Tindale Tarn House

Has been described as a Certain Pele Tower

There are masonry ruins/remnants remains

NameTindale Tarn House
Alternative NamesTernehouse; The terne howse
Historic CountryCumberland
Modern AuthorityCumbria
1974 AuthorityCumbria
Civil ParishMidgeholme

Farmhouse, formerly tower house. Late C15 for Humphrey, Lord Dacre, with extensions and alterations dated 1843 over entrance and initials T.(&) M.H. on inscribed stone set into wall. Calciferous sandstone rubble walls, over one metre thick and in places 2 metres thick in tower; wall of tower raised by about 3 courses when gabled roof added 1843; graduated slate roof with eaves modillions, yellow brick chimney stacks on stone bases. 2 storeys; 3-bay tower with 2-bay extension under common roof. Tower has projecting stone gabled porch with plank door and dated lintel. Angle buttress to left, with probable filled entrance between this and porch. Original small filled ground floor window to right; small windows above are 1843. Rear wall has large footing stones and plinth. Original ground floor entrance is filled; windows all of 1843. Extension left has plank door with plain stone surround. Ground floor 2-light sash windows with glazing bars; similar 2-pane sashes above. Rear wall includes older stonework, which may be from the curtain wall referred to by Curwen. See Transactions Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archaeological Society, xi, p234, which refers to a document of 1485 mentioning 'a new built house called Ternehouse'. Overlooks Tindale Tarn and on a good defensive site. (Listed Building Report)

Considerable portions of an old pele, with its curtain walls, remain incorporated into farmbuildings dated 1823 (Curwen).

The remains of the peel abut the west side of Tarn House. It is in a good state of repair. Traces of the barmkin wall are still visible incorporated in the fabric of the house (F1 BHP 03-JUL-72). (PastScape)

Stonehouse.

Curwen describes as a pele tower with curtain walls

Curwen gives no source for his statements, but may have visited the site.

1485 Ipm of Humfrey Dacre gives a reference to a 'new built house there called Ternehouse wch (is) ...for getting of Seacole' (TCWAAS (2), xi, 234 and CRO Carlisle Ca/1485). There are other 17th century references in Household Accounts of Naworth and TCWAAS (2) xix, 108.

Important site because there is a firm date for the building. Extremely roughly coursed unsquared rubble. There may have been a tower at the west end and there may be remains of curtain walls. (Perriam and Robinson 1998)

Gatehouse Comments

Shown on Saxton's map of 1579 as a tower. A building, in fact, originally of baronial status, although not a residence used by the Dacre lords but an administrative building for exploiting their estates, initially for coal mining (see Industrial History of Cumbria) and, seemingly, for cheese making in some scale in the C17. The steward of the Dacre's may have actually been a 'gentleman' (Such a position may well have gone to a younger son of a local minor knight.) but the esteem of the family would require a reasonable status building, possibly with some martial features (like a crenellated tower), it is also likely that the building needed some defence to protect the moneys held in it and as a probably target for any local discontent.

- Philip Davis

Not scheduled

This is a Grade 2* listed building protected by law

Historic England Scheduled Monument Number
Historic England Listed Building number(s)
Images Of England
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceNY605584
Latitude54.9194297790527
Longitude-2.61687994003296
Eastings360550
Northings558480
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • Salter, Mike, 1998, The Castles and Tower Houses of Cumbria (Malvern: Folly Publications) p. 99 (slight)
  • Perriam, Denis and Robinson, John, 1998, The Medieval Fortified Buildings of Cumbria (Kendal: CWAAS Extra Series 29) p. 172 (plan)
  • King, D.J.C., 1983, Castellarium Anglicanum (London: Kraus) Vol. 1 p. 91
  • Curwen, J.F., 1913, Castles and Fortified Towers of Cumberland, Westmorland and Lancashire North of the Sands (Kendal: CWAAS Extra Series 13) p. 410-411

Journals

  • Graham, T.H.B., 1919, 'The Eastern Fells' Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 19 p. 108 online copy
  • Graham, T.H.B., 1911, 'Extinct Cumberland Castles (Part III)' Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 11 p. 234 online copy

Primary Sources

  • 1898, Calendar of inquisitions post mortem and other analogous documents preserved in the Public Record Office Vol. 1 no. 10 (1485) (TNA ref C142/1/12)
  • Ornsby, G. (ed), 1877, Household Accounts of Naworth 1612-40 (London: Surtees Society 68) p. 217 (1624 - Purchase of cloth for cheese clothes for Tarn House) online copy