About
Lichfield House, the picturesque black and white half timbered residence built when Henry VIII, and Catherine of Aragon ruled England, now the Tudor of Lichfield, has watched over 500 years of Englands history. The house itself has been added to from time to time, but the main building is the original. Between 1643 - 1646 our Tea House was first a prison for captured Royalists who fell into the enemys hands during sortees from the Cathedral, and then the tables were turned, and the Roundheads in their turn found themselves chained in the cellars, and again in the last siege Royalists were imprisoned. In more recent years Lichfield House has been a private residence, the offices of a coal merchant and a milliners shop. It was requisitioned for the Pay Corps in 1910 and in 1920 it became an antique shop. In 1936 Wilfred and Evelyn and their son Jeffrey opened the old buildings as The Tudor Cafe now better know as the Tudor of Lichfield.
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