The Construction of
Wuthering Heights: Phase 1

Wuthering Heights is an old building, at least three hundred years old
when Lockwood visits it. Indeed, it is possible that the '1500' date
over the entrance only indicates the completion of a major building phase
and not the original construction.
A typical farm building in sixteenth-century Yorkshire was the long-house
which involved a long building which combined the living quarters in
one half and the animals’ quarters in the other, with the entrance
in between. The first phase of Wuthering Heights is this sort of building.
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Ground floor
showing the 'house' and barn |
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First
floor showing main bedroom and two smaller rooms aside a passageway. |
The present-day kitchen block was not present at the time but the building
conforms to the rest of the farmhouse. The ‘house’, now used
as just a sitting-room, also included the kitchen at this time, while
the area to the south with the present spare rooms was used as the barn.
The upper floors, unlike now, were above the ‘house’ and
they extended into the roofspace.
The construction of the building, being in the 15th/16th century, is
less sophisticated than the later phases with irregular blocks forming
the walls. The local stone is millstone grit which has a beige colour
but darkens as it weathers. The areas around the windows, doors and corner
quoins are carefully carved in the same stone by more skilled masons.
There is a porch but it is not so large as the later construction.
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Interior of
the 'house' |
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Interior of
the barn showing unplastered walls and staircase to upper floor |
Go to Phase 2 of the construction
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