Another historic building in Bramber is St Mary's House, a late 15th-century
timber-framed house on a site associated with the
Knights Templar. The present building was constructed in about 1470 by William of Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester and founder of
Magdalen College, Oxford. The house has beautiful gardens with topiary figures, and a quite large secret garden at the back. The house is open to the public in season, and there is a tearoom in the grounds. The house has a music room which has two 14th-century ornately carved stone chantry tombs serving as fireplaces, and is regularly used for concerts and recitals. Originally it was a monastic hostel for pilgrims and monks who collected the tolls at Bramber bridge, a bridge over the River Adur, incorporating a Chapel dedicated to St Mary the Virgin on its central span, though now reduced to a flat bridge of just a few feet over a tributary of the river, following silting, and a change of course. This should not be confused with the nearby Beeding Bridge, a hump-back bridge which now spans the main course of the river.
King Charles II is claimed to have stayed at St Mary's House during his escape to France after defeat at the
Battle of Worcester. The
Monarch's Way long-distance footpath, following Charles' supposed route to
Shoreham-by-Sea, crosses the Adur at Bramber. The house has been used in a number of television productions including an episode of
Doctor Who where the
TARDIS landed inside. Its owners since 1984 are Peter Thorogood and Roger Linton. ==Maudlin District==