The Building
The Building
The Tudor House Museum is based on some of the older structures in Upton Upon Severn, dating back to the early 1600’s where the two cottages, numbers 16 and 18 Church Street, are in the middle of the early settlement, with the Church opposite and the Manor House, originally another timber framed building, a short distance away. By the early nineteenth century, they were part of the Ham Court estate.

In the Tithe Map and Apportionment of 1841, there were three dwellings on the site, probably one behind the other on the site of the Museum, and the third, now number 18 alongside. In what is now the garden there were a number of outbuildings, two behind the two cottages , one where the greenhouse now stands, and another across the yard with another yard behind it before the boundary wall. The principal occupant was Robert Johnson, a “cordwainer” (in the 1837 trade directory he is described as a boot and shoemaker). He continued to trade from there until at least 1856. The 141 Census suggests that amongst the other inhabitants of the cottages were a laundress and a plumber.
In the second half of the nineteenth century great changes were made. The two cottages which are now the Museum were made into one, the one behind being considerably reduced in size, and behind them a malthouse was built. It was the sale documents for the Ham Court Estate in 1914.
Numbers 16 and 18 are described with their outbuildings. They were sold to Mr A Fowler before the auction date. Bothe properties continued to be let by a Mrs Campbell of Welland, who inherited the properties in 1955. However, due to their deteriorating condition , in 1972, the Rural District Council ordered that they should not be inhabited. They were listed buildings , so demolition was out of the question.


In 1977. Mrs jennie Meller purchased both house for £10,900 and set about planning the conversion of No 16 into a restaurant. Major changes were made, new staircases were put in , the malthouse was incorporated into the cottage in front of it. The cellar below the cottage was filled in. The door in the front of No16 was removed, ground floor windows were made larger and a window on the second floor was put back to where it had been a century earlier. The door in front of No 18 was removed and replaced by a side entrance. This then was the building which was purchased by the Museum’s founder – Lavender Beard in 1993 and converted into the building now know as The Tudor House Museum.