Title: Blakesley Hall
Title: Reconstruction

Blakesley Hall in July 2001

 
'The Space by the Hall'
This is the office which we think was originally known as 'the space by the hall'. In 1684 it had two old rakes and a spinning wheel stored in it! There is a mystery here. Look for the wooden timbers under the window. They are very old. But in Victorian times this part of the room was extended to make a big breakfast room. In the 1950s, the extension was removed. So, how did these old timbers survive? Perhaps they were used more than once?
The Space by the Hall

The Parlour Wing
The little parlour is being recreated in its original space. Notice the metal pole. This supports one of the heavy ceiling beams. The architect wants to remove the metal pole! But the beam must have help in supporting the wall of the room above. A metal girder must be inserted through the original oak so that it will not spoil the look of the old beam, yet still allow it to support the upsatirs wall safely.

A metal pole supporting the beams
The Little Parlour
The space you can see through the doorway is where Richard Smalbroke's little parlour was in 1590. The wooden panelling to the right of the picture was placed there in the 19th century when the newel stairs were mended. Until this year the little parlour space was where the public toilets were!
The Little Parlour
The Newel Staircase
The newel stairs originally turned around the post again and did not come down into the great hall. The original stair treads can be seen here turning to the right after the first section leading up from floor level. The walls for this first section were built in Victorian times when the stairs were repaired. Look for the window space which has been boarded-over. The window was necessary to light the original stairs.
Stairs
The Painted Chamber
This is the bedroom that is thought to be Richard Smalbroke's. The name we give to it is because of the painted pattern on the walls. These patterns were painted in the 1590s when the house was built and are quite rare in a house of the size of Blakesley Hall. It is a sign of Richard's success and wealth that he could afford to have his walls painted in this manner. The paintings would have been very bright and colourful when they were new.
The Painted Chamber
This picture shows evidence of where the bed was placed in this room. The marks on the wood show where a candle has been burning and damaged the wall. The candle would have been placed near to the bed.
Candle burn
This picture gives useful evidence about who used this room. Look at the painted panel below and see if you can find any letters in it. Remember the house was built for Richard Smalbroke and his wife, Elizabeth.
Initials in the painted panel
The Parlour Chamber
The parlour chamber is the room above the great parlour. It was originally an important bedchamber, possibly for visitors. The fireplace is evidence of it's status as a room.

The window to the left of the fireplace still has it's original frame - the oldest window frame at Blakesley Hall. The upright pieces of wood in the window frame are called mullions, the cross pieces, transoms.

The Parlour Chamber
Look at this picture of the outside of Blakesley Hall. Notice how the middle floor of the Hall sticks out over the ground floor. This is known as a jetty.
The jetty needed extra support, and there are big strong uprights (dragon posts) at each corner with a holder called a corbel bracing the jetty. Inside the parlour chamber, a dragon beam helps to support the floor where the two jetties meet at a corner. The floorboards under the old window frame are lifted so that visitors can see the dragon beam.
The jetty
Where is the door?
This is a picture of the room next to the parlour chamber. When the house was first built it was possibly used as a wool room, where fleeces were carded, spun and woven into cloth, then dyed. Very soon after the house was built, this room was divided into two. A new door was put in, and two other doorways made for the new smaller room and the parlour chamber. The old doorway to the parlour chamber was blocked in. Can you work out, from the evidence in the picture, where the old parlour chamber doorway was?
The doorway
The Long Gallery
In a grand house - such as Aston Hall - the long gallery was used for exercise, particularly if the weather was bad, and a place for activities and entertainments. Richard Smalbroke was copying the fashions of the rich in high society, but his long gallery is quite small in comparison.
There are two alcoves on the outer wall of the gallery, both with windows. Evidence in the framework around one of the alcoves shows that it was used as a separate room, and as we know Richard had a 'closet', or study, at Blakesley Hall where he kept his important papers, we think that this was his closet.
The Long Gallery
The Bed Chamber
This bedchamber was furnished as the little parlour, as the proper room downstairs was in use as modern toilets! Now, the little parlour will return to its correct space, and this room will become a bedchamber again. When the room was emptied an exciting discovery was made. The walls had been painted with a similar pattern to Richard's bedchamber next door! Samples of plaster were carefully removed and underneath was the evidence!
The Bed Chamber
Scrapings of the paint have been taken by experts who will analyse it to find out when the walls were decorated and what colours were used.

Evidence was also found which makes us think that the wooden beams in this room were painted white.

Underneath the plaster
The Children's Bedchamber
The room has been emptied and some repairs are being carried out on the walls. Notice the herringbone pattern under one of the windows. It is being repaired in the same way as in the parlour chamber. The radiator under the other window is being replaced and a beautiful new painted cloth is being made to hang over the walls.
The Children's Bedchamber
This blocked doorway was once an entrance to the bedroom, but nobody knows when it was in use, or when it was blocked up. The doorway now used is thought to be the original one.
blocked doorway
Inside the Attics!
The two attics at Blakesley Hall were used as servant's sleeping quarters and for stores. The left-hand side attic has a strange lath structure near the window. No one is quite sure what it was for!
Inside the Attics!
Crouching down and looking through where the roof slopes down to meet the building (through the eaves), you can see where the plaster and infill have been stripped away. The diamond shape is part of the pattern decorating the top floor of the Hall, which is called, quadrant bracing, or star.
through the eaves
You can see the rafters of the roof very clearly here. Notice how snugly the brace fits into the surrounding timbers. 'A snug fit' is a saying we still use today and comes from carpenter's technical language. The rafters of the roof
The right-hand attic has a window at both ends of the room.

You can see the braced wood in the top section of the window and underneath the same method has been used to make the quadrant pattern.

Attic window
This picture shows you what is under the floorboards of the attic. The piece of wood crossing under the floorboards is called a joist.
Under the floorboards
Service Rooms and Cross Passage
This is the wall of the cross passageway on your right as you walk into Blakesley Hall. It shows how the gaps between the tall upright timbers were filled in with thin lathes, then limewashed. The ground floor timbers made a pattern called close studding. It was very expensive to have upright timbers placed so closely together, and was a sign of Richard Smalbroke's wealth.
Wall separating passage way and service rooms
This picture shows close studding on the ground floor, and herringbone on the middle floor.
studding
The service room area was made into one room - a dining room - during Victorian times, with all the internal walls being removed. The three rooms were restored in the early 1980s. The buttery was used by Richard Smalbroke's household for making and storing drinks. Notice the repairs on the timbers, and where they have had to be replaced.

How can you tell the replacement timbers from the old ones? Why do you think the bottom of the old timbers might need repairing, rather than the top?
Replacing timbers
Outside the Hall
This is where the new classroom will be! The stone flags have been lifted to show evidence of the original floor underneath.
evidence of the original floor underneath
Looking from the barn door towards the house, where the outside wall of the service area has been bricked over and whitewashed.
End of house
The kitchen extension at the back of the Hall was added as the 'new building' in the late 17th century. It was built of brick and replaced a timber built kitchen that was set slightly apart from the main house. Not far from its back door is the herb garden, created specially for Blakesley Hall, and now looking sadly neglected. A new herb garden has been designed to take its place.
The kitchen extension at the back of the Hall
The view from the lawn at the other side of Blakesley Hall, shows the scaffolding going right up to the chimneys. A great deal of work is being done to this section of the house, with the replacement of the little parlour.
The view from the lawn at the other side of Blakesley Hall