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Hill Hall, brick kiln and deserted manorial settlement of Mount Hall

A Scheduled Monument in Theydon Mount, Essex

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.674 / 51°40'26"N

Longitude: 0.1538 / 0°9'13"E

OS Eastings: 549024.6482

OS Northings: 199442.062379

OS Grid: TQ490994

Mapcode National: GBR RJ.1G0

Mapcode Global: VHHMT.M651

Entry Name: Hill Hall, brick kiln and deserted manorial settlement of Mount Hall

Scheduled Date: 31 October 1999

Last Amended: 23 March 2009

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1021438

English Heritage Legacy ID: 36354

County: Essex

Civil Parish: Theydon Mount

Traditional County: Essex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex

Church of England Parish: Stapleford Tawney with Theydon Mount

Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford

Details

The monument includes the approach road to the extant Hill Hall and the
buried remains of medieval buildings beneath it, the earthworks of the
deserted manorial site of Mount Hall approximately 300m to the east and the
buried deposits of the medieval kiln site approximately 150m to the
south-east. Hill Hall sits at the highest point of a flat-topped hill; 'the
Mount' of the parish of Theydon Mount. Mount Hall and its associated medieval
settlement lie to the north of the Church of St Michael; both of which lie
within a series rectilinear enclosures surviving as cropmarks.

The scheduled area that comprises the medieval site falls within the much
larger extent of the registered Park and Garden of Special Historic Interest
at Hill Hall. Hill Hall itself is a Grade 1 listed building and has a Grade
II listed outbuilding alongwith three Grade II listed garden structures in
the vicinity.

The first identifiable documentary evidence of an earlier house beneath the
existing Hill Hall dates to 1373 when 'Hill Hall' was bought by Richard de
Northampton and was known as the messuage to the manor of Mount Hall. The
medieval manor house, located to the west of the current hall, was extended
to form a small courtyard house probably in the C13 and C14. By the late C15
the buildings were in need of repair prompting Margery Hampden to demolish
the hall in 1486, replacing it with a small country house using higher status
materials including painted glass in the windows and wall paintings. It was
at this date that Hill Hall became the manorial house, the pre-Elizabethan
manor at Mount Hall becoming secondary, eventually serving as a farmhouse.
The Manor of Theydon Mount continued to be held by the Hampden family until
the widow of the last Sir John, Phillipa, married Thomas Smith (1512-77) in
1554. In 1557 Smith commenced the rebuilding of Hill Hall and continued with
many building campaigns until his death. The mural buildings were completed
in 1575. The Hall was used as an open prison from 1952, gutted by fire in
1969 and taken into care by the Department of the Environment in 1980. The
north range was re-roofed in 1982 and the shell restored by English Heritage.
The hall was subsequently converted into apartments with Scheduled Monument
Consent.

Limited excavations by the Chelmsford Archaeological Trust were undertaken
between 1882-5 and further small-scale and non-invasive archaeological work
has since been carried out by Wessex Archaeology and Northampton Archaeology.


Archaeological intervention in the environs of Hill Hall during the 1980s
revealed buildings pertaining to the earliest buildings on the site which
appear to date from the late C12. The limited excavations revealed traces of
narrow ridge and furrow in buried soils and rubbish pits containing late C12
and early C13 pottery beneath the existing courtyard. A number of buildings
were also revealed to the west of the courtyard including the lower part of
an undercroft to a detached chamber block, constructed of flint rubble. This
chamber was located to the east of the earliest hall, probably originally
approached from the direction of the manor at Mount Hall and the church. The
hall had a service end to the north and a detached kitchen block beyond that,
and measured approximately 6.75m x 9.5m.

Nothing is visible above ground of the probable site of the kiln which
produced the brick, tile and terracotta for Sir Thomas Smith's building in
the 1560s and 1570s, but the field was known historically as Tile Croft
(estate map of 1657 in Essex Record Office D/DU 884) and substantial footings
were recorded in a trench 400ft NNW of the church in 1965 (DOE AA 40460/2
pt2). An early C17 Nuremburg Jetton showing Hercules was found at the same
time.

The estate map of 1657 shows Mount Hall to the east, the site of the medieval
manor of Theydon Mount. The earthworks are substantial, although not clearly
interpreted and probably represent the remains of the manor house and small
settlement surrounding it which was present in 1777 (Chapman and Andre map,
sheet XVI) The manor house was demolished at around 1800 and by 1838 only one
cottage remained on the site.

A number of features are excluded from the scheduling: these are Hill Hall
and associated outbuildings and garden features, all modern field boundaries,
all gates and stiles, fence posts and all road and path surfaces. The ground
beneath all these structures and features, is however, included. There are
also three areas of total exclusions north west of Hill Hall: in these areas
both the ground above and below is excluded from the scheduled area; this
includes the cottages numbered 19 to 22 and the central area between the
garages.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

Medieval manorial settlements, comprising small groups of houses with
associated gardens, yards and paddocks, supported local communities devoted
primarily to agriculture, and acted as the foci for manorial administration.
Although the sites of many of these settlements have been occupied
continuously down to the present date, many others declined in size or were
abandoned at some time during the medieval and post-medieval periods,
particularly during the C14 and C15. The reasons for desertion were varied
but often reflected declining economic viability, changes in land use or
population fluctuations. As a consequence of their abandonment, these
settlements are frequently undisturbed by later occupation and contain
well-preserved archaeological deposits, providing information on the
diversity of medieval patterns and farming economy and on the structure and
changing fortunes of manorial communities.

An important element of the medieval manor of Theydon Mount was the lesser
important, but still significant medieval Hill Hall, a new foundation imposed
on the landscape, probably towards the end of the C12. Its development took
the form of separate buildings rather than a fully integrated plan, its
layout reminiscent of the royal hunting lodge at Writtle to the west of
Chelmsford and it may have served as a lodge to Mount Hall. The medieval
remains give a clear indication of the nature and scale of the house which
Sir Thomas Smith acquired on his marriage to Phillipa Hampden and show how
its site and layout largely determined that of his new building. Although
some excavation has taken place, the scheduled status of the site ensured
that most of the archaeological deposits were left in situ beneath the
existing courtyard and thus the potential for further evidence of the
evolution of this important site is certain to be preserved beneath the
present hall.

The outstanding importance of Smith's house is recognised by its Grade I
listing. The ceramic building materials used at Hill Hall in the 1570s
included simple mosaic tiles, rectangular and hexagonal tiles in two colours,
unglazed terracotta for mouldings and much of the classical detail and
tin-glazed terracotta for small-scale architectural details and decorative
tiles. The tin-glazed terracotta and the geometric floor tiles are apparently
unique in this country and were almost certainly made by foreign craftsmen.
The site of the kiln in which they were fired is thus of great interest and,
given the limited archaeological work, has the potential to yield important
information on the origin and manufacture of the material which contributes
to the exceptional special interest of Hill Hall.

Source: Historic England

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