Hepple: Difference between revisions

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
RB (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
Line 20: Line 20:


[[File:Woodhouses Bastle - geograph.org.uk - 1485031.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Woodhouses Bastle]]
[[File:Woodhouses Bastle - geograph.org.uk - 1485031.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Woodhouses Bastle]]
Half a mile north-east of the village along the road to Rothbury are the ruins of Hepple Tower, a fourteenth-century tower house (which is listed as a 'building at risk'.<ref>{{Heritage at Risk|1566|Hepple Tower}}</ref>  
Half a mile north-east of the village along the road to Rothbury are the ruins of Hepple Tower, a fourteenth-century tower house (which is listed as a 'building at risk'.<ref>{{Heritage at Risk|1688145|Hepple Tower}}</ref>  


A mile to the west, close to Holystone Grange (a country house), is Woodhouses Bastle, dated to 1602 and restored and re-roofed in the twentieth century, a well-preserved bastle which may have been converted from a pele tower.<ref>{{britlist|236176|Woodhouses Bastle House}}</ref> A date of 1602 would make it one of the last, possibly the last, of the bastles, as the accession of King James I the next year brought peace to the [[Middle Shires]].
A mile to the west, close to Holystone Grange (a country house), is Woodhouses Bastle, dated to 1602 and restored and re-roofed in the twentieth century, a well-preserved bastle which may have been converted from a pele tower.<ref>{{britlist|236176|Woodhouses Bastle House}}</ref> A date of 1602 would make it one of the last, possibly the last, of the bastles, as the accession of King James I the next year brought peace to the [[Middle Shires]].

Latest revision as of 12:52, 26 September 2017

Hepple
Northumberland

Hepple
Location
Grid reference: NT985005
Location: 55°17’55"N, 2°1’31"W
Data
Population: 144  (2011)
Post town: Morpeth
Postcode: NE65
Local Government
Council: Northumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Berwick-upon-Tweed

Hepple is a small village and parish in rural Northumberland, four miles west of Rothbury, which town provides most of its local services. It is on the road between Rothbury and Otterburn.

Hepple is in Coquetdale, on the bank of the River Coquet, and on the edge of the Northumberland National Park. During the War this was part of the 'Coquet Stop Line', prepared in case of a German invasion, and a pillbox from these defences can still be seen here.

Woodhouses Bastle

Half a mile north-east of the village along the road to Rothbury are the ruins of Hepple Tower, a fourteenth-century tower house (which is listed as a 'building at risk'.[1]

A mile to the west, close to Holystone Grange (a country house), is Woodhouses Bastle, dated to 1602 and restored and re-roofed in the twentieth century, a well-preserved bastle which may have been converted from a pele tower.[2] A date of 1602 would make it one of the last, possibly the last, of the bastles, as the accession of King James I the next year brought peace to the Middle Shires.

References

  1. Hepple Tower – Register of Heritage at Risk (Historic England)
  2. Woodhouses Bastle House - British Listed Buildings