The Armoury is a Grade II* listed building in Winchelsea, East Sussex England.
It was during the Napoleonic Wars when the Duke of Wellington's army was quartered in the town that it became known as the Armoury.
It was later home to the weavers of the English Linen Company and then occupied by John Sharp who built a large brick oven against the north wall of the house to bake bread with flour ground at St Leonard’s Mill.
In 1898 the property was for sale, and advertised in the Sussex Agricultural Express on 23 April 1898[2] as All that Freehold House, Shop, and Premises in Castle-street, containing baker’s shop, entrance hall, parlour, living-room, small study, pantry, large bakehouse with seven-bushel oven, cellar and four bedrooms, and four garrets and two small rooms, shut off and unused; garden with wood lodge, van lodge and stable, with loft over, and piggery adjoining.
Water is laid on.From 1898 to 1939[3] it was the home of Miss (Julia) Maud Peel, an artist.