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Latitude: 52.5573 / 52°33'26"N
Longitude: -0.1343 / 0°8'3"W
OS Eastings: 526582
OS Northings: 297132
OS Grid: TL265971
Mapcode National: GBR J01.NVR
Mapcode Global: WHHNL.XZ7C
Plus Code: 9C4XHV48+W7
Entry Name: Mud Wall between 9 and 13 Horsegate, Whittlesey
Listing Date: 15 April 2021
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1471095
ID on this website: 101471095
Location: Briggate, Fenland, Cambridgeshire, PE7
County: Cambridgeshire
District: Fenland
Civil Parish: Whittlesey
Built-Up Area: Whittlesey
Traditional County: Cambridgeshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Cambridgeshire
Tagged with: Wall
A vernacular mud wall built in the late C18 or early C19.
A vernacular mud wall built in the late C18 or early C19.
The mud walling is un-rendered and stands on a footing of stone rubble covered in places with cement. It has a coping of corrugated tiles beneath ridge tiles. Oriented roughly east-west, the wall meets small sections of C20 brick walling at either end.
It is approximately 12.96m in length and 2.06m in height.
The use of earth as a building material can be seen around the world and has a very ancient history. Though it is not an especially common method of construction in England, certain times and places have seen earth walling in significant numbers. This is particularly so with the ‘cob’ tradition in the South-West, where cob walls dating to the C15 have been identified. Typically, earth is bound with straw and mixed with a little water to create the raw building material. The C18 and C19 in East Anglia saw the creation of a significant number of earth structures using ‘clay lump’, whereby large blocks of raw material were put into forms, allowed partially to dry, and were then assembled to make a wall. Despite Whittlesey’s proximity to areas where Clay Lump had become more common, the town’s mud walls were produced in line with the cob structures of the South-West; the mud walls were raised in tapering lifts without forms or shutters and would have been produced in stages over several months. The vulnerability of earth walling to English weather requires all mud walls to have a dry plinth of a more durable material (often stone or brick), in some cases a surface of render, and a coping at its top.
Mud walling in Whittlesey is thought to date from the late C18 and early C19, during which period a tax on brick and tile was in effect (1784-1850). The tax was initially raised in the period following the American War of Independence (1775-1783) to pay for the Government’s war debts, but remained in place for many decades along with other taxes on building materials such as glass, imported timber, and, briefly, stone and slate.
Whittlesey had grown significantly in the C17 as the draining of the Fens brought new opportunities to the town. Many properties in Whittlesey at that time had long burgage plots capable of producing goods for the town’s large market. During the period of land enclosures at the end of the C18 and early C19 the demarcation of property boundaries became more important. The creation of very long boundary structures will have helped to settle property disputes and to manage the land. Stone and timber were not convenient resources for this purpose in the Fens, but high quality clays, exposed by land reclamation, were available. Though the town would later have a significant brick making industry, with four brickworks in operation at the end of the C19, large quantities of cheap bricks were not so easily available a century before. Given the very long nature of many of these burgage boundaries, and the fact that the walls themselves were not intended to be polite structures for the display of status, the use of mud walling was a cheap and highly practical vernacular solution to an otherwise expensive problem.
Whittlesey’s walls have some variation from one to the other: in height, in plinth material (brick, stone, or a mixture of both), and in coping material (usually thatch, pantiles, or wooden boards), but are otherwise a coherent group of structures. They are difficult to date precisely, especially as they are found on long-standing property boundaries, and their materials can routinely be replaced. By the late C20 this level of maintenance was at odds with building fashions that were faster in operation: whole sections of ready-made fence could replace a dilapidated section of wall. This tendency, combined with the frequent subdivision of burgage plots to accommodate new housing or alterations to the road network, have resulted in a significant loss of the town’s mud walls. Between 1980 and 2017 it is thought that 570 metres of mud wall has been lost in the town, with 28 sections remaining in 2020. Whittlesey is the only Cambridgeshire location with a surviving tradition of mud walling, though the outlying hamlet of Eastrea contains one further example.
The Grade II-listed house at 9 Horsegate (List Entry number 1287369) dates to 1743. Map evidence shows that an adjoining property stood attached to the north side of 9 Horsegate from the mid-C19 to the late C20. The mud wall between the buildings today numbered 9 and 13 Horsegate may have been built as early as the C18, but its length and form essentially relate to its function as the northern boundary of the rear garden or yard of the lost building formerly adjoining number 9.
The mud wall between 9 and 13 Horsegate, Whittlesey, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
Architectural interest:
* for its method of construction, exhibiting local distinctiveness in its form, materials and craftsmanship.
Historic interest:
* as an indicator of the impacts of the nation’s changing economic history, through its innovative alternative use of cheaply available local materials during a period of national taxation;
* as part of the sole surviving group of mud wall structures in Cambridgeshire.
Group value:
* for its historic relationship with the Grade II-listed house at 9 Horsegate (List Entry number 1287369);
* as an important part of Whittlesey’s surviving tradition of mud walling, including several other mud walls such as the wall at 4 West End (List Entry number 1228794); and those to the rear of the Black Bull public house (List Entry number 1287279).
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