NeilsYard
Coventry |
76 of 91
Mon 30th Apr 2018 10:13pm
Great stuff - thanks as ever Helen! I always love finding bits from streets that appear to have been 'lost' over time. I think I've asked this before but anything on Vicar Lane? |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Helen F
Warrington Thread starter
|
77 of 91
Mon 30th Apr 2018 10:33pm
Hi Neil. There's a Troughton in the library pictures of the entrance of Vicar lane. There is an early sketch of the meeting house in there too. There are also a few pictures in the Bunney book of the entrance (looking in and out) and of the chapel and the Sunday school. There may be photos but I wasn't looking for the later stuff. A big tranche of new pictures might turn up now they're combining the city architects collection to the Herbert stuff. There are more Bunneys than appear in the book but many of them are obscure views.
There aren't many parts of the pre war city with no images. I'm amazed at how much I've unearthed. Even the post war aerial views have value because the bombing opened vistas that were obscured by other building before the war.
Possibly the best view of Vicar Lane from Britain From Above but still poor |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Midland Red
|
78 of 91
Tue 8th May 2018 3:35pm
Ricoh Arena model in 45,000 toothpicks |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Helen F
Warrington Thread starter
|
79 of 91
Sun 6th Oct 2019 4:43pm
I'm well set for images of St Mary's Hall, including some impressively old views but there are a few niggling gaps. The plans read from left to right as they go up the building. On the ground floor I could do with a few more pictures of the guild room, on the right of the main gate as you look at it from the outside. I've got a few pictures looking towards the west but none to the east.
While the scullery going into the kitchen is mostly newish, I have no photos that capture that space from the inside. The other end of the kitchen, including the stairs to the hall are also lacking in decent pictures. While the kitchen has been knocked about, some more images of that end might be helpful.
On the first floor, I haven't got any photos looking down from the hall to the kitchens although I have got pictures of the door. Of the room next door, I have pictures looking from the door but none looking the other way. The way into Caesar's tower from that level is also a bit of a mystery.
The second floor on the plans is somewhat complicated. The South range (right side of the plans) is 3 storey but the East range (top of the plans) and North range (left side) seem to be only 2 storey. The North side is fairly simple, give or take changed windows and doors but the East range has changed a lot. The ground floor used to be open to the elements and the stairway to the first floor on the south side is the bit we are familiar with. It's how you get to the Great Hall. The floor above the East range has a very fine window all the way along but doesn't seem open to the public. Originally it was one big room with stairs on the top edge of the map. The stairs don't appear on the modern maps and aren't pictured on the ground floor at all. The room was almost as grand as the Great Hall with carved filigree roof supports to match. I assume that those have long since gone because there are no photographs of anything like it. It seems like that area is used as a landing and office now. There are no photos of it that I can find. The stairs at the South end (right side of the plans) are modern I'm guessing but I don't know where they come from or go to.
Of Caesar's tower, only the doorways need a bit of photographic love. I have a set of photos but haven't worked out which level applies to which photo. The number of times I photograph a doorway going in but forget coming out.
So if you've got any photos of these odd bits or you find yourself able to capture them, I'd be very grateful if you could share them.
Incidentally the vaulted space at the top of the plans known as the Muniments Room is 'modern'. |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
argon
New Milton |
80 of 91
Mon 7th Oct 2019 4:59pm
Helen,
I expect that with your extensive research that you have already seen this article, however in case you haven't it is about The St Mary's Guildhall kitchens:
Coventry planning |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Helen F
Warrington Thread starter
|
81 of 91
Tue 8th Oct 2019 10:26am
Outstanding Argon! No, I hadn't seen it. It's got some very interesting stuff including images I hadn't seen before eg Fig 8. The plan from before the main staircase was enclosed is particularly useful. Thanks a lot. |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
82 of 91
Tue 8th Oct 2019 10:48am
Agreed - great find argon. Is the Knaves Post still there? |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Helen F
Warrington Thread starter
|
83 of 91
Wed 16th Oct 2019 6:19pm
I'm guessing that the knaves post is at the Herbert. The kitchen has been given another level. |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
84 of 91
Fri 10th Jan 2020 11:11am
Hi Helen. As there are references in this thread - were the Leper Chapel and Spon Hospital one and the same?
The Herbert has this one of the hospital by William Brooke.
But Colin's site also shows this on the Leper Chapel.
We're they the same and whereabouts were they? |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
85 of 91
Fri 10th Jan 2020 11:39am
Neil, there are several articles in the newspaper and they all say that the church of St James and St Christopher was erroneously called the leper chapel. One article says that it was further out and long since gone. The chapel on the bridge was used by travellers to make their devotions before entering the city. It says that Chapelfields is named after the old leper chapel. An article I have found on Google in the Telegraph says that in 2007, 800 year old bones that were believed to be of a leper were found when digging foundations and it says the chapel was in the vicinity of the junction of Allesley Old Road and Hearsall Lane.
An extract from the Coventry Society article about Historic Chapelfields. The picture they use is the second one on your post.
When Hugh Kevilock, Earl of Chester, had returned from a crusade around 1100 he built a hospice and a chapel to house one of his knights who had contracted leprosy. The leper hospital was moved to Alcester in the 17th century but the chapel survived until it was demolished to build the Chapelfields estate, the 'chapel in the fields' being the source of the name. The chapel had been called St Mary Magdalen, which name still exists in the 'Blue Roofed Church' at the top of Hearsall Lane. |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Helen F
Warrington Thread starter
|
86 of 91
Fri 10th Jan 2020 12:04pm
Anne's spot on as per usual The 1850 map puts a labelled mark a short way down Hearsall Lane, just south of Broomfield Place and about halfway between Hearsall Lane and Craven Street. The barn had gone by then but it would have been demolished within living memory so is probably accurate. Troughton also sketched it and the Herbert has it in the History Centre. It shows a few more details, including windows that look a lot more like a medieval building than a barn but it's near impossible to work out a layout of the original buildings.
The Chapel near the river is aptly named after St Christopher because originally there would have been a ford running passed it, not the current bridge. There was an earlier pack horse bridge but I think that it would have been further south and east, where the river narrows. |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
87 of 91
Fri 10th Jan 2020 12:42pm
Thanks both. So what/where was Spon Hospital then? |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Helen F
Warrington Thread starter
|
88 of 91
Fri 10th Jan 2020 12:55pm
The leper chapel/barn was part of the hospital. Often hospitals were no more than the outer isles of a chapel but I don't know about the Spon hospital. |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
Prof
Gloucester |
89 of 91
Fri 10th Jan 2020 1:53pm
Neil, post 82, the painting from the Herbert shows the Chapel of St James and St Christopher. I went to school at the Jnr Tech so I remember when there was much more than remains today. I recall the steps for instance. |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
90 of 91
Fri 10th Jan 2020 2:09pm
Thanks Prof - that painting is recorded as being "Remains of Spon Hospital"? |
Local History and Heritage - Helen F - Modelling the city |
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