1
Ruislip: The Manor Farmhouse
This is a Grade II Listed Building and the English Heritage website describes it thus:-
"C16 timber framed building with C18 alterations. 2 storeys, 3 bays, and projecting gabled north wing. Old tiled roof with compound ridge stack and right end chimney. Close studded 1st floor with brick nogging. Ground floor now pebble-dashed. Sash windows with glazing bars, those on 1st floor in exposed moulded frames, those on ground floor in reveals. 6-panel door under flat hood. North wing stuccoed. Inside some exposed moulded beams."
Comparing this image with Pearl's
Image from 2007 it is evident that the large coniferous trees concealing the north wing have been felled since then.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 16 May 2010
0.00 miles
2
Manor Farmhouse, Ruislip
Image: © PAUL FARMER
Taken: 14 Sep 2015
0.01 miles
3
Manor Farm House, Ruislip
The house dates from the 16th century. Nearby are a 13th century great barn and the remains of a motte-and-bailey castle believed to date from shortly after the Norman conquest of England. Original groundwork on the site has been dated to the 9th century.
Ownership of the site passed to King's College, Cambridge in the 15th century. In 1931 Manor Farm was included in the sale of Park Wood as a gift to the people of Ruislip. The site continued as a working farm until 1933, and is now run as a community resource by the London Borough of Hillingdon.
Throughout 2007 and 2008 the site was restored with funding from the National Lottery and has become a heritage area.
Image: © Mark Percy
Taken: 28 May 2022
0.01 miles
4
Manor Farm House, Ruislip
The house dates from the 16th century. Nearby are a 13th century great barn and the remains of a motte-and-bailey castle believed to date from shortly after the Norman conquest of England. Original groundwork on the site has been dated to the 9th century.
Ownership of the site passed to King's College, Cambridge in the 15th century. In 1931 Manor Farm was included in the sale of Park Wood as a gift to the people of Ruislip. The site continued as a working farm until 1933, and is now run as a community resource by the London Borough of Hillingdon.
Throughout 2007 and 2008 the site was restored with funding from the National Lottery and has become a heritage area.
Image: © Mark Percy
Taken: 28 May 2022
0.01 miles
5
Manor Farm House, Ruislip
The house dates from the 16th century. Nearby are a 13th century great barn and the remains of a motte-and-bailey castle believed to date from shortly after the Norman conquest of England. Original groundwork on the site has been dated to the 9th century.
Ownership of the site passed to King's College, Cambridge in the 15th century. In 1931 Manor Farm was included in the sale of Park Wood as a gift to the people of Ruislip. The site continued as a working farm until 1933, and is now run as a community resource by the London Borough of Hillingdon.
Throughout 2007 and 2008 the site was restored with funding from the National Lottery and has become a heritage area.
Image: © Mark Percy
Taken: 24 May 2023
0.01 miles
6
The Pond Ruislip
Image: © pearl gardner
Taken: 12 Feb 2008
0.03 miles
7
Manor Farm House, Ruislip
The old farm house at Manor Farm in Ruislip
Image: © Ian Harrison
Taken: 24 Apr 2011
0.03 miles
8
Ruislip: Manor Farm Motte and Bailey
The Motte and Bailey to the left were probably constructed in the 11th century to protect a small fortified farmhouse on rising land above the River Pinn.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 16 May 2010
0.04 miles
9
Manor Farm - The Cow Byre
Image: © Ian Harrison
Taken: 6 Apr 2011
0.06 miles
10
Ruislip: Manor Farm Great Barn
This is possibly the earliest timber-framed building in Greater London dating from about 1280, and this is the east façade.
It is a Grade II* Listed Building and the English Heritage website describes it thus, citing as its source a report by Cecil Hewett entitled 'The Great Barn, Manor Farm', published by the Ruislip, Northwood and Eastcote Local History Society in 1980:-
"Aisled barn c. 1300, partially rebuilt in late C17 or C18. 7 bays. Overall dimensions 102 x 32 ft. Aligned North-South. Weatherboarded with hipped tiled roof. Brick and flint rubble plinth. Entrance in centre of west wall: evidence for a former entrance in opposite position in east wall. Side walls have been rebuilt and raised. Roof has been rebuilt to include principal trusses and two tiers of side purlins. Upper purlins clasped between collars. Lower purlins staggered and tenoned into principal rafters. Raking queen struts between tie beams and principal rafters. Common rafters mainly reused in their present positions and may date from primary phase of construction. The cross frames have passing braces between the main tie beams and aisle tie beams. An open, notched lap joint between the main tie beams and aisle tie beams. Originally the passing braces extended down to meet the aisle walls. Arcade posts have flared heads. Straight, square-section braces between the arcade posts and tie beams and arcade plates. Angle ties between tie beams and arcade plates. Short dragon pieces between the angle ties and the corner posts carry the feet of the hip rafters. Arcade plates with different types of scarf joints, the earliest of which has been dated by Hewett to C13. The upper (i.e. finished) face of each cross frame is addressed towards the south. Carpenter's marks take the form of long, inscribed Roman numerals. Evidence that in the early building the aisle wall plates passed above the aisle tie beams is a technique known as reversed assembly.
An outstanding example of an early timber-frame aisled barn. comparable to the great barns at Cressing Temple and Coggeshall in Essex. Probably the earliest surviving timber framed building in the Greater London area."
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 16 May 2010
0.08 miles