Low Alwinton : The Church Complex
Church InteriorThe use of the term 'bastle house' in the context of the Bowes and Ellerker's 1541 Border survey probably implies something rather more substantial than the fortified farmhouses that are so common in Redesdale, North Tynedale and upper Coquetdale.
Bastle houses, stronghouses or stonehouses, as they are sometimes labelled, could represent quite large structures in plan a more elongate rectangle than most of the earlier tower-houses and as many three or four storeys high, including an attic chamber, and sometimes possessing a small gabled stair wing protecting the doorway (Pevsner et al. 2001, 64). Examples include Doddington and Akeld bastles.
However in this case the bastle is described as 'little' and a two-storey structure might be envisaged, akin to The Stonehouse at Naworth Park in north-east Cumbria or the even more modest Low Cleughs bastle in Redesdale (cf. Ramm et al. 1970, 77-78 (no.15), 85 (no. 36); Carlton & Rushworth 2004). Previous phases of vicarage may well have stood on the same site as the bastle house.