Gatehouse Farm, Tarset
Has been described as a Possible Bastle
There are masonry footings remains
Name | Gatehouse Farm, Tarset |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Northumberland |
Modern Authority | Northumberland |
1974 Authority | Northumberland |
Civil Parish | Tarset |
Farmhouse and attached outbuildings incorporating probable bastle remains. Both buildings are 19th century but incorporate sections of typical bastle boulder plinth, best seen at the rear (north east) (Ryder, P F 26-JUN-90 Field Investigation).
Boulder plinth may be the survival of a building tradition, yet its position in relation to the two bastles to the south suggests it is an in-situ remnant of an earlier building. The two ranges of bastles appear to have faced each other (Ryder 1990).
Gatehouse Farmhouse is an early 19th century house on a 16th century base. Built of dressed stone with Welsh slate roof. The house is a small two-storey, two-bay cottage, quite pretty with a 20th century porch and windows. Its interest, however, lies in the fact that it quite clearly rests on the foundations of a bastle house. The massive boulder plinth is quite clearly visible front and back. The attached single-storey stable also rests on such a plinth, visible only at the back. Whether the remains indicate two connected bastles or one bastle with contemporary outbuildings it is impossible to say. (Grundy Grade III) (Grundy 1987). (Northumberland HER)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | NY788889 |
Latitude | 55.1939582824707 |
Longitude | -2.33368992805481 |
Eastings | 378850 |
Northings | 588900 |