Tudor Barn, Eltham

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Tudor Barn

Kent


The Tudor Barn
Type: Barn
Location
Grid reference: TQ42477511
Location: 51°27’25"N, -0°2’57"E
Town: Eltham
History
Built 1525
For: William Roper
Barn
Information
Website: tudorbarneltham.com

The Tudor Barn is a large brick barn in Eltham in Kent. It was built in 1525 by William Roper. The Ropers lived next door in a manor house in the centre of a moat for several years. William married Margaret More, the daughter of Thomas More, and one of the most learned women of sixteenth-century England.

The barn is a Grade II* listed building (as Well Hall Art Gallery).[1]

The west end of the Tudor Barn was mostly occupied by servants, as can be seen by the two huge chimneys there. However, the barn was also used for storage. It can be seen on old maps that the moat was directly connected to the Tudor Barn by a bridge.

Edith Nesbit, author of The Railway Children and co-founder of the Fabian Society, lived in a house in the grounds of the Tudor Barn from 1899 to 1921.[2]

The Tudor Barn was refurbished in the 1930s. The local council then decided that they would use the newly renovated barn as the centrepiece of a new park, which is known as Well Hall Pleasaunce. The park opened in 1933, and three years later an art gallery was opened on the ground floor of the barn. This was not the council's original intention, however; they wanted a library and museum in the Tudor Barn, but these never materialised. For years after the Second World War, the barn contained the art gallery, a restaurant and a room for weddings and events in the upstairs space.

References

  1. National Heritage List 1289673: Well Hall Art Gallery (Grade II* listing)
  2. National Heritage List 1000850: Well Hall Pleasaunce (Register of Historic Parks and Gardens)