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Monument details

HER Number:TR 15 NW 1410
Type of record:Listed Building
Name:DOVECOTE AT BURNT HOUSE FARM SITUATED TO THE EAST OF THE BARN

Summary

Grade II listed building. Main construction periods 1700 to 1799.

Summary from record TR 15 NW 589:

Dovecote at Burnt House Farm


Grid Reference:TR 10712 55308
Map Sheet:TR15NW
Parish:CHARTHAM, CANTERBURY, KENT

Monument Types

  • SITE (Post Medieval - 1700 AD to 1799 AD)
Protected Status:Scheduled Monument 1018874: DOVECOTE AT BURNT HOUSE FARM; Listed Building (II) 1336535: DOVECOTE AT BURNT HOUSE FARM SITUATED TO THE EAST OF THE BARN

Full description

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The following text is from the original listed building designation:
1. 5273 CHARTHAM ASHFORD ROAD
Dovecote at Burnt House Farm situated to the east of the Barn TR 1055 29/224B
II GV
2. C18. Small rectangular building of red brick. Three storeys. Stringcourse. Tiled roof. Gable ends east and west with dove holes in these.
Listing NGR: TR1071455309

Additional bibliography. (2)

Description from record TR 15 NW 589:
The monument includes a dovecot situated within a farmyard on the northern edge of the village of Chartham, around 10km south west of Canterbury. The dovecot has been dated to the 18th century and is a tall, east-west aligned rectangular building measuring around 8m by 4m. Cleverley designed as a decorative, multi-purpose farm building, the red brick dovecot is built on sloping ground. It has three storeys topped by a gabled, clay tiled roof. Architectural details include a mid-height string course, a decorative cornice, small triangular dormer windows and gable ends finished with coping and kneelers. The ground floor was originally used as a pig-sty; the pigs provided warmth to help heart the two storeys above. The pigs entered the sty through two ground level round-arched openings from the lower ground to the south. The middle floor housed poultry and is lit by two square openings through the southern wall. These have vertical wooden bars designed to prevent the hens from escaping. Access to the hen house and the upper storey is through a central doorway through the northern wall, approached from the higher ground to the north. The dovecot occupies the top floor, with the doves gaining entry through small square openings in each gable end. Internally the walls of the upper storey are lined with around 600 brick nest boxes, each provided with an offset landing stage. A wooden partition has been inserted at a later date. The dovecot is listed grade II. (1)

Additional bibliography. (2)

From the National heritage for England List:

The monument includes a dovecote situated within a farmyard on the northern edge of the village of Chartham, around 10km south west of Canterbury. The dovecote has been dated to the 18th century and is a tall, east-west aligned, rectangular building measuring around 8m by 4m. Cleverly designed as a decorative, multi-purpose farm building, the red brick dovecote is built on sloping ground. It has three storeys topped by a gabled, clay tiled roof. Architectural details include a mid-height string course, a decorative cornice, small triangular dormer windows and gable ends finished with coping and kneelers. The ground floor was originally used as a pig sty; the pigs provided warmth to help heat the two storeys above. The pigs entered the sty through two ground level round-arched openings from the lower ground to the south. The middle floor housed poultry and is lit by two square openings through the southern wall. These have vertical wooden bars designed to prevent the hens from escaping. Access to the hen house and the upper storey is through a central doorway through the northern wall, approached from the higher ground to the north. The dovecote occupies the top floor, with the doves gaining entry through small square openings in each gable end. Internally, the walls of the upper storey are lined with around 600 brick nest boxes, each provided with an offset landing stage. A wooden partition has been inserted here at a later date. The dovecote is Listed Grade II. Those parts of the farmyard walls which abut the western and eastern sides of the dovecote and which fall within its protective margin are excluded from the scheduling, although the ground beneath them is included.

Dovecotes are specialised structures designed for the breeding and keeping of doves as a source of food and as a symbol of high social status. Most surviving examples were built in the period between the 14th and the 17th centuries, although both earlier and later examples are documented. They were generally freestanding structures, square or circular in plan and normally of brick or stone, with nesting boxes built into the internal wall. They were frequently sited at manor houses or monasteries. Whilst a relatively common monument class (1500 examples are estimated to survive out of an original population of c.25,000), most will be considered to be of national interest, although the majority will be listed rather than scheduled. They are also generally regarded as an important component of local distinctiveness and character.

The dovecote at Burnt House Farm is a good example of a rare 18th century combined dovecote, and survives particularly well in mostly original condition. Its siting within a contemporary farmyard, in association with a group of similarly detailed buildings, provides evidence for the planned, ordered and decorative design of farm buildings advocated by 18th century agricultural writers.


English Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Map). SKE16160.

<1> English Heritage, 1965, Dover Castle (Scheduling record). SKE6594.

<2> English Heritage, 1995, Monuments Protection Programme, Step 1 Report - Dovecotes (Unpublished document). SKE16578.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
---Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.
<1>Scheduling record: English Heritage. 1965. Dover Castle.
<2>Unpublished document: English Heritage. 1995. Monuments Protection Programme, Step 1 Report - Dovecotes.