An earlier house here is documented from 1435.
This remarkable run of late medieval buildings continues with No.
A timber-framed building of c.1500 lies behind this tall frontage.
The rendered façade of this tall narrow building hides a medieval timber-framed house, owned in 1489 by John Bishop.
No. 125 includes another late-medieval building, encased in stone in the 18th century or earlier.
Behind the Georgian façade is one of the most important medieval houses in Burford.
This impressive late medieval house may have been owned in 1552 by the clothier Edmund Silvester: his descendants certainly owned it in the early 1
Burford parish church, its elegant 15th-century spire visible for miles around, is the town’s earliest and largest communal building. In both size
Earliest records of Non-Conformists worshipping in Snodland are certificates granting meeting-houses in various homes from 1816.
In 1852, Samuel Hook, with his wife Anna Maria and their five children moved from Chalford, Gloucestershire to Tovil, Maidstone, where Samuel took