block was remodelled with a standard two storey three bay facade, typical of many farmhouses of the period, having 16 pane sash windows and a new central doorway in a dressed stone surround; one of the earlier two-light windows was allowed to survive above the doorway, but lost its mullion.
At the end of the century the roof and attic floors were renewed, as documented by a pencilled inscription on a piece of wood stating 'new roof 1894, new garret floor 1895'; the fish scale roof of Welsh slates is presumably of the same date. (6)
The bastle was built in 1602 and the house adjoining it in 1662. Listed by Cathcart King and by Dodds. (7a-b)
Burnlaw is a farmhouse incorporating the remains of a bastle house, with 17th century (datestone T.S.1662) and later additions.
In the cellar is a small, domestic chapel, which was probably used as a Quaker meeting house. See sketch plan, and G.Ps. AO 56/358/4 and 5 for north and south east aspects. (2)
Correctly described. Not outstanding. (3)
NY 791575 Remains of bastle. (See Type Site NY 88 SE 14). The original building appears to have been a bastle measuring 43.5 feet by 23 feet internally. Against the North-East side is a two-storey building dated 1662. (4)
Burnlaw Farmhouse. Grade II listed building. 16th or early 17th century bastle, remodelled and extended later 17th century, extended 18th century, altered 19th century. (5)
Burnlaw Farm lies on the hillside overlooking the confluence of the East and West Allen rivers. The farmhouse shows several interesting phases of development.
The original bastle has been quite sizeable, 13.3m by 7.4m externally. The north (downhill) end is rendered, but the central round arched byre doorway is visible as a recess, with some of its megalithic dressings showing through the render. The east side of the house (where the ground level is higher) shows typical elongate roughly shaped bastle quoins, and some original rubble fabric; a patch of later rubble above the northern ground floor window may indicate the position of the original upper door, whilst there appears to be a small slit window, now blocked, above the present door.
Internally, there is a small cellar at the level of the bastle basement; its dimensions are such as to suggest that the walls have been thickened internally when the house was heightened, although there does appear to be a blocked slit vent on the east.
The first addition to the bastle may have been the wing on the west, of two bays and two-and-a-half storeys, forming a T-plan with the earlier building. This does not appear to have been particularly defensible, having, on the north, a ground floor doorway with a flat pointed head within a square frame (the lintel inscribed 'T S 1662') and an adjacent two-light mullioned window; above are two more two-light windows, and smaller chamfered windows to the attic (the top floor is a late 20th century addition).
The main block (the bastle) was itself remodelled in the late 17th or earlier 18th century, being heightened so that its east elevation became of two-and-a-half storeys and five narrow bays, with two-light mullioned windows to the lower floors and a single chamfered window to the attic in the centre bay. Whilst the remains of these windows are not dissimilar to those of the 1662 wing, inside the surviving panelling in the southern ground floor room, and the central closed string stair with its flat splat balusters, look more of early 18th than mid 17th century type. A round headed recess in a small lobby behind the stair may have been a doorway giving access to the first floor of the west wing.
In the northern ground floor room of the main block is an 18th century fireplace built beneath an earlier bressumer, which may relate to this phase (or just conceivably, the earlier bastle); it probably carried a firehood.
A single bay house or cottage, of two storeys, and a farm building beyond, also of two storeys but lower, were added on to the south end of the original bastle in the later 18th century. The cottage has a rear (west) outshut; both front and back doors have wave moulded surrounds (the northern ground floor fireplace in the main block has a similar moulding); the cottage still has mullioned windows, and the farmbuilding chamfered windows in the 17th century style, although their tooled and margined dressings are of 18th century character.
In the main block, the southern first floor room has a basket arched fireplace of mid to late 18th century type.
In the early 19th century, perhaps in 1826 (the southern ground floor window formerly had a pane of glass with the scratched inscription 'Somerset Brown Maughan May 8th 1826'), the main block was remodelled with a standard two storey three bay facade, typical of many farmhouses of the period, having 16 pane sash windows and a new central doorway in a dressed stone surround; one of the earlier two-light windows was allowed to survive above the doorway, but lost its mullion.
At the end of the century the roof and attic floors were renewed, as documented by a pencilled inscription on a piece of wood stating 'new roof 1894, new garret floor 1895'; the fish scale roof of Welsh slates is presumably of the same date. (6)
The bastle was built in 1602 and the house adjoining it in 1662. Listed by Cathcart King and by Dodds. (7a-b)
N6339
FIELD OBSERVATION, Ordnance Survey Archaeology Division Field Investigation 1956; A S Phillips
FIELD OBSERVATION, Ordnance Survey Archaeology Division Field Investigation 1966; R W Emsley
PHOTOGRAPHIC SURVEY, Towers and Bastles in Northumberland 1995; P RYDER
THEMATIC SURVEY, Towers and Bastles in Northumberland 1995; P RYDER
FIELD OBSERVATION, Ordnance Survey Archaeology Division Field Investigation 1966; R W Emsley
PHOTOGRAPHIC SURVEY, Towers and Bastles in Northumberland 1995; P RYDER
THEMATIC SURVEY, Towers and Bastles in Northumberland 1995; P RYDER
Disclaimer -
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.