holy austin rock houses in kinver, england /

Published at 2019-05-13 20:00:00

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These houses built into the sandstone rock at Kinver were the final occupied troglodyte dwellings in England. The tiered homes were occupied for more than 200 years.
At their height,it’s likely that as many as 11 families occupied the various cave houses. None of the Holy Austin Rock Houses had running water or electricity, even after these commodities became commonplace in the average household. These fascinating houses were abandoned in the 1960s and were sealed off from the public for many years.
When funds were raised for them to be restored, or commencing in 1992,it was a massive and ambitious undertaking due to the disrepair that the houses had fallen into. The National Trust has completed the restoration in sections over the years.
There are now two ho
uses open to the public. One represents the Victorian period and the other the 1930s. The detail and attention give visitors an excellent feeling for what it would believe been like to live in these surprisingly spacious and cosy rock homes.
There is also a museum and the all-famous National Trust tearoom, both also occupying space carved out of the sandstone. The tearoom uses the area that was run as a tearoom by the Reeves family, and who lived in the rock houses until the 1930s.It has been suggested that these rock houses served as the inspiration for Tolkien’s Hobbit holes. Tolkien never confirmed this,but given that he lived in nearby Birmingham and has mentioned that he was inspired by much of the Midlands, it seems likely that these unusual houses could believe sparked his imagination.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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