20.4.14

Houses of the North York Moors: Appleton-le-Moors

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, dairy and barns, mid C18 with earlier origins. Farmhouse: Dressed limestone, sandstone dressings, pantile roof, brick chimney stacks and coped gables. Cruck frame barn: Coursed rubble limestone and pantiles. North-facing front elevation. Grade II Listed
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
Orchard Cottage, C18 with earlier origins. Materials: Dressed limestone and coursed rubble with sandstone quoin stones, pantile roof, brick chimney stacks and stone coped gables. West-facing elevation. Grade II Listed
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
Moorfield, house, mid C18. Materials: Dressed sandstone with limestone dressings, raised quoin stones, opening surrounds and band at first floor level, slate roof, coped gables and brick chimney stacks. West-facing front elevation. 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, C18 with earlier origins. Materials: Cruck frame, dressed limestone, sandstone quoin stones, pantile roof, brick chimney stacks, coped gable walls. Fire window to right of door. Grade II Listed
Rosemarie Lodge, east-facing front elevation
The Firs, mid C18. Materials: Herringbone-tooled limestone and coursed rubble, sandstone dressings, keyed lintels to openings, raised chamfered milled quoin stones, pantile roof, brick chimney stacks and coped gable walls. Grade II Listed
Wesleyan Chapel, 1822
Chapel Garth and Lingmoor
The Post Office, now house, late C18 with C19 alterations. Hammer-dressed limestone, pantile roof, brick chimney stacks, coped gables, irregular quoin stones. East-facing front elevation. Grade II Listed 
The Old School House and Schoolmaster's House, now Village Hall and house, 1865, Architect: John Loughborough Pearson, Victorian Gothic style. Grade II Listed
East View, mid-late C18. Materials: Dressed limestone, sandstone quoin stones, raised sandstone surrounds to windows and doors, pantile roof, brick chimney stacks and stone coped gable walls. False window. East-facing front elevation. Grade II Listed
Hazelwood (main house), 1750, altered C19. Materials: Coursed rubble limestone with raised sandstone quoin stones, sandstone dressings, slate roof, brick chimney stacks and coped gables. South-facing front elevation. Grade II Listed
Hazelwood, west gable and north elevation
Town End Farmhouse, mid C18. Materials: Squared limestone, raised sandstone quoin stones and band at first floor level, pantile roof, one each, stone and brick chimney stacks and coped gable walls. Grade II Listed
Town End Farm outbuildings
The Reading Room
The Reading Room






1 comment:

  1. 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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