This building dates to 1300 The Pilgrims’ Hall is a six-bay medieval building consisting of two halls lying end to end, plus a service bay. At the north end is the Pilgrims’ Hall (a 19th-century name) with three bays and two hammer beam trusses. The roof is of supreme importance, as it includes not only a single ‘true aisled’ truss, but also three ‘aisle derivative’ forms: base crucks, hammer beams, and raised aisle construction. Bibliography: John Crook, ‘The Pilgrims’ Hall, Winchester. Hammerbeams, Base Crucks and Aisle-Derivative Roof Structures’. Archaeologia 119 (1991), 129-59.”