Kirkby Thore Hall

Has been described as a Questionable Pele Tower, and also as a Questionable Uncertain

There are major building remains

NameKirkby Thore Hall
Alternative NamesKirkbythore
Historic CountryWestmorland
Modern AuthorityCumbria
1974 AuthorityCumbria
Civil ParishKirkby Thore

Hall block with solar wing, now farmhouse; C14 with later additions and alterations. Wet-dashed rubble. Graduated slate roofs; hall of 30° pitch with outshut to front, solar of 45° pitch with stone-flagged eaves. Brick chimneys to east end and junction of hall and solar. Hall was single-storey with 3-bay front, but upper floor was added in C17. Central part-glazed door replaced a C16 mullioned window (the lintel has been retained). 3-light C17 window to left; C16 bay window to right has 5 leaded lights to front and 2 to side, all mullioned and transomed under hoodmould. Three C19 sashes to east wall; no remains of any earlier wing at this end. Solar wing has 3-light C16 mullioned window under hoodmould to ground floor north; pointed C14 mullioned window of 2 trefoil-headed lights with blind quatrefoil between to 1st floor. west side of wing has 2 small original windows to 1st floor and two C19 sashes to each floor. Panel in south gable of solar wing bears the Wharton arms. Lower C19 extension and C20 barn conversion to rear are not included. (Listed Building Report)

Kirkby Thore Hall, 500 yards S.E. of the church, is of two storeys; the walls are of rubble and the roofs are slate-covered. It was built in the 14th century and the hall-block, formerly of one storey, with the solar-wing still remain. There is no evidence of a corresponding buttery-wing but the N.E. end of the hall-block, which it presumably adjoined, may have been partly reconstructed. A bay-window was added to the hall in the 16th century and the upper floor was inserted in the 17th century. There are later additions on the S.E. side.

The house formerly belonged to the Wharton family and is an interesting example of a 14th-century building.

The N.W

Front (Plate 15) of the solar-wing has an original window, at the first-floor level, of two trefoiled and transomed lights with a quatrefoil in a two-centred head; it is now blocked but retains an iron grate; below it is a 16th-century window of three lights with a square head and a moulded label. The hall-block has a 16th-century bay-window of five transomed lights on the front and two on the return; further N.E. is an 18th-century doorway set in the blocking of a 16th-century window and above it is a 17th-century window of three lights. The S.E. side has, in the gable of the solar-wing, a panel with the arms of Wharton; the hallblock retains an original window of two transomed and trefoiled ogee lights in a square head with a moulded label and blank shields in the spandrels. Inside the building, the hall (25¼ ft. by 21¼ ft.) has an inserted ceiling with exposed beams; in the S.W. wall is an original doorway with a shouldered head and adjoining it is a wall-staircase to the upper floor of the wing. The roof of the hall is of three bays with two original trusses of collar-beam type with curved braces below the collar-beams and a shaped cutting of the beams above the collar. The original roof of the solar-wing is of three bays with four trusses; these have curved principals below the collars and short king-posts above. (RCHME 1936)

The old manor-house Kirkby Thore Hall stands on a low level to the E. of the plateau of higher ground now covered by the village which contains the site of the Roman camp of Brovonacae. This latter seems to have been the position occupied by what Machell in his MSS. refers to as the ruins of Whelp Castle. It does not appear certain that these remains were representative of any mediaeval structure, for even in Machell's time there was scarcely a vestige above ground, and his account of the foundations, pavements, and walling applies more conspicuously to Roman work, than to any pre-existing strong-hold raised by the Whelps. The present hall now occupied as a farm house presents an excellent example of the style and arrangements of a fifteenth century manor-house, built all at one time on its present lines on the L shaped plan simply as a domestic residence. There is no trace of keep-tower or battlements, nor any characteristics of a fortified place of the old type. It was built probably in the reign of Hen. VII. in the tranquil times which succeeded the years of havoc and desolation of the Wars of the Roses. (Taylor 1892)

Gatehouse Comments

Delightfully well preserved C14 hall house with no defensive features. Presumably included by Perriam and Robinson in their gazetteer of medieval fortified buildings, because of its architectural importance only. The form of the building is a hall with an attached solar block but that solar block is only two storeys and has no roof walk, crenellations or anything else that would make it it a tower. There may have been a fortified earlier manor house, called Whelp Castle, within the bounds of the nearby Roman fort.

- 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 ReferenceNY641256
Latitude54.6244812011719
Longitude-2.55674004554749
Eastings364154
Northings525624
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • Perriam, Denis and Robinson, John, 1998, The Medieval Fortified Buildings of Cumbria (Kendal: CWAAS Extra Series 29) p. 286 (plan)
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus, 1967, Buildings of England: Cumberland and Westmorland (Harmondsworth)
  • RCHME, 1936, An inventory of the historical monuments in Westmorland (HMSO) p. 147 no. 3 (plan) online transcription
  • Curwen, J.F., 1932, 'Parishes (East Ward): St Michael, Kirkby Thore' The Later Records relating to North Westmorland: or the Barony of Appleby (Kendal: CWAAS Record Series 8) p. 157 online transcription
  • Taylor, M.W., 1892, Old Manorial Halls of Westmorland and Cumberland (Kendal: CWAAS Extra Series 8) p. 139 online copy
  • Nicolson, J. and Burn, R., 1777, History and Antiquites of Cumberland and Westmorland Vol. 1 p. 379 online copy

Antiquarian

  • Manuscripts of the Reverend Thomas Machell, vicar of Kirkby Thore (d 1698) Vol. 1 (preserved at the Cumberland Record Office)

Journals

  • Charlesworth, D., 1964, 'Recent work at Kirkby Thore' Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 64 p. 63- online copy
  • Brunskill, R.W., 1957, 'The Development of the large house in the Eden Valley 1350-1840' Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 57 p. 81 online copy
  • Brunskill, R.W., 1956, 'Three medieval manor-houses of North Westmorland' Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 56 p. 75-9 online copy
  • Taylor, M.W., 1892, 'Manorial Halls of Westmorland' Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 12 p. 27 online copy
  • Taylor, M.W., 1876, 'On some of the Manorial Halls of Westmorland' Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Vol. 2 p. 245 online copy