Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 77 total)
  • Who lives in the oldest house on STW?
  • molgrips
    Free Member

    Just curious. Apparently the oldest continuously inhabited private house (built as such) in the UK is Saltford Manor near Bath at about 1148.

    Oldest I lived in was about 120 years old in Hadfield in Derbyshire.

    LoCo
    Free Member

    Only 110 in my house, the family place in St Ives the bottom half is over 400.

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    me, mine was built in 1066, I win! me. me. ME!!!!

    bassspine
    Free Member

    the deeds to ours go back to mid 1600s but mention that the house was there before the deeds were written up. Some of the exterior walls that we’ve looked at have stone bases with small very early bricks above and then cob blocks on top of that…

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Mine is around 1870

    KT1973
    Free Member

    1880 here

    GlitterGary
    Free Member

    2008.

    iDave
    Free Member

    I found a coin dated 1773 under the floor in one house I owned

    mcmoonter
    Free Member

    Moonter Towers 1712, pic taken in the between the wars.

    My gaffe in Orkney is much older. It sits in the grounds of the Bishop’s Palace, King Haakon IV of Norway, overwintering after the Battle of Largs, died there in 1263. I doubt if the house is that old, but the Royal Commission came and took measured drawings and photographs of all the details.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    1864 according to the deeds used to liv3 above a pub in aberystwyth apparently 400 its old certainly felt old made of huge stones like a castle

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Pics please.. phil wtf?

    Re coins I found an old penny from about 1890 on the street in Cardiff..

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    😆 wanted to get it in early before STW went in its traditional way of one-upmanship! lived in a house that had wattle and daub in the walls… thats about as much as i know about it.

    but for the sake of the thread here’s a photo of my current mansion:

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    moonter, that place looks awesome. Have you had it long?

    BigButSlimmerBloke
    Free Member

    1853 BUT if precious stones or minerals are found on my laaarnd, they don’t belong to me but to the original owner of the land prior to it being developed. I am entitled to compensation for any mining activity in the garden though

    BigButSlimmerBloke
    Free Member

    mcmonter, that bus is turning up beside st magnus cathedral and the white building is now the museum?

    titusrider
    Free Member

    1713 for my parents place where I grew up

    mcmoonter
    Free Member

    mcmonter, that bus is turning up beside st magnus cathedral and the white building is now the museum?

    The photograph was taken from the top of the cathederal. The buiding you refer to is now Tankerness House Museum.

    My wee place is in the garden to the left centre of the photograph.

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    Turn of the century here – old farmworkers cottage (read end-terrace) that had been used as a livestock/hay/whatever store for 50 years before we bought it and developed it.

    Gotta say that Lord McMoonter appears to have the most amazing gaff of anyone on here (I have seen previous threads showing his home too).

    ton
    Full Member

    old houses are spooky

    mcmoonter
    Free Member

    Gotta say that Lord McMoonter appears to have the most amazing gaff of anyone on here (I have seen previous threads showing his home too).

    It’s a longstanding family home. I’m a starving artist!

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    It’s a longstanding family home. I’m a starving artist!

    Well you are very fortunate to have the home you do have. Put in an outdoor pool and you could hire it out to the makers of porn films to make some money.

    elliptic
    Free Member

    Mine’s not known exactly but believed to be early 1500s – one of the older houses in one of the older parts of town.

    House across the road has roof timbers dated to the 1460s.

    mrmo
    Free Member

    i think the house i am renting was put up around 1860. so quite modern really.

    bedmaker
    Full Member

    2010. Wooden spoon for me I guess…..

    Teetosugars
    Free Member

    About 1760..

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    1810 but (in a STW oneupmanship stylie)… one of the Dambusters lived in it. Somebody Clay IIRC.

    donsimon
    Free Member

    My house in Chester was built in something like 1873 and the oldest I’ve lived in was a cottage near Wrecsam, the original part of the house would be about 250 years old now.

    My current house must be in the running, I thnk the wiring dates from the early 13th Century…

    Hob-Nob
    Free Member

    1650 apparently.

    Once it’s finished, I do plan on looking into the history and finding a bit more about it.

    plop_pants
    Free Member

    Anne of Cleaves stayed here, not sure how old that makes it. About 1550s maybe.

    CharlieMungus
    Free Member

    1810 but (in a STW oneupmanship stylie)… one of the Dambusters lived in it. Somebody Clay IIRC

    Was it this fella?

    djglover
    Free Member

    My parents live in what they think was a tudor meeting house, so possibly one of the oldest stone buildings in Lancashire. It was a barn through most of the next 500 years and has additions to if from following centuries, but the arrow slits give it aways as not your average barn conversion, so about 500 years old

    thebunk
    Full Member

    Used to live here:

    1483, but rebuilt in the late 1800s. So to answer the question…not me.

    midlifecrashes
    Full Member

    Midlife towers is 1901, here’s a pic painted by my next door neighbour, Neil McGregor from the museum.

    A neighbour (maybe her father) used to own this place.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Why would a meeting house have arrow slits?

    5lab
    Full Member

    not me. 1920s. but only 2 owners from new (me included).

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Talking of owning castles.. The castle in Wigmore near my folks’ house was owned at one point by Roger Mortimer (he was in fact born there). Mortimer was Regent to Edward III, and he had a son called John of Gaunt. Until recently, the castle was owned by a bloke called John Gaunt. Amazing innit.

    djglover
    Free Member

    Why would a meeting house have arrow slits?

    Er, Tudor times, in Lancashire… there was a bit of a war going on..

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Either 1830s or 1790s depending on who you ask

    Hasn’t always been lived in by humans though

    yossarian
    Free Member

    100 years to the month here. Not very old I guess but it’s survived a german parachute mine, tidal floods and some **** with a bucket of artex in the 1970s.

    Happy 100th birthday little house

    Dickyboy
    Full Member

    Rented a timber frame jobbie c 17th century off the national trust when the kids were young, the bedroom floor was so out of level that when my oldest started to walk he could only go in one direction before turning round & crawling back uphill – mind you this did mean his toys were self tidying as they all gravitated to one corner of the room 🙂

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