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[Closed] Who lives in the oldest house on STW?

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Jesus was born in my house. Barn conversions were all the rage in 1AD


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 7:39 pm
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I live in a cave formed around 3bn years ago. Can I claim my prize now?


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 7:42 pm
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i don't know about 'oldest' - but i definitely live in the [i]coldest[/i]...

100 year old terraces are rubbish.


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 7:43 pm
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we rented a place that had cellar / foundations dating back to about 1243 apparently. The bulk of the building was from the early 1600's. Used to be a church cloister / Monks building. Seriously haunted it turned out (and I'm cynical to the nth degree but I only spent 1 night in it alone)...


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 8:07 pm
 FFJA
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1620 for me, with a humungous cellar which goes all the way under village green and is the old beer cellar from when it was used at the Half Moon hotel


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 8:22 pm
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1642 according to the date stone, but that hasn't stopped progress as we have underfloor heating and centralised hoover system but all very tastefully done so the house still looks like it would have done 300 years ago. Allegedly in the 1740's John Wesley, the methodist church founder preached, from our doorstep (facing outwards presumably, or maybe the other direction if they had decided not to let him in!). The site has been inhabited since the bronze age as an axe head was found in our garden during renovations proves.


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 8:53 pm
 jonb
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what on earth is a centralised hoover system?

1895 for me so quite new compared to some.


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 9:35 pm
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i worked in a pizza hut with roman walls - does that count?


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 9:40 pm
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I slept in West Kennett Long Barrow once-does that count?


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 9:47 pm
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1863 here- its a semi detached cottage with cavity construction (pretty advanced for its time ) and our neighbours is concrete construction - not smooth faced but a very nice rough hardcore mix concrete- how weird is that?

They are part of the Duke of Sutherlands estate and the house across the road is all timber construction- think they were a very early Grand Designs project!


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 9:50 pm
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Guido - I have done the same, although at Wideford Hill Cairn and the Dwarfie Stane most memorably... there have been a few others over the years too!


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 9:57 pm
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Used to live here, but only built in 1799

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 10:02 pm
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Our house was built around 1890. My wife grew up in a lovely farmhouse built in 1663.


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 10:03 pm
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one part of my apartment dates to early 1800's, the other part dates to 1400's

this is in Italy


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 10:13 pm
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1906 here


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 10:50 pm
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i have the 2nd oldest fridge in the UK, oldest in Scotland 8)


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 11:16 pm
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Belongs to a friend, I can sort of claim to have lived here at weekends in the past, on and off. Says 1617 over the door and originally belonged to the Knights of St.John.
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 11:55 pm
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1780s N Yorks farm house with a servants wing put on by the Victorians in around 1890.

The old farm buildings behind the house pre-date the main building but probably only by 10-20 years. Going to make a great workshop/office when my premium bond comes up.


 
Posted : 08/12/2010 11:57 pm
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Banana - that looks interesting, any more info?

Our place is an old flax mill, called; "The Old Mill". Probably about 3-400 years old originally before being redeveloped ~50years ago.
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 12:05 am
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Dave Rudabar, It's Beckfoot Cottage near Bingley, West Yorks. More info here [url= http://www.cottingleyconnect.org.uk/beckfoot.htm ]http://www.cottingleyconnect.org.uk/beckfoot.htm[/url]. They bought it derelict in the 1970's and divided it into 3 cottages. I think, originally this was the main road into Bingley and for a long time the cottage was a stagecoach post. The bridge is Cottingley Bridge. Cottingley being of Cottingley Fairies fame.
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 12:32 am
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i don't know about 'oldest' - but i definitely live in the coldest...

100 year old terraces are rubbish.

tell me about it and end of terrace is the worst
mines 1855 according to the stone in the wall.


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 11:22 am
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Not us but my folks place in the oldest house in Wadebridge - records date back 500 years.


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 11:32 am
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I used to live in the road next to Fairy Dell in Cottingley - where Conan Doyle faked the photos.

My current house had a warped bit of shirting board. It had obviously been warped a long time because when I replaced it I found a previous owner had stuffed newspaper down it and filled over it. When I carefully unfolded the paper it had got reports from last week's fighting in the Crimean War and Victoria & Albert's visit from Napoleon III.


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 11:39 am
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As a student, I lived for one year in rooms on the staircase next to the great hall in Durham Castle.

[img] [/img]

the big door used to be my outside door. I had rooms at the back of the castle with views over the River Wear and (shhhh...) access onto the roof, for summer sunbathing.

Reverse view from the river up to my room.

[img] [/img]

I live in a post war semi now. At least the windows fit.


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 12:08 pm
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Some tremendous houses on here. I don't live in it but our hostel is c. 400 years old, owned (I think) at that time by the Livingston family. I think some of the decor and plumbing is original ๐Ÿ™‚

TS


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 1:01 pm
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As a student, I lived for one year in rooms on the staircase next to the great hall in Durham Castle.

Stayed there too during a conference in 2002. Huuuuuge long bath with no plug up some stairs on its own landing. Nice pub down the hill to the left of the exit and a Woolworth's where I got a universal bath plug.
Hogwarts dining room in the same building?


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 1:57 pm
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1810 but (in a STW oneupmanship stylie)... one of the Dambusters lived in it. Somebody Clay IIRC.

this one?
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 2:08 pm
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Nice pub down the hill to the left of the exit and a Woolworth's where I got a universal bath plug.

The Shakespeare?


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 2:11 pm
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1839, neo-classical square

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 2:20 pm
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Brakes I like that.


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 2:36 pm
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me too! at the time, critics called it 'overly geometric'


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 2:48 pm
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Banana,

I would be interested in that info too, the hospitallers had a thing for putting houses next to river crossings in england,the bridges/fords being a focal point for travellers i suppose, there is one on the Northern side of the Iron Bridge in newport pagnell.

My ten penith, my house was built in 1915, my mums house was built in the 1600's, but my mates wifes parents house, was mentioned in the doomsday book (baliifs house) and had a massive garden that even had the original village pond in it, which later witnessed some witch dunkin'.in her bedroom she had the remains of a C13 fireplace in the wattle and dorb walls.


 
Posted : 09/12/2010 2:48 pm
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