How to date a historic building walk
Lewes House, 32 High Street, Lewes, East Sussex, BN7 2LX
This walk will involve a stroll around the town centre looking at the exteriors of the many interesting buildings within the historic core of the town. We will look at the different styles and building techniques which allow us to date the buildings. The town is rich in local building materials such as mathematical tiles, and local bricks. A lot of the timber came from the Baltic and slates from Wales. The skilled builders used design books for their more expensive houses and their own expertise for the smaller cheaper ones. We will discuss their building techniques. Many houses were built to last twenty-five years or so. Be prepared to accept that they were mostly built to let and to be rebuilt when required, and lacked facilities that we take for granted! A lot of the bricks were fired in primitive clamps and so were very uneven - with consequences as we will see.
You will have a handout to help you to look at how they built roofs and other parts of houses. and a picture of a brick clamp .....it was the Victorians who got bricks 'squared'.
Lewes House, 32 High Street, Lewes, East Sussex, BN7 2LX
The walk takes place along public streets where there are areas of unevenness and narrow pavements. Being outside, inclement weather may be encountered and all participants should wear suitable clothing and footwear.
The walk will be led by Dr Sue Berry, formerly a Principal Lecturer in a University. She has been a trustee of two national and one regional heritage charity. A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and of the Society of Antiquaries. Sue is a lecturer and researcher in the 18th and 19th century , specialising in landscape change. She has published many historical articles in research journals which include those of the Georgian Group, Garden History Society, and the Sussex Archaeological Society. These have mainly focussed on the development of Georgian and Victorian period in Sussex.