Rampant Horse Street

In Rampant Horse Street, very little here survived the disastrous air raids of April 1942. Until that time there was at No 14 the western half of a fine Georgian mansion - its eastern half having been demolished earlier in the twentieth century to be replaced by a branch of Boots the Chemists. What remained could hardly be said to have been improved by the large shop front, but the original central doorway (left) was undisturbed. This was really the prize feature of the old building, its pillars, tympanum, jambs and lintel being all well executed. The elaborate carving which filled the tympanum has been surmised to represent the laurel branch vert, once part of the arms of the Mingay family, surrounding the initials “M.M.” for the Reverend M. Mingay, the last of the family to own the property. On 29th September 1749, he conveyed it to one Timothy Matthews, a working carpenter.
A notable occupant was John Mackerell, who died in 1723 aged eighty and lies buried with his wife in St Peter Mancroft Church. He was the father of Benjamin, author of manuscript histories of Norwich, King’s Lynn, and the parishes of St Peter Mancroft and St Stephen’s, Norwich. At the beginning of the twentieth century Mr W. J. Sadd was the owner and it was occupied by the School of Music and various offices.

Facing Mingay House at the corner of what was then St Stephen’s Church Lane (now the north end of Malthouse Road) stood a fine Tudor house of three storeys. Timber framed and with walls of plaster, it had an overhang at both first and second-floor levels, with a small bracket supporting the upper corner. A long range of weavers’ windows lit the top floor on the side overlooking the main street, and although tiled, one can imagine that the roof was originally thatched. Undoubtedly had it survived to the present time the house would have been listed as Grade I under the Town and Country Planning Acts.

At the corner of St Stephen’s and Rampant Horse Street stands Marks and Spencers, formerly Buntings the drapers: its architect, A. F. Scott. Built in 1912, it lost its attic storey during an air raid and after the war was internally remodelled.

Text and photographs Copyright © G.A.F.Plunkett 2001

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