. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE sold by Francis and John Symonde and John and Elizabeih Clerkc to Edward Fitz ; In 1657 it was in the possession of Ralph Penny father ,J7 who in 1673 sold it to Edmund ; After this date there is no further record of the manor. Hawkin's Hall, now a farm-house, is situated a little east of Datchworth Green on the road to Watton. BRJGBURV (Bragborrowes, Brackberrie, xvii cent.) was owned at the end of the 16th century by Thomas Michell, son of John Michel], who held it of the manor
. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE sold by Francis and John Symonde and John and Elizabeih Clerkc to Edward Fitz ; In 1657 it was in the possession of Ralph Penny father ,J7 who in 1673 sold it to Edmund ; After this date there is no further record of the manor. Hawkin's Hall, now a farm-house, is situated a little east of Datchworth Green on the road to Watton. BRJGBURV (Bragborrowes, Brackberrie, xvii cent.) was owned at the end of the 16th century by Thomas Michell, son of John Michel], who held it of the manor of Friars in Standon in socage by fealty. He settled it in i6oz on his son Thomas, who was about to marry Martha Bussye, and who succeeded his father in ; Bragbury is now in the possession of Mr. Samuel S. Berger, of the 17th century, and none of the original work can now be traced. The south porch ii probably of the same date as the alteration of the chancel. The top stage of the tower was rebuilt in 1875 when the church was restored ; the north vestry is modern. The chancel has an cast window, and two in the south wall, of about 1600. The east window has a four-centred head which has been blocked, and the three cinquefoiled lights in a square top are modern. The two south windows are of two lights. On the north a modern two-centred doorway leads to the vestry. The roof, of the late 16th or early 17th century, is of the collar beam type, with plaster. The nave has a north arcade of four bays, which it now much out of the perpendicular, and a trust has been thrown across the aisle, against it, with a buttress outside the aisle wall to sup- port it. The arches are two-centred, of two hollow- chamfered orders, and rest on octagonal columns with moulded capitals and bates. The responds have modern detached shafts of Purbeck marble with crudely foliated capitals, which support the inner order only, the outer hollow chamfer descending without interruption to the gro
Size: 1460px × 1712px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1902