PHYSICAL FABRIC | |
Subject: | Contract to build an annex to an inn |
Original source: | unknown |
Transcription in: | L. F. Salzman, Building in England down to 1540: A documentary history, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1952, 516-17. |
Original language: | Middle English |
Location: | Salisbury |
Date: | 1444 |
TRANSLATION
This indenture, made at New Salisbury on 16 December 1444 between William Ludlow on the one part and John Fayrebowe carpenter of Bishopstrow, Wiltshire, on the other part, witnesses [the agreement] that John is to construct for William a house as part of the Boar by the marketplace at Salisbury, 63 feet long and of an interior width of 20 feet. The groundsills are to be 15 inches wide and 10 inches thick. [There are to be] 14 principal posts, every post 16 feet long, 13 inches wide and 12 inches thick. Each somer board is to be 16 inches [wide] and 15 inches thick. Each joist is to be 8 inches thick and 9 inches wide; joists are to be at 10-inch intervals. Each binding beam is to be 9 inches thick and 15 inches wide. Each wall-plate is to be 8 inches thick and 9 inches wide. Each coarse rafter is to be 4 inches thick at the top and 5 inches at the bottom, and in breadth 7 inches at the bottom and 5 inches at the top. With 6 windows all of the same style, and two [sets of] stairs. Rafters are to be at 9-inch intervals. The "sideresons" are to be 11 inches wide and 6 inches thick, with braces of comparable size. This house is to be well-constructed, of suitable timber without sap or wind-damage, and [the timbers] ready to be raised by 8 September next. For which house, John shall furnish all the timber, boards for doors and windows, and studs for all the walls. And William shall furnish all the nails, iron fittings, wattle, roofing and walling materials, and work of masons required in relation the same. At William's cost are to be provided two men to work with John for 7 days to raise the house[-frame], including food and wages, and food and drink for the men transporting the timber to Salisbury. He is also to pay John for the construction of the house and for the workmanship in providing and fashioning all the components specified above, £20 in cash in three instalments, that is: at the beginning of construction when timber is hewed, £6.13s.4d; when the timber is brought to Salisbury, £6.13s.4d; and when the house is completed, with doors installed and windows hung, £6.13s.4d. As assurance of the proper performance of the matters agreed, William on his side along with Robert Warmwell put up a bond in £20, payable on 8 September. And in the same way, John on his side along with Simon Poy put up a bond to William in £20, payable on the same date. In testimony to which the seals of the above parties to this indenture have been set on each other's part of the indenture, on the day and year indicated above. |
Created: August 27, 2004 Last update: January 6, 2019 | © Stephen Alsford, 2004-2019 |