Located 3 miles NE of Chichester on a rising slope of the South Downs, the fortified medieval manor house of flint rubble and clunch with sandstone ashlar dressings was remodelled on a courtyard plan in the early 16th c. Surrounded by a curtain wall with a 2-storey 14th c. gatehouse and square tower in the S range and a single-storey hall in the W end of the N range.
Most of the S facade with the stone gateway in the centre, a large 13th c. chapel in the E range and the 14th c. hall's E wall with part of the S wall remain.
A probable performance venue. No relevant West household records survive but entertainers under the patronage of Thomas West, 9th Baron De La Warr, appeared elsewhere in Kent in the 1530s. It is likely that they also performed at home for their patron.
Privately owned and inaccessible to the public. The ruins are part of the estate immediately S of Little Halnaker,a mid-20th c. house.
12th c. Manor of Halnaker granted to Robert de Haia.
1494 Acquired by Thomas West (later 9th Baron De La Warr), via marriage with Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Bonville of Halnaker.
early 16th c. Older medieval fortified house remodelled on a courtyard plan by West, who enriched the hall with decorative features.
ca. 1540 West forced to relinquish Halnaker to the king in exchange for the former abbey of Wherwell, Hampshire. West relocated to Offington, where his father had resided until his death in 1525.
1561 Granted to Henry Fitz Alan, 24th Earl of Arundel.
1566 Manor settled on his son-in-law, John, 6th Baron Lumley.
1587 Sold to Sir John Morley of Saxham, Suffolk.
1752 Following the death of Sir John's great-granddaughter Mary, dowager Countess of Derby, Halnaker inherited by her distant cousin Sir Thomas Dyke Acland. Halnaker ceased to be a significant residence.
1765 Sold to Charles Lennox, 8th Duke of Richmond, who merged it with his Goodwood estate.
19th c. Neglected and allowed to decay. Some decorative stonework removed to The Grange, Chichester (built ca. 1840; demolished 1962). Converted for use as tenements.
early 20th c. Purchased by Reginald McKenna, who built a new house near the ruins.
REED Kent: Diocese of Canterbury 2.688
Name | Dates | Titles |
---|---|---|
West, Thomas | 1472-1554 | Knight of the , 9th Baron , 8th Baron |