Torksey Castle, Lincolnshire, February 2015

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HughieD

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OK, this one is a bit of a gem. Don’t know how I didn’t know about this place but discovered it recently when researching new locations. It’s been covered on here a long time ago so about time Torksey Castle got another report done on it. The day I visited the light was really, really flat but I didn’t let that put me off as I parked up in the village and made my way over to the site. Torksey isn’t a real castle but more of a manor house. It is located in the centre of the village of Torksey on the east bank of the River Trent in Lincolnshire. To be more precise it is a 16th-century Tudor stone-built fortified manor house founded by the Jermyn family of Suffolk. It’s perhaps no surprise that the building is on the Buildings at Risk Register. The site is “strictly private, with no public access” and is only just visible from the A156 road that runs through Torksey. In the hands of English Heritage it would no doubt pull in a steady stream of tourists.

It is not known why Torksey Castle was built. It may have been built as a ‘waypoint’ for the Jermyn family's travels to York or as a gift to one of their sons. The manor was constructed the latest Renaissance fashion. The lower or ground floor level is built of thin limestone blocks and has small mullioned windows. This part of the house was probably used as the domestic area where the servants would have worked. The upper level is built in brick which, at the time, was considered a lavish building material. The hall consisted of a planned series of ranges around a square courtyard.

In 1645 the property fell victim to the English Civil War when the Royalist Jermyn family had the house seized by the Parliamentarians and was in return burned by Royalist soldiers based up the road at Newark. After this very little of the structure remained. The Jermyn family retained control of the estate post- Civil War but the property was not restored and continued to deteriorate. The remains of the buildings were scavenged for building supplies by local residents to reuse. Also due to the hall’s close proximity to the flood-prone River Trent, flooding has contributed to the manor’s demise. In the 1990’s English Heritage undertook the stabilisation of the building (as can be clearly seen from some of the pictures.

Hope you like the pictures and thanks for looking!

Close up of the mullioned windows:

15976852514_c6bff5944f_b.jpgimg7509 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Two of the towers:

16411827708_4477631985_b.jpgimg7508 by HughieDW, on Flickr

General view of Torksey:

16411843488_f3f9cb380e_b.jpgimg7504 by HughieDW, on Flickr

A brick and limestone range of the first floor:

15979293173_aaaf1c8f45_b.jpgimg7499 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Rear view clearly showing the stabilisation work English Heritage undertook in the 1990s:

16599098455_69734ee915_b.jpgimg7498 by HughieDW, on Flickr

On the inside looking out:

15979334143_1a812c8449_b.jpgimg7489bw by HughieDW, on Flickr

Looking up one of the towers:

16598532392_1495e55c8f_b.jpgimg7480 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Close up of the manor’s façade:

16412139970_5b351cfe44_b.jpgimg7478 by HughieDW, on Flickr

16573307986_8150e503df_b.jpgimg7471 by HughieDW, on Flickr

More general shots:

15979425603_8c55ce9639_b.jpgimg7476 by HughieDW, on Flickr

15977060404_5f91a8ff93_b.jpgimg7475 by HughieDW, on Flickr

16573284936_394664fb50_b.jpgimg7472 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Up chimney shot:

16598124781_12a0886b13_b.jpgimg7465 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Another shot up one of the manor’s towers:

15977166204_8805283637_b.jpgimg7459 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Close up of the rear elevation:

16599391485_93aa2b456a_b.jpgimg7510 by HughieDW, on Flickr

External of one of the towers:

16412147428_6961278ba4_b.jpgimg7457 by HughieDW, on Flickr
 
Nice set of photos Sir. First introduced to this place in summer of 1948 whilst on a picnic to celebrate my brother's first birthday. In those days you could walk far closer to the structure - no H & S concerns over falling masonry in those days. To be honest the structure has looked much the same over the ensuing years, apart from the ever changing undergrowth and greenery that is. It is a shame that E H's stabilisation work has to stand out so - I know that work of that type must be clearly seen as modern additions, but surely they could have blended in the colour better, so that the work did not look so stark and stand out so.

The mixed brick and stone construction is quite interesting. At the time this was built there was still real unrest between the Guild of Master Masons and the gangs of roving bricklayers who were laying these newfangled things. Bricklayers had their tools destroyed and in one recorded instance, a bricklayer was so badly beaten by a mason that he died. The Guild defended the mason on the grounds that 'he was defending his livelihood' and he got off very lightly - four days in the local nick!!
 
Nice set of photos Sir. First introduced to this place in summer of 1948 whilst on a picnic to celebrate my brother's first birthday. In those days you could walk far closer to the structure - no H & S concerns over falling masonry in those days. To be honest the structure has looked much the same over the ensuing years, apart from the ever changing undergrowth and greenery that is. It is a shame that E H's stabilisation work has to stand out so - I know that work of that type must be clearly seen as modern additions, but surely they could have blended in the colour better, so that the work did not look so stark and stand out so.

The mixed brick and stone construction is quite interesting. At the time this was built there was still real unrest between the Guild of Master Masons and the gangs of roving bricklayers who were laying these newfangled things. Bricklayers had their tools destroyed and in one recorded instance, a bricklayer was so badly beaten by a mason that he died. The Guild defended the mason on the grounds that 'he was defending his livelihood' and he got off very lightly - four days in the local nick!!

What a totally fascinating story. Thank you for sharing that. And yes...exactly my thoughts re the EH work. Saw some old engravings of the place when I was doing my research and yes it has not changed much over the last two hundred or so years.
 
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