Residential properties - Vigo Road
This page lists the residential properties in Vigo Road which runs in a south-westerly direction from the top of Stansted Hill, through the centre of Faiseat, and finishes at the crossroads with the Gravesend Road and Vigo Hill.
Please get in touch with the Society should you have further information on any of the properties listed or suggest any alterations or additions.
The Dairy Farm
The farm house and buildings were constructed sometime between 1867 and 1895. It was a dairy farm for most of its life and was run by the Burgess family. A barn which was part of the main farm building was separated off as a separate dwelling in 1982/3 and is now known as The Coach House.
Underpine Cottage
The property was originally a stables/ store/ garage within the grounds of Fairseat Lodge, then, in 1991, a granny annexe for the elderly mother of the owner of the Lodge. When no longer needed for that purpose, it was rented out, but remained within the curtilage and ownership of the Lodge and did not have its own entrance from the road. In 2007 a Lawful Development Certificate was obtained to separate the annexe from the Lodge. The building on the site in 2019 was demolished and completely replaced.
Fairseat Lodge
Fairseat Lodge and Fairseat Cottage started life as outbuildings of the girl’s school at Fairseat House and were probably built at the same time as the school (1835). It became known as Fairseat Lodge before 1901 and was used as a Coachman’s house and a stable block. Mrs. Pitt (the former owner of Fairseat House) lived there from 1935 to 1954. It became a separate property from Fairseat House in 1954 when it was bought by John and Charmian Stacpoole who lived there for the next 30+ years.
Fairseat Cottage
Fairseat Lodge and Fairseat Cottage started life as outbuildings of the girl’s school at Fairseat House and were probably built at the same time as the school (1835). The property was used as a coach house and harness room before parts of it became a dwelling some time around 1900. The Fairseat Post Office operated from the building from about 1871 to 1930 when it moved to what is now known as the Old Post House (behind Fairseat pond). The old hayloft in the premises was used as an HQ for Fairseat Scouts during and after WW2. The premises were sold in 1965 and it has been a self contained house since then and, for many years was the home of Adrien and Glenys Sturgeon.
Fairseat House
The house was built in 1835 by Horace and Hannah Grant (cousins) and was enlarged with further additions in about 1850. They also built Court House at the same time as a home for Horace. Fairseat House was run by Hannah as a Boarding School for about 50 young ladies until 1863 when it was bought by Major General John Kemball as a family home and it was he who built the wall around the kitchen garden. The Pitt family were in residence from 1914 until 1935 and from 1935 to 1985 Hugh and Grisell Pasteur were owners. From 1871 to 1930 the local Post Office operated from the coach house on the premises whcih is now Fairseat Cottage. In 1935 a large wing and kitchen block, which were part of the original school, were demolished and another wing was reduced in height. The house was Grade II listed in 1984 and was considerably improved in the late 1990s, including a new roof and the addition of a substantial orangery.
Court House
Known as ‘The Cottage’ for most of its life this house was built in 1835 at the same time as Fairseat House. Horace Grant lived there until his death in 1859 while his cousin Hannah was owner/headmistress of the girl’s school at nearby Fairseat House. Hannah’s sister, Elizabeth, was married to William Hickson (Snr) who had lived at Fairseat Manor. The house passed through many hands, including Major Drummond who died there in 1916. The Sheldon family bought the house in 1954 and live there still. A barn in the garden was been converted into The Woolpack Barn in 2019/20 and in 2021/22 a self-contained dwelling called The Courtyard has been formed from part of the main house.
Woolpack Barn
An existing barn built in the 1980’s on the farmland associated with Court House was converted into a residential property named The Woolpack Barn in 2019/20 and the construction and renovation of the barn conversion was featured in the TV programme ‘Grand Designs’. The link below is to an article in Grand Designs Magazine published in April 2021.
Fairseat Manor
The current building comprises a front elevation of the early 1700s with a much older building behind it. The building and the garden wall facing Vigo Road were Grade II* listed in 1952. The listing says that the original building dates from the 17th century but it could well be much older. The Georgian facade and high garden wall were added by John Cox after he has bought the older building from Sir Roger Twisden.
Soranks Manor
The house now known as Soranks Manor was built in the mid-1850s and stands on the foundations of a much earlier, medieval manor house. The land associated with the original Manor was held by Ralph de Sandwich during the reign of Henry III and was later passed to Edmund Sorank whose name is recorded in the assize roll of 1313 as a juror for Stansted. Hasted records the Manor as covering some 140 acres in 1548. Soranks Manor was the home of Ada Berry after whom the almshouses in Tumblefield Road are dedicated. Before WW2 the house was owned by Miss Coomber who ran it as a guest house/ hotel until she died in about 1945.
Meadow House
This was originally the staff quarters for Soranks Manor. It was a two-storey timber-framed building on a brick plinth, with timber walls and a corrugated iron roof. Over the years the use became a coach house/ barn and access was from existing secondary access to Soranks Manor. In 2006 planning consent was given to convert the property into a three-bedroom house of the same size, with its own access from Vigo Road.
Woodbine Farm
In 1841 this was a smallholding of 3.6 acres and was called Woodlawn Farm. It was occupied by William Goodwin and comprised a house and garden, a meadow and some arable land. Today the farm comprises some 28 acres of land and in the 1980s was used to grow most types of soft fruit and was a piggery for a period. Current uses are equestrian stables and fields, caravan storage and industrial units along Crabtree Close. The land includes the site of a medieval manor which could be the original Soranks Manor.
The Old Rectory
Originally called Woodbine Cottage this house was sold to The Anglo Saxon Friendly Society in 1898 who used it as a convalescent home for its members. It was used a Rectory for Stansted Church from 1968 to 1996 when it was sold. Prior to this part of its garden had been sold and a new house (Langara) was constructed.
Olivers Cottage
This property and the adjoining Waterlow Cottage were built by Sir Philip Waterlow in the late 1920s as farm workers cottages attached to Corner Farm (which he also owned). The local midwife and nurse, Evelyn Oliver lived here for over 30 years and its name changed from 1 New Cottages after she moved away after 1955.