Wednesday 3 February 2021

Along the twitten

Although my home town has seen many changes over time it has retained a goodly handful of its medieval buildings and alleyways. Going along these twittens [as we call the passages in Sussex] you really get a feel for how little space there would have been between the building on either side. I like them all, but this short one I find particularly charming. From one end you wouldn't even guess it was there because it's tucked behind a high brick wall alongside some modern houses and this is the non too prominent entrance at the other....it doesn't exactly scream public access at you does it!

Being only of average height I can only ever see the top of these two pre Victorian "follies" [they were tile hung later on in the 19th century] over the garden wall which are part way along.  Looking online for a little more detail about them they are more accurately described as two summerhouses with glass greenhouses running between them in the middle. 


These two houses are the star turn for me though. I absolutely adore clapboard houses and even spending two weeks looking at lots in New England many years ago didn't lessen their appeal. These ones are late 18th/early 19th century and were built by a local builder called John Morth. He was so local in fact that he actually built them in his own garden for his daughters and the twitten is called Morth Gardens in his honour.



It amazes me still that this is slap bang in the middle of the town, just off the conservation area around the parish church. I have lived here since I was 10, yet I had no idea of its existence until my Dad took me down it one day when we were out for a walk.. it's always stuck in my memory because my own son was still a very young baby and in his pushchair with us. It never ceases to delight me like it did that first time and is my absolute favourite spot in Horsham.

Arilx




12 comments:

  1. That clapboard house is a real surprise, not something I'd expect to see in the UK. I always look at them and worry about fires. x

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'd never thought about them in the context of being a fire risk. From a purely practical point of view the need to keep the exterior paintwork done regularly might put me off actually living in one. Arilx

      Delete
  2. It looks beautiful. Sussex has such lovely houses and I hadn't heard the word twitten until my son moved to Hastings, I think it is a marvellous word.!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We have all sorts here. The Old Town in Hastings is lovely. Arilx

      Delete
  3. I love those houses, and the follies (I assume that is the decorative 'gingerbread' trim?) and twitten is my new word today.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A folly is a building built just for whimsy without any intended purpose. They were very popular in the 18th century with the landed gentry who had them dotted around their grounds. ARilx

      Delete
  4. Those houses are adorable.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Replies
    1. They are charming and quite unusual for round here. Arilx

      Delete
  6. John Morth was my 5 x great grandfather and I was amazed to see those houses and other properties he owned in Horsham mentioned in his will. I'm still trying to work out where some of the other properties are/were as names have changed. Must do soon!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. How fabulous to hear a bit more of John Morth's history. I wasn't aware he had other properties. Arilx

      Delete

Marching on

 Well March is being a bit of a madam isn't she. One minute she's teasing us with blue skies and a sun with some warmth in it and th...