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12 Prospect Row is just opposite the alley leading to Brompton Hill, and it always was. A print from 1755 shows it to the right of “n” towering over the other houses. We don’t know who built it, but as it is the only one with decoration over the door and has a rather impressive hall he was clearly of some status. . We moved in during 1995, and only got to own the back of the house “the cottage” (Known as 12A) in 2007.
The deeds to 12/12a Prospect Row do not survive but it appears to have been constructed in c.1746 (based on a reference to the sale of the plot in deeds of No.11 now deposited in Medway’s archives) and appears on the print by Milton of the Dockyard in 1755 where it is evident that it is the only three storey property in the Row, many of the others having been extended vertically since. It also appears in the Farrington painting of Chatham Dockyard, often reproduced and in the collections of the National Maritime Museum.
The core of 12a, a cottage with brick ground floor and wooden first floor crossing the plot has a number of legends associated including the notion that it is the oldest building in Brompton. This is not borne out by the available maps which show it to be contemporary or near contemporary with the front house in spite of the high pitch of the roof. Its upper floor is of wood construction, clap boarded and internally half panelled with a brick lower storey and north wall (this also houses fireplaces for each floor). The doors to each floor on the northern end of the west elevation are small and apparently 18th century or slightly later, they are now internal to the house as a whole. It seems to have had a single room on the first floor with an attic garret possibly reached by trapdoor and ladder. The configuration on the ground floor is unclear. It may have been servants quarters, stabling or an independent dwelling.
Early owners of the houses are unknown with no records of ‘12A’ at this time but 12 Prospect Row continued as a relatively respectable property.
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