Monthly Archives: May 2014

The Roof Is Off; All Is Revealed

Three weeks into the restoration of the North Wing of Combermere Abbey, the building is dry and secure under its massive superstructure of hundreds and hundreds of scaffolding poles and a coat of flame-proof plastic sheeting. The covering has cost a large amount of money but it is money well spent; it allows the work to continue regardless of the weather, and the scaffolding – all 70 tonnes of it – itself provides invaluable corridors round all three sides, and on four levels. It’s also a very safe way of working; if anything falls from the exterior, it falls within the sheeting, and the structure itself is so strong that wide, shallow aluminium steps are supported on the north side – so workmen aren’t going up and down potentially dangerous ladders. A further advantage is that although the builders are playing pop music on the radio – as they are required to do by ancient custom – it can’t be heard outside the plastic.

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The scaffolding and plastic sheet covering seen from the north west, facing the lake, with stairway access on the north side.

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From the north. The telescopic ‘cherry picker’ loads materials to and from each of two platforms which have been built into the scaffolding surround at each level.

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From the east – with the remains of the wing built for the visit of The Duke of Wellington on the right – though whether the range of arches looked like that originally we do not know. They may have been windows in the ballroom.

With the roof now removed completely the building resembles a massive, three dimensional jigsaw puzzle – albeit one that has been created at different times across many centuries, and one which is rotten and crumbling. Many questions are being raised by what is been uncovered, and it will be some time before all the evidence can be assessed and will have answers. One query regards floor levels; identifying the original levels of the different floors takes some thinking about, and in one area a floor seems to have been raised several feet by the addition of a number of huge beams – possibly re-used from elsewhere – simply being stacked one upon the other.

What we do see throughout is an astonishingly high level of rot. Some of the very earliest timbers are solid, but the other timbers, no matter their size or their age, are crumbling away – and have obviously been doing so for very many years. It is very common to see vertical timbers which have rotted from the base and no longer reach the surfaces they once stood upon.

Only a dendrochronology survey will finally answer the questions about the age of the different timbers, but it seems logical that the larger, older timbers in the North Wing date from the middle of the Sixteenth century. After Abbot John Massey surrendered the Abbey to Thomas Cromwell’s agents in 1539 it was granted to Sir George Cotton, but the work of demolishing the ecclesiastical buildings and the building of a private house was undertaken by his son, Sir Richard Cotton. This was complete by the middle of the mid-1560s. The new house had five steep gables on the west-facing facade, and was symmetrical. There was two more gables to the south, of which at least one was of the same height, but they were set back slightly. The house was two storeys high, but small windows within the gables suggest that there were attic windows.

Throughout Cheshire and Shropshire the structure of timber-framed houses of this period have survived very well.  In many cases the exposed timbers were crassly tarred or painted black, to give the ‘magpie’ effect which for a long time was thought to be original and authentic.  We now know that such was not the case, and sealing the timbers was a bad idea; where they were left exposed they weathered to a very pleasing dark silver colour, and hardened naturally. In many cases timbers of this age and older seem to have almost petrified, and are exceptionally dense and strong.

It seems likely that encasing the house within the gothick outer shell stopped air from circulating, and allowed damp to take hold. The horizontal distance between the Sixteenth and Nineteenth structures varies considerably. Where the newer exterior projects forward that is a deception, and it is not a reflection of the earlier building. At these points the gap between the two can be as much as eighteen inches.

A relatively small number of large timbers was used in the 1814 – 1821 re-building. Laths were then built over this frame and ashlar was applied and scored to give an appearance of stone blocks (as already noted). These laths were both thin and flimsy, and a softwood seems to have been used. Where architectural changes were made, such as where window openings were altered,  a mixture of wood and brick was used. This was not meant to ever be seen, and it is not hard to imagine that the builders were only too aware of the fact. The workmanship seems hurried at best and shoddy at worst. In some cases – such as in Tudor quatrefoils – the infilling is nothing more than mortar.

It is not hard to imagine that in the damp atmosphere of low-lying south Cheshire decay set in fairly soon. We have to remind ourselves that the ‘gothicisation’ is in fact less than two centuries old, and very many buildings of that age – built with better materials and more care – have survived very well.

There is also the likelihood of subsidence. The house is on a plateau, but from the west front the land falls away gently to the lake; at least, it does now – there was no water in front of the house in Tudor times. There were two lakes and the gap between the two was immediately to the west of the south. They were joined to create the current, 150-acre lake, in the Nineteenth century. The Tudor house incorporated the Abbot’s Lodgings – a late-medieval manorial hall in all but name – just off-centre, so the position of the Tudor house was dictated by the existing footprint of that room. The house has no cellars or foundations, and given the huge weight of the Tudor oak beams, and then the gothick overcoat, it might well have settled unevenly.

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Combermere library and north wing may 12 142One of the gothick pediments at the very top of the house, on the west front. It wouldn’t be unreasonable to expect this to be made of stone!
Combermere library and north wing may 12 141What were designed to look like stone details were made up of layers of wood, built up to give horizontal depth. The disfigurement is from foliage clinging to the outer face.
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We have commented on these curious wooden triptychs before. There are two, facing each other within the returns on the west face. Again, one would expect windows frames such as these to be made of stone. On the exterior face (top of these two images) the frame has been boxed in. On the inside it has been reinforced with an iron strap at some point.
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The window has now been removed and is in storage awaiting either restoration or a new frame being made by way of an exact replica.
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With the roof removed from the North Wing we can look down on the top floor from the temporary corridor around the scaffolding. The large, steel I-section beams were inserted fairly recently as emergency measures, and to support the structure while the scaffolding put up fifteen years ago was removed. 
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In many places we are seeing carpenters’ marks. Where components were first assembled on the ground, they were identified by the master carpenter’s individual marking system so that they fitted together as intended once they were hoisted into place. This was particularly important for joints. 
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The mix of building materials used at the Abbey (which Dr Johnson commented on, with approval) can be seen here. 
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 What remains of the wire-operated bell system to summon servants can be seen in a disused bedroom high up in the North Wing. The different rooms are annotated in an elegant hand-written script.
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A curious internal arrangement in what was a servant’s bedroom, with a fireplace on an internal wall next to an arched doorway. The external gothick window is almost at floor level. Headroom is good though (around eight feet).
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This pargetting work (above and below) on a fire surround in a North Wing bedroom is probably not as old as it would have us believe.
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These five photos show the delicate and elegant Georgian decoration which has survived the decay. These features will be conserved and included in the new decor. Missing plaster moulding will be replaced with new mouldings modelled from areas of the original work. The gothick arches will of course be conserved, and the external windows – so typical of the Abbey – will be restored or duplicated.
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Combermere’s Aeolian Pipes

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What would you think if you found this contraption in your attic? That’s an electric motor on the left, and some sort of turbine on the right, while on the far right is looks as if there should be a pulley attached to that wheel. On the wall behind it is an early electrical control of some kind. but what on earth is it all for? And when does it date from?

This equipment – mostly made of cast iron and obviously very heavy, was exposed in a small room right at the top of the North Wing after the roof had been taken off – a first step prior to the restoration. The answers to what it is and how old it is are very simple, but believe me, it’s not something you would in find in many homes.

In 1919 Sir Kenneth Crossley commissioned the building of a pipe organ from the Aeolian Organ & Music Company of 841, Broadway, New York City.  The firm had been founded in 1878 by one William B Tremaine, and the company was said to manufacture the best instruments of their kind in the world. They specialised in making organs for domestic use; that is to say, in the main, for use in very large houses, and their clients were the very wealthy.

Aeolian did also made cheaper ‘organettes’ or ‘player pump’ organs, with the wind being forced through the instrument by the organist operating foot pedals – as on a harmonium. And that’s the clue to the use of this apparatus at Combermere. The circular motion generated by the motor, powered the belt, which went down – in effect – two floors, and forced air under pressure into the ‘lungs’ of the organ.  As the required stops were opened, the air rushed through the pipes and sounded the notes. Presumably the pump was at the very top of the house so that the noise of it in operation was not heard below in The Library – and certainly did not impinge on the music being played. As he was an engineer by profession, this must have appealed greatly to Sir Kenneth, and of course it was cutting edge technology.

Combermere library and north wing may 12 146The electrical master control box on the wall by the pump. This would be switched off when the organ was not in use, and would have protected the other electrical items in the house.
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Aeolian – named after the Greek god of the winds – had a sales office in Aeolian House in Bond Street, in Mayfair, and Sir Kenneth may well have seen the organ being played there – and doubtless had a go himself. The sales contract was actually made out in the name of Lady Crossley, and the address for delivery was the family’s previous home, Mobberley Hall, but it was to be delivered to Combermere Abbey and installed against the wall at the north end of The LIbrary. That order – number 1431 – goes into great detail, and tells us that the electric bellows (in the loft room) was a ‘London Supplies Blower’, operated by a 100-watt electrical feed. They also got the address wrong; giving ‘Whitechapel, Salop’ instead of Whitchurch, but that was incidental as the organ was to be delivered to Wrenbury railway station, from where it was presumably collected by local workmen – or even estate workers. The documentation also tells us that the trans-Atlantic shipping route required was to be to ‘Liverpool, Cardiff or Bristol’ whichever was to both cheapest and fastest.

An dark oak case for the organ was requested (which would have fitted in well with the panelling in The Library), as well as a total of sixty six stops and pedals. The organ had no fewer than twenty five ranks of pipes. The date of the initial order was January 28 1919, but the organ did not leave the Aoelian factory in New Jersey until January 27 1921. The family moved to Combermere Abbey in 1919, so perhaps it was originally ordered for Mobberley Hall, but then a decision was made to buy a larger house – made simply because the Abbey came on the market perhaps – and delivery was postponed until the family was settled and there was a place for the instrument. The one thing which we don’t know from the documentation, sadly, was how much it cost.

morris_01aThe Combermere organ, with the large aperture to take the ‘automatic play’ cylinder open

The fascinating fact is that you didn’t need to be able to play a single note to get a good tune out of your Aeolian organ. It could be played conventionally, but it also came with a range of pre-formed cylinders which, once slotted into a central cupboard in the vertical face of the machine – one by one, one piece of music at a time – would play the organ automatically, like a pianola. A bit of a con really! It was described in a contemporary press advert as “An instrument upon which anyone entirely ignorant of music can play anything without the slightest practise”.  A con, or a blessing for those of us who learned nothing despite years of piano lessons?

morris_05aA close-up of a cylinder in position
morris_06aAnd the same aperture without a cylinder

We know that Aeolian made around a thousand of these larger organs between 1894 and 1932, and perhaps as many as a hundred were installed in homes in Britain. Very few survive; probably only three where they were originally positioned. The Combermere organ was sold back to the company at some point – we don’t know when – and was then refurbished and sold to Arthur Chilton-King, who had founded the Chiltonian biscuit company, and it was installed at his home in Croydon. It seems that in the 1908s it found its way to Exeter, after perhaps twenty years in storage, and it is now at the home of musician and composer Rowland Lee in Lincolnshire.

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Aeolian Organ Company adverts from different periods, and for different sizes of instrument