Tranmer House

Tranmer House is a country house in Sutton Hoo, Woodbridge, Suffolk, England, dating from 1910. The house is located on the Sutton Hoo Anglo-Saxon burial site, and in 1938 was the home of Edith Pretty. In June 1938, Pretty employed Basil Brown to undertake the excavation of a range of burial mounds on the estate, leading to Brown's discovery in May 1939 of a ship burial, "one of the most important archaeological discoveries of all time".[1] The house is now owned by the National Trust.

Tranmer House
TypeHouse
LocationSutton Hoo, Woodbridge, Suffolk
Coordinates52.0908°N 1.3381°E / 52.0908; 1.3381
Built1910
ArchitectJohn Shewell Corder
Architectural style(s)Tudor Revival
OwnerNational Trust
Tranmer House is located in Suffolk
Tranmer House
Location of Tranmer House in Suffolk

History and description

Tranmer House, then called Sutton Hoo House, was designed in 1910 by John Shewell Corder, an architect based in Ipswich, for a Suffolk artist, John Chadwick Lomax.[2] In 1926 the Sutton Hoo estate was bought by Edith Pretty and her husband, Frank, for £15,250.[3] Edith Pretty, born Edith Dempster in 1883, inherited a considerable fortune from her father upon his death in 1925.[4] Following Frank Pretty's death in 1934, Edith Pretty developed an interest in excavating the burial mounds that lay to the north-east of Tranmer House and engaged a local archaeologist, Basil Brown, to undertake two digs, in 1938 and 1939. During the second dig, Brown located the Anglo-Saxon ship burial site under Mound 1, "the largest Anglo-Saxon ship burial ever discovered".[5] The trove of treasure within made Sutton Hoo "the richest intact early medieval grave in Europe with a burial chamber full of dazzling riches".[6]

Edith Pretty died in 1942, having gifted the Sutton Hoo treasure to the British Museum.[lower-alpha 1][7] The house was sold by her son's trustees in the late 1940s, and was owned by a number of local farming families until bought by the Tranmers. Following the death of Annie Tranmer, the house and the Sutton Hoo burial site were bequeathed to the National Trust in 1998. The Trust renamed the house in acknowledgement of the donation.[3]

James Bettley and Nikolaus Pevsner, in their Suffolk: East volume of The Buildings of England series, describe the architectural style of Tranmer as "Tudor".[2] The house now operates as a museum,[3] while the stable block, and original squash court,[2] form part of the Sutton Hoo Visitor Centre.[lower-alpha 2][10]

Footnotes

  1. The then Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, offered Pretty a CBE in recognition of her generosity, but she declined.[7]
  2. Tranmer House, and the wider Sutton Hoo site, are referenced in the 2021 film The Dig. The film, a dramatisation of the 1938/1939 excavations, used locations in Surrey for much of the filming, including for the burial site itself, and for Tranmer House, the exterior shots of which are of Norney Grange, a house in Shackleford designed by Charles Voysey.[8][9]

References

  1. Bruce-Mitford 1977, p. 71.
  2. Bettley & Pevsner 2015, pp. 538–539.
  3. "Tranmer House at Sutton Hoo". National Trust.
  4. "Obituary". The Chemical Trade Journal and Chemical Engineer. 76: 643. 1925. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  5. "The ghostly treasure ship of Sutton Hoo". National Geographic. 17 January 2017. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  6. "The Anglo-Saxon ship burial at Sutton Hoo". The British Museum. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  7. Russell, Steve (29 July 2019). "Ghosts and treasure: The Edith Pretty Sutton Hoo story". East Anglian Daily Times.
  8. Historic England. "Norney Grange (Grade II*) (1029515)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  9. "How the Sutton Hoo dig was recreated". Findthatlocation.com. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  10. "Sutton Hoo". National Trust. Retrieved 31 January 2021.

Sources

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