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Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, is an old rambling village with its High Street stretching for over a mile. Much of this thoroughfare and the surrounding streets has been drastically modernized.
In Turner's Hill is a group of old houses with, of particular interest, the yellow-brick early-l9th-century. Grange and the 18th-century Manor House, three stories high with two-bay lower wings and a doorcase with rusticated pilasters. The Dewhurst Almshouses, 10 one-storied brick cottages in a line, were founded in 1642. The l8th-century red-brick Clock House, with seven bays arid two stories is in Blind Man's Lane, and in College Road will be found the large houses of Cheshunt Cottage, early l9th-century with hood-moulds over the windows and bargeboard gables, and Brook-side House, of the same period.
Cheshunt Great House, ½ miles north west of the church, was originally a large moated house. All that remains is one wing of a courtyard house, but this is impressive with its late-15th-century great hall, 40 ft long with an original timber roof. The house was converted at the beginning of the 18th century and added to in the following century.
Near to the church in Churchgate and Church-field can be seen some of the old character of the village, of particular note the brick-built Dewhurst Charity School, dated 1640, with three gables and mullioned brick windows.
St Mary's Church, built in the 15th century, has an embattled west tower of ashlar stone and a south-east stair-turret. There are a number of brasses of interest.
Nearby towns: Broxbourne, Enfield, Harlow, Hertford, Hoddesdon, Loughton, Potters Bar, Waltham Cross, Ware
Nearby villages: Domewood, Turnford
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