1
Rodmell houses [2]
Numbers 1 and 2 Style Cottages were built in the 18th century. Constructed of flint with red brick dressings and quoins, partly tile-hung, all under a tile roof. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1239036
Rodmell is a small commuter village in East Sussex some 7 miles northeast of Brighton and 2½ miles south of Lewes. There is evidence of occupation from the Iron Age onwards. In the village is Monks House, the home of the author Virginia Woolf for twenty-one years until her death in 1941.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 5 May 2022
0.01 miles
2
Rodmell houses [14]
Rose Cottage was probably built in the 17th century. Constructed of flint with one wall stuccoed and one wall weatherboarded, all under a thatch roof. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1239028
Rodmell is a small commuter village in East Sussex, some 7 miles northeast of Brighton and 2½ miles south of Lewes. There is evidence of occupation from the Iron Age onwards. In the village is Monks House, the home of the author Virginia Woolf for twenty-one years until her death in 1941.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 5 May 2022
0.02 miles
3
Lane heading SSW at the NE end of Rodmell village
Image: © Ian Hawfinch
Taken: 7 Nov 2020
0.02 miles
4
Lane at Rodmell
Image: © Basher Eyre
Taken: 24 Mar 2012
0.02 miles
5
Rodmell houses [15]
Thatched Cottage was built in the 16th century. Timber framed, plaster infill, the ground floor rebuilt in red brick and flints, the first floor partly tile-hung, partly weatherboarded, all under a hipped thatch roof. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1238985
Rodmell is a small commuter village in East Sussex, some 7 miles northeast of Brighton and 2½ miles south of Lewes. There is evidence of occupation from the Iron Age onwards. In the village is Monks House, the home of the author Virginia Woolf for twenty-one years until her death in 1941.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 5 May 2022
0.02 miles
6
Rodmell: Monk's House
Weather-boarded buildings ranged along the west side of the village street. The property was once - according to the National Trust notice-board - the home of Virginia Woolf and her husband Leonard.
From the churchyard I could see into the garden - immaculately prim. Was it really that neat in the days of the Bloomsbury Group?
The photo was one of the last I took on this October afternoon, with the sky clouding over and rain threatening.
Image: © Stefan Czapski
Taken: 10 Oct 2019
0.03 miles
7
Monks House
Grade II listed.
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 3 May 2021
0.03 miles
8
Monks House [6]
The house seen from the garden.
Monks House was the home of the writer Virginia Woolf and her husband, the political activist, journalist and editor Leonard Woolf. They bought the house in 1919 and lived there until their deaths in 1941 and 1969 respectively. They upgraded the house considerably. Built in the 18th century, the house is faced with weatherboarding on a stuccoed base under a slate roof. There is an extension on the left. The house is in the care of the National Trust. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1273935
Rodmell is a small commuter village in East Sussex some 7 miles northeast of Brighton and 2½ miles south of Lewes. There is evidence of occupation from the Iron Age onwards. In the village is Monks House, the home of the author Virginia Woolf for twenty-one years until her death in 1941.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 5 May 2022
0.03 miles
9
Monk's House at Rodmell
National Trust with literary links with former resident Virginia and Leonard Woolf.
Image: © David M Clark
Taken: 8 May 2015
0.03 miles
10
Monk's House
National Trust owned house on The Street. Grade II listed http://list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1273935
Image: © Oast House Archive
Taken: 1 Sep 2011
0.03 miles