Building record 10516/2 - Chester Rows: 9 Eastgate Street Row The Boot Inn

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Summary

No 9 Eastgate Street Row is a 17th century town house forming part of the Eastgate Row, it is currently in use as a public house. The traditional arrangement on the Rows consisted of a single storey stone undercroft at street level and a Row level building over it. Above the undercroft, the Row level building was more often timber built and consisted of a 'Row' level storey incorporating the Row walkway or stallboard extending over the frontage of the undercroft (this allowed extra head room for the undercroft and additional space for traders on the stallboards). The Row walkway was approximately 4-6m in width and incorporated the path and the stallboards themselves. The Row level storey formed the medieval shop opening onto the Row walkway. Due to differences in ground level between the front and back of the plots, the undercroft is at street level at the front and the Row level storey at ground level to the rear. The Row building also often included at least one further storey above it that extended forward again over the Row walkway. The upper floors were private, domestic quarters. The Rows are believed to be of medieval origin, dating at least to the 13th century followed by a gradual evolution of built form over a period of perhaps 100 years to create the present elements of undercroft, Row walkway and Row building. Survival of the built form of the Rows varies considerably and different elements of a single building can vary enormously in date from the 13th century through to the 20th century.

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Type and Period (3)

Full Description

No 9 Eastgate Street Row is a 17th century town house forming part of the Eastgate Row, it is currently in use as a public house.

The front facade of the row building is heavily restored timber framing with 19th century windows and bargeboarding as decoration. Although the Row building originally included a passageway to the rear on the east side, this was removed during renovation in the 1980s. The interior of the Row level town house survives reasonably well with minimal modern alteration.

The Row level walkway consists of a walkway some 2.3m wide and a wooden stallboard 2.55m wide. The upper Row levels are supported by bay posts of a 19th century date. (1)

A gable post is inscribed '16 C B 10' (3)


<1> Chester Archaeology, 1985-1990, Chester Rows Research Project Archive, CHER 10516 (Paper Archive). SCH6789.

<2> Brown. A. (ed), 1999, The Rows of Chester: The Chester Rows Research Project (Book). SCH6790.

<3> Hewitt, John, 1887, Notes on the Medieval Architecture of Chester, with Special Reference to the Rows and the Crypts, p41 (Article in Journal). SCH5536.

<4> English Heritage, 2005, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Digital Archive). SCH4666.

Sources/Archives (4)

  • <1> Paper Archive: Chester Archaeology. 1985-1990. Chester Rows Research Project Archive. CHER 10516.
  • <2> Book: Brown. A. (ed). 1999. The Rows of Chester: The Chester Rows Research Project.
  • <3> Article in Journal: Hewitt, John. 1887. Notes on the Medieval Architecture of Chester, with Special Reference to the Rows and the Crypts. Journal of the Chester Archaeological and Historic Society. Volume 1. p41.
  • <4> Digital Archive: English Heritage. 2005. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Related Events/Activities (1)

External Links (0)

Location

Grid reference Centred SJ 4058 6633 (18m by 40m) (2 map features)
Map sheet SJ46NW
Civil Parish CHESTER NON PARISH AREA, CHESTER, CHESHIRE WEST AND CHESTER
Historic Township/Parish/County CHESTER, CHESTER HOLY TRINITY, CHESHIRE

Protected Status/Designation

Record last edited

Jan 12 2022 3:12PM