Ancient High House

Local nameAncient High House
LocationStaffordshire, UK

The Ancient High House is an Elizabethan town house located on the main street in Stafford. The house was constructed in 1595 by the Dorrington family, from local oak, which anecdotally came from the nearby Doxey Wood, and is the largest timber framed town house in England.Many of the original timbers bear carpenter's marks indicating that the frame was pre-assembled on the ground and the joints numbered to aid the on-site construction. Some timbers have additional joint housings cut into them, which would suggest that they have been reused from an even earlier structure. It was not unheard of for a building to be dismantled and rebuilt at a different location - hence the expression to 'up-sticks', which means to move house.

At the time of the outbreak of the English Civil War, a member of the Sneed family of Keele Hall, near Newcastle-under-Lyme, was renting the building.

Tags Museum
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More information and contact

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_High_House

Official Website http://staffordmuseums.co.uk/museums/ancient-high-house/

Address 9 Greengate Street, Stafford ST16 2HN, United Kingdom

Coordinates 52°48'22.636" N -2°7'1.77" E

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