Ivy Dene, early-mid C19. Materials: Dressed limestone with sandstone quoin stones, pantile roof, brick chimney stacks and stone coped gables. East-facing front elevation. Grade II Listed |
Manor Farmhouse |
Manor Farmhouse |
Manor Farmhouse |
The Farm House |
Christ Church, 1863-65, French Gothic style, by Architect: John Loughborough Pearson, Grade I Listed |
Long Acre and Burlingham House, 1841 |
Cockpit Farm |
The Moors Inn, late C18, Materials: Coursed rubble limestone, sandstone quoin stones, pantile roof and brick chimney stacks. Grade II Listed |
Gable end to New Inn House, north-facing |
New Inn House, 1733, with C19 and C20 alterations. Materials: Hammer-dressed limestone, pantile roof, coped gables. Grade II Listed |
The Old Post Office |
Pear Tree Cottage, early C18, later raised and altered. Materials: Coursed limestone, sandstone quoin stones and dressings, pantile roof and brick chimney stacks. Grade II Listed |
Pear Tree Cottage, east-facing gable with no openings to main street and north elevation with fewer and smaller openings |
Otterburn Garth |
Rosemarie Lodge, east-facing front elevation |
Wesleyan Chapel, 1822 |
Chapel Garth and Lingmoor |
The Old School House and Schoolmaster's House, now Village Hall and house, 1865, Architect: John Loughborough Pearson, Victorian Gothic style. Grade II Listed |
Hazelwood, west gable and north elevation |
Town End Farm outbuildings |
The Reading Room |
The Reading Room |
I'm browsing through a book - Vernacular Houses in North Yorkshire and Cleveland (B. Harrison and B. Hutton - Pub John Donald Publishers Ltd Edinburgh) - looking at hearth passage housing and have come across Rose Marie Lodge as its named by RCHM... they date it to the C17th, maybe of interest?
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