Tales of the Urban Explorer: Lydiate Hall

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(Edited)

“Is this really Urbex?”

My question was relevant as our target was a ruin. Being off the visible track and not open to the general public allows it to fit into that category, just barely.

I do wish @anidiotexplores would get his mojo back for finding weird places such as this. I know he will read this and ponder my words. While it may not be super interesting, just getting to it was half of the fun.

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Close by was one of those rural food outlets, the type that sell home grown produce that, while better quality that your average supermarket tend to command outlandish prices.

As tempting as it was to dump my car on their car park and scramble through some thick brambles and gorse to attain our goal, I know we would have mustered some strange looks and worse, the fucking shop owner would come out giving us mouthy words.

No, that would not do, and so a short walk would be needed, as well as a back entry route down a farm track and off into the forest around the left side. The amount of barbed wire and ‘trespass signs’ present confirmed my suspicion that ‘Lydiate Hall’ was not in the public domain.

The Ireland family that worshipped at St Catherine's Chapel (also in Lydiate) lived here after Lawrence Ireland built the hall circa 1470 and his initials can be seen carved into the doorway from the hall.

Now only medieval remains exist after the eastern part of the Hall was destroyed in about 1780 and then abandoned completely by the late 1800s.

By 1940 it was a complete ruin and the old barn and outbuildings now house a farm shop, The Hay Lofte Coffee Shop and duck pond.

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“Where is the damned place?”, I growled to @anidiotexplores as we went in a half-circle to keep out of eyeshot from both the lane and the nearby expensive farm shop. It was here, and yet we somehow could not see it.

A deer shot out from behind a bush, startling the both of us as we closed in on the ruins of the 16th century hall. ‘Lydiate Hall’ is a grade listed building, though there is little left.

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Through the green and browns of ‘fall’, we spotted a large red-bricked house that was not going to give us any trouble gaining inner entry.

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Next to it I noticed something that looked like a well. In 1566 or thereabouts, there was no running water from any taps. If you wanted to quench your thirst it was via this deep hole.

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Someone had wisely added a grill to the entrance. Underneath was a huge drop, and falling down there meant instant death. How many peons, or unwanted pregnancy bearers had been pushed I thought?

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Clear shots of ‘Lydiate Hall’ were in short supply. The entire building was covered in leaves, branches, crawling ivy and any other number of miscellaneous green items.

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As well as the foliage, spiders have made this ancient hall their home. Thick webs were in abundance.

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I don’t have an aversion of arachnoids, but didn’t go as far as poking my fingers in those holes to disturb the local residents.

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While this looks like an external view of ‘Lydiate Hall’, you needed to simply walk around the exterior to get ‘inside’. To tell the truth it was difficult to figure out what was in or out.

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Having done a little research, I know this was the great fireplace where the lords and ladies would perch themselves on long benches feasting on huge hunks of meat, followed by a wiping of dribbling jowls on their sleeves.

People were not diet conscious in the 1500’s and tended to live much shorter lives, those terrible eating habits doing them no favours.

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The brickwork does not look over 500 years old, and is extremely well crafted. Those ancestors of ours knew a thing about building houses and halls.

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This looks like yet another fireplace. It was all about keeping warm if you were rich and making the poor serfs do all the donkey work.

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No walls, it must have been really cold living here.

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Did they contain glass once; did glass exist in such a time?

Whilst glass was manufactured in the UK from the 13th century, it remained extremely rare to have glass in the windows until the 16th century.
Source

Possibly it did, but if not what were these arches used for besides letting in all the freezing winds and severe cold?

The facts are if you were rich and an aristocrat then living during this period could have been decent, otherwise life was pure misery.

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As this old hall has been a ruin since the early 20th century, there was little or no chance of stumbling upon any ancient relics, at least not without a metal detector.

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We noticed an easier exit, but that meant crossing a field with a large bovid mammal within. Noticing the lack of tits underneath, I peered into its eye trying to determine its intent.

Pure death looked me back in the face. That fucker was going to charge the minute I stepped into its territory.

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We faced the facts of retracing that bloody route again, and commenced with a groan.

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Do you like posting your Urbex content and photography for FREE on Facebook and YouTube? I like to get some form of reward for my work and every time I create I do just that. Take a look at The Urbex Community on HIVE.

If you want to keep creating for FREE then ignore what you are reading. If you want to be like me and gain something other than BUGGER ALL for your work then click here and learn about posting on the HIVE blockchain.

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If you found this article so invigorating that you are now a positively googly-eyed, drooling lunatic with dripping saliva or even if you liked it just a bit, then please upvote, comment, rehive, engage me or all of these things.



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34 comments
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I can sense a touch of history from the pictures. This place should be preserved. Good work 💯

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This place should be preserved.

I see little chance of that, there's not enough left for a full restoration.

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Such places are full of lessons which is why I always put forth the suggestion of preserving and restoration.

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good photos, I'm sorry that these places are abandoned 😪😪

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I'm sorry that these places are abandoned

I'm not! If there were all good and OK I wouldn't be able to do this stuff 😀

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Most beautiful pictures showing unsung history. Thanks for sharing with us.

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Old buildings known to be drafty and cold, no wonder so many fireplaces still to be found, solid by design, big enough to place a whole tree trunk in by underpaid staff.

Nice old ruin with some features evident, not worth fighting a bull to take shortcut either.

!BEER

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not worth fighting a bull to take shortcut either.

He was mean looking bastard; it was a short trip but one I was not willing to risk my balls on!

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Beady red eye looks at you...., you know better to stay your side of the fence 🙃

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The pictures and history goes hand in hand
I really love that
Nice one!

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As always, it seems that you have gone through a damn portal to a parallel world where you find those abandoned structures which you take advantage of to take those types of photos that (in my opinion) are really wonderful and worth applauding...

But the best thing here was that I almost pissed myself laughing reading your crude and eloquent way of commenting on the details of life during those years when this place was at its peak... Not to mention the encounter of the "bovid mammal" without tits!... haaaa haaa haaa!... :))

This is high creative quality my friend!... Thank you very much!

!discovery 40
!VSC
!PIZZA
!BBH

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Aha.., there's no doubt they would be barbarians at the table.. 😀

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No veg..., just whatever was took down in the local forest.

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Not sure about the technology that time, but a waterpump would have made it so easy to pull up the water.

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It was a rope a pole a far as I know (I'm a little young to remember such details).

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Wow, I am shocked you even found the place! That is quite buried there! That well is something out of The Ring movies! I would have expect Samara to come crawling out of it!

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The texture and color of the bricks, especially those vibrant red ones are so awesome, you don't see those colors much in architecture! Love how nature is just going full steam ahead to reclaim the land!

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The red contrasts so well with the greenery. I look for things like that in my photography, and it was just there.

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Looks like it was quite a place in its time. The red brick work was pretty nice !

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A long long time ago, it went down in the 1940's.., maybe with some help from bombs!

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This is camouflaged very well. How long did it take to find it? I'm assuming not very long because it looks like you still had plenty of daylight left.

I'm left wondering about the arches. They could have used glass, they had the money. But a more practical approach, if they did need to fill the arches, would have been wood. No?

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I am not sure glass was about at the time of design, but what else would they fill those arches with? It must have been very dark inside old castles before the 14th century. Lots of lit torches and smoke.

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Thinking ya mate is hitting rock bottom!

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He's kind of out of the scene, but there's still plenty of soiled pants in the bag, so do keep reading 😀

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