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Moulsecoomb Place

Moulsecoomb Place is a large 18th-century house on Lewes Road in the Moulsecoomb area of the English coastal city of Brighton and Hove. Originally a farmhouse based in an agricultural area in the parish of Patcham, north of Brighton, it was bought and extensively remodelled in 1790 for a long-established local family. It was their seat for over 100 years, but the Neoclassical-style mansion and its grounds were bought by the local council in the interwar period when Moulsecoomb was transformed into a major council estate. Subsequent uses have varied, and Moulsecoomb Place later became part of the University of Brighton's range of buildings. Student housing has been built to the rear; but much of the grounds, the house itself and a much older cottage and barn attached to the rear have been preserved. The house is a Grade II Listed building.

Moulsecoomb Place
Moulsecoomb Place after renovation in 2011, seen from the southeast
LocationLewes Road, Moulsecoomb, Brighton and Hove BN2 4GA, United Kingdom
Coordinates50°50′47″N 0°07′02″W / 50.8465°N 0.1172°W / 50.8465; -0.1172
FoundedEarly 18th century (as farmhouse)
Built1790
Built forBenjamin Tillstone
Restored1906 or 1913, 2010–11
Architectural style(s)Neoclassical/Palladian
Governing bodyUniversity of Brighton (owner)
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameMoulsecoomb Place
Designated20 August 1971
Reference no.1381668
Location within Brighton and Hove

History edit

At the time of the Domesday survey in 1086, Moulsecoomb was an outlying part of the large parish of Patcham, which was centred on Patcham village north of Brighton. Spelt Mulescumba at that time, the name varied considerably over the centuries[1] and was not standardised to its current spelling until the 1960s.[2] The manor and estate of Moulsecoomb later belonged to Lewes Priory, and Mouscombe Farm was first named in the early 17th century when it was owned by Sir Edward Culpepper. On his death in 1730, it was left to Sir William Culpeper, 1st Baronet of Preston Hall, the first of the Culpeper baronets.[1] By this time, nothing more than a farming hamlet had developed in the steep-sided valley: it had no church of its own, and was dependent on Patcham.[1][3]

In the early 16th century, a timber-framed hall house was built on the estate near the farm (although some sources claim a late-14th-century date).[2][4] A wooden tithe barn was erected next to it later in the 16th century, and was subsequently extended in flint. The hall house is the oldest secular building in Brighton, and is presumed to be a remnant of a larger medieval manor house—perhaps the forerunner of the present Moulsecoomb Place,[2] which has its origins in the early 18th century. At that time, when the farm was still in agricultural use, a farmhouse was built adjoining the hall house. In 1790, Benjamin Tillstone bought the farm and converted it into a rural retreat with the farmhouse as its centrepiece. He commissioned a major overhaul of Moulsecoomb Place, extending the façade and refacing it in yellow brick.[2][4]

 
Moulsecoomb Place underwent maintenance in 2010. The early 20th-century extension is hidden behind the tree to the left.

The building was thereafter the seat of the locally important Tillstone family for more than a century, and was the centrepiece of an estate extending to 1,000 acres (400 ha).[1] A wide verandah was added to the house at ground-floor level by 1810,[5] and the hall house was converted into stables.[2] A regular visitor around this time was the Prince Regent (later King George IV), a friend of the family. He had his own bedroom above the drawing room, and a dovecote near the house was adapted into a summer house, in which the prince would sit and practise playing a silver flute he had received from Tillstone.[4] The dovecote was accordingly known as Prince's Tower, but was vandalised beyond repair in 1942.[2] Three "huge mahogany doors" in the house were given by the prince in return; they may have come from the demolished Grove House at Old Steine, where the prince stayed when he first visited Brighton in 1783.[6] More work was carried out on the building in 1906[2] or 1913,[7] when a further two bays were added to the south side of the seven-bay façade.[2]

The final Tillstone family owner, Mr. B.T. Rogers-Tillstone, sold Moulsecoomb Place and the family's estate to Brighton Corporation (predecessor of the present city council) in February 1925. Much of the land, which had been transferred from the parish of Patcham into the borough of Brighton in October 1923, was used to develop the Moulsecoomb housing estates[2] (South, East and North Moulsecoomb), collectively the largest area of council housing in Brighton. Hundreds of "homes fit for heroes" were built to replace unsuitable inner-city slums.[8] Moulsecoomb Place and its grounds were retained, and the building was used by the Corporation to house its Parks and Recreation Department.[5] Later it housed Moulsecoomb's first library and was used to provide extra capacity for a local school.[2] Between August 1948 and November 1969, part of the building was registered as a place of worship by a group of Christians known as Moulsecoomb Free Church.[9] By 1971 most of the interior was used for offices, and a social club and bar occupied the hall house.[7]

The building is next to the main (Moulsecoomb) campus of the University of Brighton. In 1993, the university submitted a plan to buy Moulsecoomb Place and its grounds, build accommodation for 163 students on the former plant nursery to the rear,[2] and convert the building itself and the old tithe barn into the headquarters of its Student Services division and a children's nursery. Permission for this was granted in the same year.[2][10] The student residences consist of flats accommodating six to eight people, each with their own bedroom but with shared bathroom and laundry facilities. Breakfast and evening meals are provided on site. As of 2012, rent was £142 per week or £5,538 for a 39-week academic year tenancy.[11] In July 2022 a property developer announced its plans to demolish the existing student housing and rebuild at a higher density, creating a mixed-use "student village".[12]

Moulsecoomb Place was designated a Grade II Listed building on 20 August 1971.[7] The timber-framed hall house to the rear had been listed on its own on 13 October 1952; in 1971 the listing was expanded to cover the whole building.[7]

Architecture edit

 
The southern extension has a bow-fronted section.

Moulsecoomb Place is the only building in the Moulsecoomb area mentioned by Ian Nairn and Nikolaus Pevsner in the Sussex edition of their Buildings of England architectural guides. They describe it as "an early 19th-century seven-bay house of yellow brick", and note that the hall house attached to the rear is "the only worthwhile timber-framed cottage in Brighton".[13] The seven-bay façade, which faces east,[7] is the original part dating from 1790; another two-window range was added on the south side in the early 20th century,[2] making the composition asymmetrical. The original section has yellow brickwork in a Flemish bond pattern to the main elevation and brown and yellow gauged brickwork on the north (side) wall. Yellow bricks are also used on the south extension, but in a stretcher bond layout.[7] The 1790 section has a 2–3–2 bay pattern whose central three-bay section projects slightly and is set beneath a pediment.[2][7] Its tympanum has a pattern of raised brickwork. Behind the pediment is a parapet and a cornice with mutules below. Some of the ground-floor windows have elements of the Palladian and Neoclassical Adam styles; those at first-floor level are straight-headed. The hipped roof has several chimney-stacks.[7] The early 20th-century extension is in complementary style. On the east elevation, a single-storey two-window section projects forward and is topped with a parapet and cornice. This continues round to the south elevation, which has a full-height bow front with a three-window range.[2][7] A modern conservatory has been added to one side.[2]

The timber-framed hall house, whose interior had been significantly altered by the time it was in use as a bar and social club, is believed to be the surviving section of a larger building dating from the medieval era. It has two storeys, the upper of which is jettied.[2][7] The areas between the closely studded timber frame are filled in with a mixture of plaster, flint and brickwork, and tiles cover the hipped roof. There are some small sash windows. The tithe barn, which was extended in the 19th century, is linked to the hall house by a bridge-like section of the same date.[7]

At the time of the listing by English Heritage, when the building was in use as offices, the interior had elaborate fittings. The main staircase is in a hall with a vaulted ceiling, in which mahogany doors with Greek Revival-style panelling lead to various rooms. Some have original fireplaces in styles including Neoclassical and Jacobean. The staircase itself has mahogany rails and Gothic Revival-style balusters of cast iron. There is some stained glass bearing the date 1913.[7]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Salzman, L. F., ed. (1940). "A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 7 – The Rape of Lewes. Parishes: Patcham". Victoria County History of Sussex. British History Online. pp. 216–220. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Collis 2010, p. 205.
  3. ^ Brighton Polytechnic. School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987, p. 100.
  4. ^ a b c Brighton Polytechnic. School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987, p. 102.
  5. ^ a b Beevers & Roles 1993, p. 119.
  6. ^ Antram & Morrice 2008, p. 30.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Historic England. "Moulsecoomb Place (Grade II) (1381668)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  8. ^ Brighton Polytechnic. School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987, p. 103.
  9. ^ Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 (Number in Worship Register: 62066; Name: Moulsecoomb Hall; Address: Moulsecoomb Place, Lewes Road, Brighton; Denomination: Moulsecoomb Free Church (Christians Not Otherwise Designated); Date registered (as recorded on original certificate): 20 August 1948; Date deregistered (as recorded on original certificate): 24 November 1969. (Archived version of list from April 2010; subsequent updates; original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70/125)
  10. ^ "Moulsecoomb Place and the Manor House". University of Brighton (Estate and Facilities Management Department). 2012. from the original on 13 March 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  11. ^ "Halls of residence on Moulsecoomb campus". University of Brighton. 2012. from the original on 28 December 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  12. ^ SouthwellZfirst=Felice (30 July 2022). "Student village planned in the grounds of historic Brighton manor house". Brighton & Hove News. from the original on 30 July 2022. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  13. ^ Nairn & Pevsner 1965, p. 458.

Bibliography edit

  • Antram, Nicholas; Morrice, Richard (2008). Brighton and Hove. Pevsner Architectural Guides. London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-12661-7.
  • Beevers, David; Roles, John (1993). A Pictorial History of Brighton. Derby: The Breedon Books Publishing Co. Ltd. ISBN 1-873626-54-1.
  • Brighton Polytechnic. School of Architecture and Interior Design (1987). A Guide to the Buildings of Brighton. Macclesfield: McMillan Martin. ISBN 1-869-86503-0.
  • Collis, Rose (2010). The New Encyclopaedia of Brighton. (based on the original by Tim Carder) (1st ed.). Brighton: Brighton & Hove Libraries. ISBN 978-0-9564664-0-2.
  • Nairn, Ian; Pevsner, Nikolaus (1965). The Buildings of England: Sussex. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-071028-0.

moulsecoomb, place, large, 18th, century, house, lewes, road, moulsecoomb, area, english, coastal, city, brighton, hove, originally, farmhouse, based, agricultural, area, parish, patcham, north, brighton, bought, extensively, remodelled, 1790, long, establishe. Moulsecoomb Place is a large 18th century house on Lewes Road in the Moulsecoomb area of the English coastal city of Brighton and Hove Originally a farmhouse based in an agricultural area in the parish of Patcham north of Brighton it was bought and extensively remodelled in 1790 for a long established local family It was their seat for over 100 years but the Neoclassical style mansion and its grounds were bought by the local council in the interwar period when Moulsecoomb was transformed into a major council estate Subsequent uses have varied and Moulsecoomb Place later became part of the University of Brighton s range of buildings Student housing has been built to the rear but much of the grounds the house itself and a much older cottage and barn attached to the rear have been preserved The house is a Grade II Listed building Moulsecoomb PlaceMoulsecoomb Place after renovation in 2011 seen from the southeastLocationLewes Road Moulsecoomb Brighton and Hove BN2 4GA United KingdomCoordinates50 50 47 N 0 07 02 W 50 8465 N 0 1172 W 50 8465 0 1172FoundedEarly 18th century as farmhouse Built1790Built forBenjamin TillstoneRestored1906 or 1913 2010 11Architectural style s Neoclassical PalladianGoverning bodyUniversity of Brighton owner Listed Building Grade IIOfficial nameMoulsecoomb PlaceDesignated20 August 1971Reference no 1381668Location within Brighton and Hove Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 BibliographyHistory editAt the time of the Domesday survey in 1086 Moulsecoomb was an outlying part of the large parish of Patcham which was centred on Patcham village north of Brighton Spelt Mulescumba at that time the name varied considerably over the centuries 1 and was not standardised to its current spelling until the 1960s 2 The manor and estate of Moulsecoomb later belonged to Lewes Priory and Mouscombe Farm was first named in the early 17th century when it was owned by Sir Edward Culpepper On his death in 1730 it was left to Sir William Culpeper 1st Baronet of Preston Hall the first of the Culpeper baronets 1 By this time nothing more than a farming hamlet had developed in the steep sided valley it had no church of its own and was dependent on Patcham 1 3 In the early 16th century a timber framed hall house was built on the estate near the farm although some sources claim a late 14th century date 2 4 A wooden tithe barn was erected next to it later in the 16th century and was subsequently extended in flint The hall house is the oldest secular building in Brighton and is presumed to be a remnant of a larger medieval manor house perhaps the forerunner of the present Moulsecoomb Place 2 which has its origins in the early 18th century At that time when the farm was still in agricultural use a farmhouse was built adjoining the hall house In 1790 Benjamin Tillstone bought the farm and converted it into a rural retreat with the farmhouse as its centrepiece He commissioned a major overhaul of Moulsecoomb Place extending the facade and refacing it in yellow brick 2 4 nbsp Moulsecoomb Place underwent maintenance in 2010 The early 20th century extension is hidden behind the tree to the left The building was thereafter the seat of the locally important Tillstone family for more than a century and was the centrepiece of an estate extending to 1 000 acres 400 ha 1 A wide verandah was added to the house at ground floor level by 1810 5 and the hall house was converted into stables 2 A regular visitor around this time was the Prince Regent later King George IV a friend of the family He had his own bedroom above the drawing room and a dovecote near the house was adapted into a summer house in which the prince would sit and practise playing a silver flute he had received from Tillstone 4 The dovecote was accordingly known as Prince s Tower but was vandalised beyond repair in 1942 2 Three huge mahogany doors in the house were given by the prince in return they may have come from the demolished Grove House at Old Steine where the prince stayed when he first visited Brighton in 1783 6 More work was carried out on the building in 1906 2 or 1913 7 when a further two bays were added to the south side of the seven bay facade 2 The final Tillstone family owner Mr B T Rogers Tillstone sold Moulsecoomb Place and the family s estate to Brighton Corporation predecessor of the present city council in February 1925 Much of the land which had been transferred from the parish of Patcham into the borough of Brighton in October 1923 was used to develop the Moulsecoomb housing estates 2 South East and North Moulsecoomb collectively the largest area of council housing in Brighton Hundreds of homes fit for heroes were built to replace unsuitable inner city slums 8 Moulsecoomb Place and its grounds were retained and the building was used by the Corporation to house its Parks and Recreation Department 5 Later it housed Moulsecoomb s first library and was used to provide extra capacity for a local school 2 Between August 1948 and November 1969 part of the building was registered as a place of worship by a group of Christians known as Moulsecoomb Free Church 9 By 1971 most of the interior was used for offices and a social club and bar occupied the hall house 7 The building is next to the main Moulsecoomb campus of the University of Brighton In 1993 the university submitted a plan to buy Moulsecoomb Place and its grounds build accommodation for 163 students on the former plant nursery to the rear 2 and convert the building itself and the old tithe barn into the headquarters of its Student Services division and a children s nursery Permission for this was granted in the same year 2 10 The student residences consist of flats accommodating six to eight people each with their own bedroom but with shared bathroom and laundry facilities Breakfast and evening meals are provided on site As of 2012 rent was 142 per week or 5 538 for a 39 week academic year tenancy 11 In July 2022 a property developer announced its plans to demolish the existing student housing and rebuild at a higher density creating a mixed use student village 12 Moulsecoomb Place was designated a Grade II Listed building on 20 August 1971 7 The timber framed hall house to the rear had been listed on its own on 13 October 1952 in 1971 the listing was expanded to cover the whole building 7 Architecture edit nbsp The southern extension has a bow fronted section Moulsecoomb Place is the only building in the Moulsecoomb area mentioned by Ian Nairn and Nikolaus Pevsner in the Sussex edition of their Buildings of England architectural guides They describe it as an early 19th century seven bay house of yellow brick and note that the hall house attached to the rear is the only worthwhile timber framed cottage in Brighton 13 The seven bay facade which faces east 7 is the original part dating from 1790 another two window range was added on the south side in the early 20th century 2 making the composition asymmetrical The original section has yellow brickwork in a Flemish bond pattern to the main elevation and brown and yellow gauged brickwork on the north side wall Yellow bricks are also used on the south extension but in a stretcher bond layout 7 The 1790 section has a 2 3 2 bay pattern whose central three bay section projects slightly and is set beneath a pediment 2 7 Its tympanum has a pattern of raised brickwork Behind the pediment is a parapet and a cornice with mutules below Some of the ground floor windows have elements of the Palladian and Neoclassical Adam styles those at first floor level are straight headed The hipped roof has several chimney stacks 7 The early 20th century extension is in complementary style On the east elevation a single storey two window section projects forward and is topped with a parapet and cornice This continues round to the south elevation which has a full height bow front with a three window range 2 7 A modern conservatory has been added to one side 2 The timber framed hall house whose interior had been significantly altered by the time it was in use as a bar and social club is believed to be the surviving section of a larger building dating from the medieval era It has two storeys the upper of which is jettied 2 7 The areas between the closely studded timber frame are filled in with a mixture of plaster flint and brickwork and tiles cover the hipped roof There are some small sash windows The tithe barn which was extended in the 19th century is linked to the hall house by a bridge like section of the same date 7 At the time of the listing by English Heritage when the building was in use as offices the interior had elaborate fittings The main staircase is in a hall with a vaulted ceiling in which mahogany doors with Greek Revival style panelling lead to various rooms Some have original fireplaces in styles including Neoclassical and Jacobean The staircase itself has mahogany rails and Gothic Revival style balusters of cast iron There is some stained glass bearing the date 1913 7 See also editGrade II listed buildings in Brighton and Hove M nbsp Media related to Moulsecoomb Place at Wikimedia CommonsReferences editNotes edit a b c d Salzman L F ed 1940 A History of the County of Sussex Volume 7 The Rape of Lewes Parishes Patcham Victoria County History of Sussex British History Online pp 216 220 Retrieved 21 December 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Collis 2010 p 205 Brighton Polytechnic School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987 p 100 a b c Brighton Polytechnic School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987 p 102 a b Beevers amp Roles 1993 p 119 Antram amp Morrice 2008 p 30 a b c d e f g h i j k l Historic England Moulsecoomb Place Grade II 1381668 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 21 December 2012 Brighton Polytechnic School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987 p 103 Registered in accordance with the Places of Worship Registration Act 1855 Number in Worship Register 62066 Name Moulsecoomb Hall Address Moulsecoomb Place Lewes Road Brighton Denomination Moulsecoomb Free Church Christians Not Otherwise Designated Date registered as recorded on original certificate 20 August 1948 Date deregistered as recorded on original certificate 24 November 1969 Archived version of list from April 2010 subsequent updates original certificate held at The National Archives in folio RG70 125 Moulsecoomb Place and the Manor House University of Brighton Estate and Facilities Management Department 2012 Archived from the original on 13 March 2011 Retrieved 21 December 2012 Halls of residence on Moulsecoomb campus University of Brighton 2012 Archived from the original on 28 December 2012 Retrieved 21 December 2012 SouthwellZfirst Felice 30 July 2022 Student village planned in the grounds of historic Brighton manor house Brighton amp Hove News Archived from the original on 30 July 2022 Retrieved 30 July 2022 Nairn amp Pevsner 1965 p 458 Bibliography edit Antram Nicholas Morrice Richard 2008 Brighton and Hove Pevsner Architectural Guides London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12661 7 Beevers David Roles John 1993 A Pictorial History of Brighton Derby The Breedon Books Publishing Co Ltd ISBN 1 873626 54 1 Brighton Polytechnic School of Architecture and Interior Design 1987 A Guide to the Buildings of Brighton Macclesfield McMillan Martin ISBN 1 869 86503 0 Collis Rose 2010 The New Encyclopaedia of Brighton based on the original by Tim Carder 1st ed Brighton Brighton amp Hove Libraries ISBN 978 0 9564664 0 2 Nairn Ian Pevsner Nikolaus 1965 The Buildings of England Sussex Harmondsworth Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 071028 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moulsecoomb Place amp oldid 1145169812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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