Gods Place, and Lobby to Church of St Mary Ewelme, England

Listed Building Data

Gods Place, and Lobby to Church of St Mary has been designated a Grade I listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1369023
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
18 July 1963
Name
GODS PLACE, AND LOBBY TO CHURCH OF ST MARY
Location
GODS PLACE, AND LOBBY TO CHURCH OF ST MARY, HIGH STREET
Parish
Ewelme
District
South Oxfordshire
County
Oxfordshire
Grid Reference
SU6463691394
Easting
464636.4854
Northing
191394.0750

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

EWELME HIGH STREET SU6491 (North side) 8/98 God's Place, and lobby to 18/07/63 Church of St. Mary (Formerly listed as Almshouses)

GV I

Almshouse. c.1437. Uncoursed limestone rubble; old plain-tile roof; brick lateral stacks. Courtyard plan. Single storey and attic; 5-window range. Projecting red brick porch to right of centre with crow-stepped cross-gable; arched doorway in taller lancet surround with trefoil top. Irregular fenestration mostly of 2-light wood casements. 2-light stone mullioned window to cross-gable to left. 3 gabled dormers. Central square cloistered courtyard. Internal wall; timber frame with brick infill. Outer wall has red brick base with open timber-framed arcade above supporting lean-to roof. The centre of each side of courtyard has Tudor-arched doorway with 3 trefoil-topped wood lancets above and cross-gable with ornamental carved barge boards. The plan has 11 dwellings of one ground floor room and upstairs room arranged round 3 sides with probably former warden's accommodation to fourth side. Each dwelling has lateral stack to external wall. Lobby to church: Tudor arches to doorways to 4 sides. Carved shields supported by angel heads above. History: The licence to establish the almshouse was granted in 1437 and the foundation was probably complete by 1442, at the expense of the Earl and Countess of Suffolk. The countess (nee Alice Chaucer) was born in Ewelme in 1409, the daughter of Thomas Chaucer, the lord of the manor, and grand-daughter of Geoffrey, the poet. She married William de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk in 1420 (created Duke of Suffolk 1448). He "for love of his wife and the commodity of her lands felt much to dwell in Oxfordshire." They rebuilt the church, established the almshouse and built the school. The use of brick, on the porch, the infill of the cloister walls, etc, is one of the earliest in the county. (Malcolm Airs "Ewelme" Archaelogical Journal Vol.135, 1978, pp.275-280j Buildings of England: Oxfordshire, pp.595-600; Guide to St. Mary's Church, Ewelme, and to the Almshouse and the School, 1980).

Listing NGR: SU6463391404