Hall and Brook House were joined together as houses.
Brook House, southeast of the village, is a 17th-century farmhouse beside an early 16th-century stone-built range.
In May of each year at Brook House, the bluebell woods are opened to the public.
This stood opposite what is now Brook House (was once the Yew Tree Inn).
In 1686 he removed to Brook House, Hackney.
His home, Brook House, stood at the northeast corner of the square.
Breakfast at Brook House was equally heroic; fruits alone took one massive sideboard.
The Brook House is also an ice-cream parlor.
Old Brook House (and its barn), close to the Beehive public house, is a listed building.
There is a fine bridge at Brook House, that has a high arch to accommodate the tall chimneys of the locomotives used on the line.