Tyneham House is a ruined Elizabethan detached house, located in Tyneham, Dorset, England. It was built by Henry Williams between 1563 and 1583 and was for over 250 years occupied by the Bond family, who were the landowners of Tyneham. The house, which was once a scheduled monument, became fell into dereliction after Tyneham was requisitioned and evacuated by the War Office in 1943. The Army partially demolished the house in 1968 and some of its stone and features were salvaged for use elsewhere in the county. The remaining ruins are out of bounds to the public.

Tyneham House
Tyneham House in a circa 1865 drawing by John Henry Le Keux.
LocationTyneham, Dorset, England
Coordinates50°37′16″N 2°09′34″W / 50.6211°N 2.1594°W / 50.6211; -2.1594
Tyneham House is located in Dorset
Tyneham House
Location of Tyneham House in Dorset

History

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Construction of Tyneham House and occupation

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Tyneham House in c. 1900.
 
Tyneham House depicted on an Ordnance Survey map from 1902.

Tyneham House was built by Henry Williams between 1563 and 1583. It incorporated a mediaeval hall and its service rooms, which dates to the 14th century and was built in local stone by the Russell family, possibly as part of an earlier manor house. The hall became the south west wing of the house and was converted in 1567 by dividing it into two floors and adding a new doorway, windows and a chimney. The house's main range was completed in 1583 and a new kitchen wing was added to the north west in circa 1590. The north west wing was extended in the 17th century to provide additional bedrooms and a servants' hall.[1][2]

Four generations of the Williams family occupied the house before the Bond family acquired Tyneham in 1683.[3] Tyneham House remained in the ownership of the Bond family into the 1940s.[4][5] In 1820, alterations and additions were made under Rev. William Bond, including rebuilding the east part of the south west wing and extending the main range westwards. A north porch was added in c. 1861 and the main range was refronted in 1914.[6][1]

Following the death of William Henry Bond in 1935,[7] Tyneham House was offered for let, furnished, "for the summer months or by the year", through Messrs. James Styles and Whitlock of London. The advertisement listed the following accommodation and facilities: a hall, three sitting rooms, 15 bed and dressing rooms, a boudoir, two bathrooms, stabling, a garage, terraced gardens, a walled garden and a grass tennis court.[8] It was let until 1939.[9]

Military requisition

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In 1941, the Royal Air Force requisitioned Tyneham House for use as both an administrative centre and accommodation site for personnel of the Women's Auxiliary Air Force working at the nearby RAF Brandy Bay. Much of the house's furniture was moved into the cellar and its books were put into storage in the granary. The furniture was damaged or destroyed when the cellar flooded after the surface drains were damaged by RAF lorries.[10]

In December 1943, Tyneham was requisitioned and evacuated by the War Office as part of a 7,500 acre expansion of their Lulworth Ranges associated with the Armoured Fighting Vehicles Gunnery School at Lulworth Camp. Although the requisition was originally to be temporary, Tyneham was compulsorily purchased by the War Office in 1948 and, after disputes, they compulsorily acquired the house in 1952.[11][12]

Dereliction

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As a scheduled monument,[13] the Army intended to safeguard the now vacant Tyneham House as best possible, although the Ministry of Town and Country Planning said in 1948 that he was unable to guarantee the house would be preserved and spared from being hit by shells.[14]

By 1949, the house had suffered from the theft of lead from parts of the roof, resulting in water damage to the interior, and its gardens had become a "wilderness".[15] In 1952, John Gale, writing in The Observer, noted how the "deserted" house's windows were "grotesquely blindfolded with sheets of black corrugated iron" and the garden had "run wild amid barbed wire".[16]

In 1952, the Ministry of Works gave some of the house's carved oak panelling and overmantel and heraldic glass to Dorset County Museum. These were re-erected in the council chamber and library in memory of William Ralph Garneys Bond, the last of the Bond family to live at Tyneham House and the president of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society.[17]

In 1965, the Elizabethan section of the house had "collapsed internally, following the loss of its roof" and three years later the Ancient Monuments Board concluded that salvaging the entire building was an "impossibility". It was decided instead that the best option was to "allow certain features which were capable of being dismantled and erected elsewhere to be removed from the site".[18]

Partial demolition and aftermath

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In 1968, the Army undertook the partial demolition of Tyneham House, after the Ancient Monuments Board advised the Ministry of Public Building and Works that the house should be demolished due to its deterioration from weather and vandalism, and its lack of access due to the risk of unexploded shells.[19] The Tyneham Action Group criticised the destruction, which left a roofless ruin, believing the house had been in a "perfectly restorable condition" only a year before.[20]

Numerous parts and features of the house were salvaged and taken elsewhere in the county for reuse. Stone blocks were transported to Athelhampton Hall and the north porch doorway was re-erected in its gardens, and a stone doorway and a porch were re-erected at the manor of Bingham's Melcombe. The National Trust also acquired some of the roofing material to place in reserve until they it was needed for future repair projects.[21][12]

In c. 1973, the south west mediaeval wing, which is the house's most substantial survival, underwent some repair and preservation work by the Department of the Environment. A corrugated iron roof was erected over the wing to provide additional protection.[22]

The ruins of the house remain out of bounds to the public due to the risk of unexploded shells. Many of its walls survive at varying heights.[23] The house is no longer a scheduled monument.

References

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  1. ^ a b "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East: Tyneham". Royal Commission on Historical Monuments of England. 1970. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  2. ^ "Tyneham House". tynehamopc.org.uk. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  3. ^ Winter, Gordon (31 March 1966). "The Rape of Tyneham". Country Life. p. 730. Retrieved 17 May 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ Historic England (21 May 2020). "Former National School, Steeple with Tyneham (1470431)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  5. ^ Ridout, Teresa (August 2014). "Dorset walk: Tyneham and Worbarrow". Dorset Life. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  6. ^ Kelly's Directory of Dorsetshire 1903. Kelly's Directories Ltd. 1903. p. 196.
  7. ^ "Late Mr. W. H. Bond". Western Gazette. 18 January 1935. p. 2. Retrieved 22 May 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  8. ^ "James Styles & Whitlock: Dorset". Country Life. 15 June 1935. p. 20. Retrieved 22 May 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  9. ^ "The Estate Market: Attractive Offers of Tenancy - Old English Homes". Country Life. 9 November 1935. p. 26. Retrieved 22 May 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  10. ^ Kavanagh, Marianne (18 October 2003). "The village that time forgot". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Historic England (17 December 2020). "Church of St Mary, Tyneham (1470442)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  12. ^ a b Marshall, Rita (9 April 1968). "Dorset manor house being given away". The Times.
  13. ^ "Historic Purbeck Buildings: Wareham Council's Request to Ministry". Western Gazette. 15 October 1948. p. 8. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  14. ^ "War Office to Hold Purbeck: Fate of Historic Buildings". Western Gazette. 23 July 1948. p. 8. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  15. ^ "Facets of the world to-day: A miscellany of modern news". The Illustrated London News. 8 October 1949. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  16. ^ Gale, John (3 August 1952). "Dorset Notebook: The Deserted Village". The Observer. p. 5. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ R. F. Dalton (17 August 1952). "Honouring a Memory". The Observer. p. 3. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^ Legg, Rodney (2002). Purbeck Century. Dorset Books. p. 129. ISBN 9781871164954.
  19. ^ O'Callaghan, John (23 September 1968). "Action group aim to oust army from their valley". The Guardian. p. 12. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  20. ^ O'Callaghan, John (21 August 1968). "Effort to free stretch of coast from Army use". The Guardian. p. 1. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ Churchill, Nick (June 2018). "Tyneham revisited". Dorset Life. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  22. ^ Legg, Rodney (2002). Legg Over Dorset. Halsgrove. pp. 35, 39. ISBN 9780857041067.
  23. ^ "The 1952 hit list". The Sunday Telegraph. 12 March 1995. p. 12. Retrieved 14 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.