Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. This ancient track, known as Pilgrims Way, is where the name Pilgrims Hall came from. There are accounts of a property on the site, belonging to one John Owen Wood, dating back to 1753, but the earliest official records of Pilgrims Hall can be found on the County Archive Maps of 1795.

  3. The building was restored in 1959, when a 17th-century hay loft was removed, and the floor excavated to its assumed original level: a gallery and stage were formed for the use of the 'Pilgrims' School', present custodians of the hall.

  4. The roof of the so called 'Pilgrims' Hall', Winchester, now dated to c. 1308, has long been recognized as one of the earliest surviving examples of hammerbeam construction. The 'Pilgrims' Hall' stands in the southeast corner of Winchester Cathedral Close.

  5. The Close, Winchester, Hampshire, SO23. Pilgrims' Hall is a Grade I listed building in Winchester, Hampshire, England. See why it was listed, view it on a map, see visitor comments and photos and share your own comments and photos of this building.

  6. The Pilgrims Hall, built c.1308, is all that remains of a longer Medieval building, once the priory guest house. It has a hammer beam roof, reputedly the earliest known example. The ends of the beams are decorated with various carved heads.

  7. The roof of the so called ‘PilgrimsHall’, Winchester, now dated to c. 1308, has long been recognized as one of the earliest surviving examples of hammerbeam construction. It is somewhat surprising, therefore, that the complete medieval structure, of which the PilgrimsHall forms rather less than half, has not previously been ...

  8. www.cityofwinchester.co.uk › Cathedral › CloseWinchester Cathedral Close

    The Pilgrims Hall (c.1308) is all that remains of a longer Medieval building, once the priory guest house. It has a hammer beam roof, reputedly the earliest known example. The ends of the beams are decorated with various carved heads.

  1. People also search for