By the middle of the 19th century, the village of Chernizh came into the possession of the Ragozins, representatives of an old noble family known since the first half of the 16th century. At the end of the 19th century, the village belonged to the landowner Sergei Sergeevich Ragozin. After his death in 1913 or 1914, the estate passed to his daughter Natalya Sergeevna, who owned it until the events of 1917.
The manor house in the village of Chernizh was probably built in the first third of the 19th century. At that time, a wooden manor house was built on a stone plinth with a basement. The building is a compact two-story block, U-shaped in plan. The upper floor of the house is a spacious mezzanine. The expressive appearance of the building was given by the contrasting combination of a smooth wall and a four-column portico of the Tuscan order, completed with a triangular pediment. Not far from the manor house there was a manor park with ponds. There were three of them: Bolytsoy, Barsky and Glinyany, connected by dams (currently they are called Bolshoy and Mal'shiy).
The manor received the status of a regional monument by the decision of the Legislative Assembly of the Vladimir Region on August 18, 1995. In the years since then, nothing has been done to preserve the monument.
At the moment, a semi-abandoned wooden main manor house has been preserved, in which the rural FAP and grocery store are located. As well as paired two-story outbuildings, converted into residential buildings. A pond, ruins of a stable yard, and the functioning Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker.