Overton House, rebuilt in brick for the local surgeon in the early 19th century.
When Codford St Mary's rectory house was built in the 17th century, it was a modest house, unlikely to have been the residence of gentry rector Joh
The Poplars was built in the early 19th century with a fashionably Greek Doric porch.
The rectory house of Codford St Peter. Its classical front conceals a 17th-century house, with a central chimney and lobby-entry plan.
In 1840, the plain classical Wool House had an L-plan, but by the time it was put up for sale in 1869 there was not only a northern extension, but
Codford had no country seat until the early 19th century when Ashton Gifford House, set in a small ornamental park, took that role.
Women have featured strongly in the succession of owners at Parham although, until the Married Woman's Property Act of 1882, a woman's property pas
This section contains photographs of specialist research at Parham House.
The Palmers used several types of stone at Parham. A local sandstone called Amberley Blue was the main choice for the external walls.
Much of our knowledge about Elizabethan Parham comes from the work which the Pearsons and their architect Victor Heal carried out on the house from