Stocken Farmhouse

From Lacey Green History

Revision as of 03:55, 30 August 2023 by Joan (talk | contribs)

The history of the house of Stocken Farm by Joan West

It was this house that set me off on a quest to discover when it was built and fuelled my research into the local history in general.

My husband John and I, with three young children, had moved into it in January 1970 after living in Coronation Cottage no 2, one of the farm cottages, since our marriage in September 1961. John had been born in the farmhouse, his parents being Dick & Hilda West

We knew we wanted to alter certain things in the house. One thing being to put in central heating and also to tidy up some of the parts that had been added over the years. We lived there for a year while we decided what to do.

We always knew it was old - the enormous chimney was a giveaway anyway. But then the house had been Grade II listed some years before. (No-one had come to inspect it. Dick & Hilda had just received a letter saying it was listed and emphasizing that the chimney and the windows must never be altered.)

It became one of those projects which like 'Topsy' just grew and grew. John and I took on taking it apart with Dell Bros lined up to put it together again.

The Walls are old brick. One single layer with no foundations. At some point render had been applied to the outside.

The Walls Inside. Hilda had skilfully wallpapered the walls in the two main front rooms, both 14 feet square, with fireplaces back to back under that big chimney.

Someone before Hilda. obviously having a major damp problem had fixed batons to the walls and stretched canvas over them to make an internal wall, on which there were by our time several layers of wallpaper. This space between the outer wall and the canvas provided a wonderful sanctuary for mice. There were holes which gave them access into the house.

We decided that we must put in a dampcourse

We then proceeded to take the canvas, batons and wallpaper out through the window into a trailer parked on the lawn.

This left us with a good 3 inch gap all round the ceiling