Sedbergh is a civil parish in the South Lakeland District of Cumbria, England. It contains 165 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, two are listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, 13 are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish is in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. The major settlement is the small town of Sedbergh, and there are smaller settlements including Millthrop, Catholes, Marthwaite, Brigflatts, High Oaks, Howgill, Lowgill and Cautley. The parish contains a large area of countryside, and many of the listed buildings are farmhouses and farm buildings. In the town is Sedbergh School and a number of the school buildings are listed. Elsewhere in the town, most of the listed buildings are houses and associated structures, and shops. Other listed buildings in the parish include churches and associated structures, bridges, milestones, a hotel, a viaduct, a drinking fountain, memorials, and two telephone kiosks.
Grade | Criteria | |
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I | Buildings of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important | |
II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest | |
II | Buildings of national importance and special interest |
Name and location | Photograph | Date | Notes | Grade |
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St Andrew's Church 54.3231°N -2.5285°W | The church incorporates material from earlier periods, and was restored in 1886 by Paley and Austin. It is built in stone with sandstone quoins and dressings, and has a green slate roof. The church consists of a nave and chancel with a clerestory, continuous aisles incorporating a south chapel and a north vestry, and a south porch. At the west end is a three-stage tower with buttresses, a belfry stage corbelled out, and an embattled parapet with corner pinnacles. In the wall of the chapel is a sundial. | |||
Crook of Lune Bridge 54.3609°N -2.5858°W | The bridge carries a road over the River Lune. It is in stone, and consists of two asymmetrical segmental arches. The central pier has cutwaters, and rises to form triangular buttresses. The bridge has thin voussoirs, stone-slate bands, a narrow humped deck about wide, parapets, and splayed abutments. | |||
Ingmire Hall, Stables and Cottage 54.3208°N -2.559°W | Originally a mansion with a pele tower, it was enlarged in the early 19th century by George Webster, partly destroyed by fire in the 1920s, and remodelled and extended in 1989. It is built in stone with quoins and slate roofs. The pele tower at the north is ruinous, and has a three-stage cylindrical stair turret with slit windows and a corbelled-out stepped parapet. From the pele tower extends an embattled curtain wall linking to the south wing, which is now the main part of the house. There are two storeys, with an attic in the wing, cross-windows and mullioned windows. Other features include more turrets and a mock turret. To the north are a stable block with turrets, a cottage and a cart shed. | |||
The Old House at the Hill 54.3264°N -2.5227°W | A small farmhouse, later a private house, in stone with a steeply-pitched slate roof. There are three bays, 1.5 storeys at the front and two at the rear. In the south front are varied windows, one with a mullion, and on the north front is a gabled porch, a band, and windows including a stair window. Inside the house are two full cruck trusses. | |||
Hebblethwaite Hall 54.3343°N -2.4744°W | Originally a farmhouse, it has been altered, and later a private house. It is in sandstone with quoins, and has a roof of stone-slate with some blue slate. The house has two storeys and an L-shaped plan. The windows are of varying types, and include mullioned windows, a mullioned and transomed window, and sash windows. | |||
Thorns Hall and stable wing 54.3239°N -2.5184°W | The house and stable wing are in stone with quoins. The house has a roof of blue and green slate, two storeys and an attic, five bays, and an outshut and a wing with a pyramidal roof at the rear. On the front is a two-storey gabled porch with a round-headed doorway. Above it is a gabled dormer with a mullioned window and a ball finial; the other windows are sashes. The stable wing has a stone-slate roof, two storeys, a wagon doorway and three stable doorways, all with segmental heads and voussoirs, and ventilation slits. | |||
41 Main Street 54.3236°N -2.5275°W | Originally a house, later a shop, it is in rendered stone, with the gable end facing the street. There are two storeys with an attic, and three bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with a central doorway flanked by pilasters, and with a frieze canted over the doorway. In the middle floor is a canted oriel window flanked by sash windows, in the attic are two cross-windows, and the gable has plain bargeboards. | |||
Abbot Holme Bridge 54.3118°N -2.5411°W | The bridge carries a road over the River Rawthey. It is in stone, straight and narrow, and consists of a single high segmental arch. The bridge has stone-slate bands, long voussoirs, four corbels on the north side, and a slightly humped deck with parapets and copings of large stone blocks. | |||
Catholes Farmhouse 54.3113°N -2.5354°W | Originally a farmhouse, later extended, remodelled, and used for other purposes. It is built in stone and boulders, on a plinth of boulders, with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys, six bays, and coupled outshuts at the rear. On the front is a 20th-century brick porch and a 20th-century bay window. Most of the other windows are mullioned. | |||
Garsdale Bridge 54.3226°N -2.4987°W | The bridge carries a road over Clough River, and was altered in the 19th century. It is in sandstone, and consists of a single arch with a Tudor-style head. The bridge has double rows of voussoirs flanked by buttresses, and the parapets continue as boundary walls. | |||
Lincoln's Inn Bridge 54.3247°N -2.5677°W | The bridge carries the A684 road over the River Lune. It is built in stone and consists of two unequal segmental arches with voussoirs. The central pier has triangular cutwaters rising as triangular buttresses. | |||
Middleton Bridge 54.302°N -2.5699°W | The bridge carries the A683 road over the River Rawthey. It is in stone and consists of a single wide segmental arch with two layers of voussoirs and a stone-slate arch band. The parapets have been rebuilt and have rounded coping and splayed ends. In the centre are square corbelled-out refuges. | |||
Milestone at junction with Frostrow Lane 54.3202°N -2.5073°W | The milestone is on the south side of the A684 road. It is in sandstone, and consists of a square shaft about high with a partly obliterated inscription. | |||
Millthrop Bridge 54.3169°N -2.5221°W | The bridge carries a road over the River Rawthey. It is in stone and consists of two segmental arches of unequal span, with voussoirs and rebuilt parapets. In the centre, the pier has triangular cutwaters, the one on the west side rising to form a triangular refuge. | |||
Mire House 54.3431°N -2.4761°W | The house was later extended, including the addition of a cottage in the 18th century, and was later combined into one dwelling. It is in stone with quoins and a roof of stone-slate with some blue slate. There are two storeys, a central block of two bays, two service bays with an outshut to the left, a rear outshut, and the cottage to the right. In the main block is a segmental-headed doorway over which is a nearly semicircular canopy, and the windows on the front are sashes. The cottage has through-stones, a fixed window, and mullioned windows, and there is a similar window in the rear outshut. | |||
Pedge Croft Farmhouse 54.3239°N -2.5142°W | The farmhouse is in stone, including boulder stones, the south front is roughcast, and the farmhouse has quoins and a green slate roof. There are two storeys, five bays, and a rear outshut. On the front is a wooden gabled trellised porch with bargeboards and a finial, and the windows are sashes. There is another porch at the rear, and in the outshut are three flat-roofed dormers. | |||
Taythes Bridge 54.3573°N -2.4544°W | A small footbridge crossing Taythes Gill, it is in stone and consists of a single segmental arch. There are voussoirs on the north side, and no parapets. | |||
The Old Vicarage 54.3217°N -2.5217°W | The vicarage, later a private house, has been altered and enlarged. It is in stone with a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys, and a central range of five bays flanked by single-bay extensions. Some of the windows are casements, and others are sashes. At the rear is full-height gabled turret with a bowed extension. | |||
Browside Cottage 54.315°N -2.5217°W | A stone house with a stone-slate roof, two storeys, three bays, and a later rear outshut. The windows are mullioned, and above the ground floor windows is a stone-slate hood mould. | |||
Fell Yeat Farmhouse 54.3155°N -2.4978°W | Originally a small farmhouse, later restored as a private house, it is in stone with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys, two bays, and an almost continuous rear outshut. Most of the windows are restored with mullions. In the left gable wall is a square-headed doorway. | |||
Friends' Meeting House and cottage 54.3147°N -2.5535°W | 1675 | The Friends' meeting house was partly converted into a cottage in 1900. It is in stone, partly on a plinth, with a slate roof. The cottage has two storeys, the meeting house has one, and both are the same height. On the front is a two-storey gabled porch that has a round-headed outer doorway with a chamfered surround, above which is a replica of the original datestone, and inside is a square-headed internal doorway. The windows on the front have three lights and are mullioned. | ||
1 Back Lane 54.3229°N -2.5278°W | A stuccoed house on a plinth with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. The doorway has a moulded surround, and the windows are sashes, those in the ground floor having moulded surrounds. | |||
Birks Farmhouse and attached barn 54.3466°N -2.472°W | The farmhouse and barn are in stone with quoins, and a roof partly of slate and partly of stone-slate. The house has two storeys, three bays, a rear outshut forming an L-shaped plan, and a small barn attached to the west. On the front is a lean-to porch, and the windows are casements. | |||
Cross Haw Farmhouse and outbuildings 54.3402°N -2.4833°W | The farmhouse and outbuildings are in stone with quoins and a slate roof. The house has two storeys and three bays with a lean-to porch. All the windows are 20th-century replacements. To the left is a two-storey outbuilding with a single-storey extension, and to the right is a barn with an extension to the front. | |||
High Birks Farmhouse 54.3174°N -2.5376°W | The former farmhouse is in stone with quoins, through-stones, and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. In the centre is a gabled porch, and the windows on the front consist of a fixed window with altered glazing, two sash windows, and a casement window. At the rear are the remains of mullioned windows and a blocked stair window. | |||
Low Beckside Farmhouse, peat-house and barn 54.3547°N -2.4741°W | The farmhouse and outbuildings were extended in the 19th century. They are in stone with quoins, and have a blue slate roof with stone ridge and copings. The house has two storeys, two bays, and a rear extension. On the front is a gabled porch with a square-headed outer opening, stone benches, and a Tudor arched inner doorway. Most of the windows are sashes. The peat-house and barn are attached to the south. | |||
Low Brigflatts 54.3141°N -2.5537°W | 1677 | A farmhouse and an attached private house in stone, the north face roughcast, with a roof of slate and stone-slate, and a stone ridge and gable copings. There are three unequal storeys and three bays. The building has various doorways and windows, some of which are blocked, and some of the windows are mullioned with hood moulds. | ||
Archer's Hall 54.3144°N -2.5263°W | 1681 | A stone farmhouse with a slate roof, it has two storeys, three bays, and a rear service bay giving a T-shaped plan. On the front is a two-storey gabled porch that has a slightly arched outed doorway with a moulded surround and a lintel with a hood mould. Most of the windows are casements, and there are two mullioned windows. | ||
Stone Hall 54.3296°N -2.5062°W | 1692 | A farmhouse, later a private house, in stone with sandstone dressings and a green slate roof. There are two storeys with an attic, four bays, and a rear service wing, giving a modified L-shaped plan. On the front is a three-storey porch with a Tudor arched lintel, a hood mould, a fixed window in the ground floor, mullioned windows in the upper floors, a datestone panel, and a coped gable. Elsewhere, some of the windows are mullioned and others are sashes. Inside the house are upper cruck trusses. | ||
Thorns Cottage 54.3246°N -2.5183°W | A house that was much altered in 1896–97 in picturesque style, it is in stone with a roof of stone slabs. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. In the centre is a porch in variously coloured stones, with curved angles, a doorway with a shaped canopy, a Venetian window above, and a stepped parapet with coping and a cornice band. The windows are mullioned and contain casements. At the rear is an embattled wing with a corner turret, and a small round tower in the angle. | |||
Abbot Holme House (west), barn and stable 54.3118°N -2.5424°W | The farmhouse and attached outbuildings are in stone with quoins and roofs of slate and some stone-slate. The house has two storeys, three bays, and a rear outshut. On the front is a simple porch, and the windows are sashes. To the left is the stable, with through-stones, a small square window, a segmental-headed doorway with voussoirs, and steps leading to a loft doorway at the rear. To the right is a two-bay barn that has a shallow segmental-headed doorway with voussoirs. | |||
Beck Farmhouse and barn 54.3644°N -2.5648°W | The farmhouse and barn are in stone with slate roofs. The house has two storeys with an attic, four bays, and a rear outshut. On the front is a 20th-century gabled porch with a square-headed doorway, and the windows have altered glazing. At right angles to the left is the barn with a doorway and three windows, all with voussoirs. | |||
Draw Well Farmhouse 54.3359°N -2.5631°W | A stone farmhouse on a plinth, with quoins, through-stones, and a roof of blue and green slate with a stone ridge. It has two storeys, two bays, a rendered outshut at the rear, and a lean-to at the left. On the front is a porch with a tiled roof, and a continuous hood mould above the ground floor windows. Most of the windows are casements, and there is one sash window. | |||
Bank barn, Draw Well Farm 54.336°N -2.563°W | The bank barn is in stone with a green slate roof, and has a rectangular plan with four bays. In the east front are three shippon doors, one higher and approached by a ramp, and at the rear is a wagon entrance. | |||
Gate Farmhouse 54.364°N -2.5688°W | A stone farmhouse with quoins, some through-stones, and a Cumbrian slate roof. It has two storeys and three bays. On the front is a gabled porch with a square-headed doorway and containing side benches. To the right of the porch is a stair window, and the windows contain 20th-century glazing. | |||
High Fawes 54.3184°N -2.4662°W | Originally a farmhouse, later much modernised and a private house. It is in stone with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys, five bays, and a short rear wing, giving an L-shaped plan. On the front is a gabled porch with a square-headed doorway and a monolith lintel. The windows are replacements of the original mullioned windows. | |||
Mackereth Hill and barn 54.3324°N -2.4874°W | The former farmhouse and attached barn are in stone with a stone-slate roof. The house has two low storeys, two bays, a lean-to porch, and square windows. The barn to the left has two doorways and a loading door. | |||
Straight Bridge 54.3257°N -2.4974°W | The bridge carries the A683 road over the River Rawthey, and was widened in the 19th century. It is in sandstone and consists of a single high segmental arch. The bridge has a double course of voussoirs on the southwest side, rebuilt parapets, and sloping abutments. | |||
Thursgill 54.3347°N -2.4923°W | Originally a farmhouse, later a private house, it was extended in 1883 and a porch was added in 1899. The house is in stone with sandstone quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys and five bays. On the front is a doorway with a datestone and another doorway. In the angle is a curved porch in Gothic style with a round-headed doorway, a datestone, and a quarter-conical blue slate roof. The windows are of varying types. Inside the original part of the house is a large inglenook bressumer. | |||
Castlehaw Farmhouse 54.3266°N -2.5208°W | 1701 | Originally a farmhouse, later a private house, it is in stone with sandstone quoins, stone-slate bands, and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys and an attic, six bays, and a rear wing, forming an L-shaped plan. On the front is a gabled porch with a moulded Tudor arched opening, and an initialled and dated lintel, above which are pigeon holes, and inside the porch are stone benches. The windows are mullioned. | ||
High Oaks 54.3139°N -2.5747°W | 1706 | A stone house, partly rendered, with a slate roof. There are three storeys, a five-bay main block, a broad rear wing, and a lean-to. On the front is a gabled porch with a datestone, side benches, and a square-headed internal doorway. The windows are casements replacing mullioned windows. In the rear wing is a round-headed cellar window, a stair window, a mullioned window, and a small attic window. | ||
Rue Crofts and barn 54.3311°N -2.5613°W | 1711 | Originally a farmhouse, later a private house, in stone with quoins and a roof of slate with some stone-slate. There are two storeys, two bays, and a south wing. On the front is a small gabled porch, and the windows are of varied types. The barn to the north also has a rear wing. | ||
Hollin Hill Farmhouse 54.3304°N -2.5019°W | 1712 | A stone farmhouse with sandstone dressings and quoins, stone-slate bands, and a green slate roof. There are two storeys, three bays, and an added lean-to peat-house with a through-passage to the southwest. On the front is a gabled porch with a datestone over the opening, and the windows are sashes. At the rear are a lean-to porch and outhouse and a stair window. | ||
The Hill 54.3091°N -2.5765°W | 1712 | The house is in stone with a stuccoed front, and has a stone-slate roof. There are three storeys, four bays, and a large rear wing. In the centre is a plain doorway and a moulded dated and initialled panel, and the windows are sashes. | ||
Old Grammar School 54.3227°N -2.5277°W | 1716 | Originally a grammar school, later the library of Sedbergh School, it is in stone with freestone quoins and dressings, and a stone-slate roof. It has a rectangular plan, two storeys, and seven bays. The round-headed doorway in the gabled west front has pilaster jambs, moulded imposts, and a moulded head with a keystone, and above the door is a fanlight. Framing the doorway is an architrave with entablatures, a triglyph frieze, and a segmental pediment, over which is a tablet containing a carved shield. Along the sides are two tiers of round-headed windows with mullions and transoms, and moulded surrounds. | ||
Stable and School Room, Friends' Meeting House 54.315°N -2.5539°W | The building is in stone with a green slate roof and a rectangular plan. It consists of a single-storey stable, with a two-storey part to the left containing the schoolroom in the upper floor. In the stable is a large entrance doorway and windows, and the other part has a doorway in the ground floor and external steps leading to a doorway in the upper floor. | |||
6 and 7 Settlebeck 54.3229°N -2.5193°W | Originally a farmhouse, later converted into two cottages, and then into one dwelling. It is in stone with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys and four bays. On the front is a gabled porch with a doorway on the side, and the windows are sashes. | |||
Barn north of Archer's Hall 54.3147°N -2.526°W | The barn is in stone with quoins, some through-stones, a roof mainly of stone-slate with some blue slate, and four bays. It contains a segmental-headed wagon entrance with voussoirs, doorways, and square ventilation holes. | |||
Beckside Farmhouse and barn 54.3488°N -2.5697°W | The farmhouse and bank barn are in stone with roofs partly in slate and partly in stone-slate. The house has two storeys, three bays, a gabled porch, and sash windows. The barn to the left has a shippon under the left half and a three-bay lean-to on the front at the right with a wagon entrance. In the left part are through-stones, a doorway, and external steps leading up to a loading door. | |||
Bluecaster 54.3615°N -2.4621°W | A former farmhouse with outbuildings in stone that have a roof partly in blue slate and partly in stone-slate. The house has two storeys, and an L-shaped plan formed by a two-bay main range and a short cross-wing at the south. On the front is a gabled porch, and the windows are of varying types. At the north end are outbuildings, one with a single bay, and beyond that a lower one of two bays at a lower level. | |||
Barn, Fell Yeat Farm 54.3152°N -2.4978°W | A bank barn in stone with irregular quoins and a roof mainly in stone-slate. It has two unequal storeys and four bays, and a shippon under the northwest end. The barn contains a wagon entrance approached by a ramp and a mullioned window. Elsewhere there is a square-headed doorway to the shippon, and square ventilation holes. | |||
Barn, Garth's Farm 54.326°N -2.5643°W | The barn is in stone with sandstone quoins, and a roof partly of stone-slate and partly of blue slate. It has an L-shaped plan with a 19th-century extension at right angles. The earlier part has a ramp leading to a wagon doorway, and a shippon doorway. In the newer part are three shippon doors, two windows, and a loading door. At the rear is a wagon doorway with a gabled porch, and a lean-to extension. | |||
High Beckside Farmhouse and former barn 54.3551°N -2.4733°W | The farmhouse and the barn, which has been incorporated into the house, are in sandstone with quoins and a stone-slate roof. The house has two storeys and five bays. On the front is a gabled porch with a square-headed opening and pigeon holes above, and the windows are mullioned. The former barn to the right contains a segmental-headed wagon entrance and ventilation slits. | |||
High Branthwaite Farmhouse 54.3347°N -2.5608°W | A stone farmhouse with quoins and a roof mainly of stone-slate with some blue slate. There are two storeys and three bays. On the front is a gabled porch with a segmental-headed doorway and stone benches. The windows on the front are sashes, and at the rear are two stair windows and mullioned windows. | |||
Barn, Low Haygarth Farm 54.3652°N -2.4684°W | The barn is in stone and boulders with quoins and a stone-slate roof. It has three bays, and contains two wagon doorways, one with a porch, and the other with voussoirs and a keystone, and ventilation slits. Attached to the west gable is a lean-to stable. | |||
Low Ridding and former barn 54.3337°N -2.4881°W | Originally a farmhouse with an attached barn, converted into a private house and a separate dwelling. It is in stone with quoins and a slate roof with a stone ridge. The house has two storeys with attics and five bays, with the former barn converted into a rear wing. On the front is a gabled porch that has a Tudor arched inner doorway with a chamfered surround and a hood mould. The windows are mullioned. | |||
Milestone near Fairmile Beck 54.3741°N -2.5722°W | The milestone is in sandstone and consists of a square post about high. There are inscriptions on all four sides giving the distances in miles to Kendal and to Sedbergh, the other inscriptions being illegible. | |||
Mill Cottage 54.3485°N -2.5674°W | The cottage is in stone with sandstone quoins and a composition tile roof. There are three storeys, a main range of two bays, and a one-bay extension recessed to the left. On the front of the main range is a shallow gabled porch and a doorway with voussoirs. Most of the windows are casements. | |||
Moss Farm and Moss Cottage 54.3214°N -2.5086°W | A farmhouse later divided into two dwellings, in stone, partly roughcast, with quoins and a roof partly of slate and partly of stone-slate. It has two storeys, five bays, and a rear wing giving an L-shaped plan. On the front is a lean-to porch, and the windows on the front are sashes. In the rear wing are mullioned windows and a casement window. | |||
Spedding House and barn 54.315°N -2.5213°W | The house and barn are in stone with quoins. The house has a roof partly of slate and partly of stone-slate, two storeys, five bays, and a rear extension. On the front is a gabled porch, above which is a blind window, the other windows being sashes. The barn, higher and to the right, has a slate roof, and contains through-stones, a doorway and a window, both with segmental heads, a loading door, and ventilation slits, and at the rear is a wagon doorway. | |||
Taythes Farmhouse 54.3575°N -2.4556°W | The former farmhouse is in stone, partly roughcast, with quoins, some through-stones, and a roof of green slate with an eaves course of stone-slate and a stone ridge. There are two storeys, two bays, and a lean-to peat-house at the right. On the front is a gabled porch with a square-headed doorway, a projecting lintel, and a ball finial. Most of the windows are sashes. | |||
Thwaite Farmhouse 54.3473°N -2.5722°W | The farmhouse is in roughcast stone with a roof partly of green slate and partly of stone-slate. There are two storeys, a centre block of three bays, an earlier bay at the north, and a peat-house at the south end. On the front of the centre block is a gabled porch and sash windows. The bay to the north has a doorway with a plain surround, a tilting casement window and a fixed window above, and in the peat-house is a doorway and a window. At the rear are mixed windows, including a mullioned stair window. | |||
Low Haygarth Farmhouse 54.3654°N -2.4684°W | 1728 | The former farmhouse is in stone with quoins, through-stones, and a composition tile roof. There are two storeys, five bays, and a rear wing with an integral outshut. In the centre of the front is a two-storey porch with a square-headed outer opening, stone benches, and an inner doorway with a lintel inscribed with initials and the date. Most of the windows are casements. The rear wing also has a gabled porch containing stone benches, a fixed window and sash windows. | ||
Cross Keys Hotel 54.3665°N -2.4665°W | 1732 | Originally a farmhouse or an inn, later altered and extended and used as a hotel. It is in stone with quoins and a slate roof. The hotel has two storeys and a front of five irregular bays. Above the doorway is a dated and initialled lintel. The windows are of varying types, some are mullioned and some are sashes, and there are three half-dormers. | ||
48 and 50 Main Street 54.3238°N -2.5272°W | A shop with living accommodation above, in stone with a stuccoed front, and a slate roof. There are three storeys, three bays, and a long rear wing, giving an L-shaped plan. In the left part of the ground floor is a shop front with decorative pilasters, a frieze, and a cornice. To the right is a doorway with a moulded surround, a fanlight, and a cornice on consoles, and to the right of this is a fixed window. The middle floor contains sash windows with segmental heads, and in the top floor are casement windows. | |||
Barn, Castlehaw Farm 54.3265°N -2.5205°W | A barn and shippon in stone with quoins, through-stones, and a roof partly of slate and partly of stone-slate. It has an L-shaped plan, with a main range and a shippon forming a south wing. The openings include a wagon entrance with a porch, doorways, windows, and ventilation openings. | |||
Bank barn, Catholes Farm 54.3117°N -2.5361°W | The barn is in stone with quoins, through-stones, and a stone-slate roof. It has a rectangular plan with five bays, and a shippon under the south end. There are wagon entrances and outshuts on both north and south fronts, and a shippon doorway in the west gable end. | |||
Gateside House 54.3244°N -2.4847°W | Originally a small farmhouse, later a private house, it is in stone with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys, two bays, and a large lean-to extension to the right. On the front is a gabled porch with a square doorway and side benches. The windows are top-hung casements, and above the ground floor windows is a hood mould. | |||
Hallbank 54.3203°N -2.4916°W | A stone house with a stone-slate roof, two storeys, three bays, and a 20th-century flat-roofed extension to the rear. On the front is a lean-to porch with side benches and a square-headed inner doorway. The windows are casements, with a stone-slate hood mould above the ground floor windows. | |||
Bank barn, High Branthwaite Farm 54.3345°N -2.5602°W | The barn is in stone with quoins, through-stones, and a stone-slate roof. It contains two square-headed wagon doorways, a shippon at the north end, ventilation slits, and other doorways. | |||
Barn adjoining Hollin Hill Farmhouse 54.3306°N -2.5017°W | A bank barn in stone with sandstone quoins, through-stones, and a stone-slate roof. It has an L-shaped plan, with a seven-bay main range and a three-bay wing at right angles linking to the farmhouse. On the south front is a small porch. The openings include shippon doorways, a loading doorway, windows, a segmental-headed wagon entrance, ventilation slits and square holes, and dove holes. | |||
Kilnbeck Farmhouse and barn 54.3255°N -2.4868°W | The farmhouse and attached bank barn are in sandstone with quoins. The farmhouse has a roof of blue slate with a stone ridge. There are two storeys, three bays, a square-headed doorway, and sash windows. The barn to the left dates from the 19th century, it has a corrugated sheet roof, through-stones, a square-headed wagon doorway, and a small window. | |||
Low Branthwaites 54.3152°N -2.4871°W | A former farmhouse with barns, it is in sandstone with some through-stones, and a roof partly in blue slate and partly in slate-stone. The house has two storeys and two bays, a barn attached at both ends, and a rear wing. On the front is a gabled porch, and the windows are casements. The former barn to the left has been incorporated into the house. The barn to the right has a segmental-headed doorway with voussoirs, a square-headed doorway, and two windows. In the rear wing are a mullioned stair window, an altered windows, and a casement window. | |||
Low Hollins Farmhouse and garden wall 54.3156°N -2.5029°W | The farmhouse is in stone with irregular quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys with an attic and four bays. On the front is a gabled porch that has a square-headed doorway with a moulded surround and a side bench. The windows are top-hung casements imitating sashes. Enclosing the garden is a drystone wall about high. | |||
Nether Bainbridge Farmhouse 54.342°N -2.5674°W | The farmhouse, later a private house, is in stone with quoins and a roof partly of slate and partly of stone-slate. There are two storeys with an attic, three bays, and a short stair outshut and a wing at the rear, giving a T-shaped plan. In the front is a central square-headed doorway, casement windows in the ground floor, and sash windows in the upper floor. In the left gable end is a mullioned window and in the attic is a pigeon hole. | |||
18 and 19 Back Lane 54.3234°N -2.5252°W | Originally an agricultural building, it was converted into two houses in the 19th century. The houses are in stone with quoins. Behind No. 19 is a wing, giving the building an L-shaped plan. There are three storeys and most of the windows are sashes, irregularly placed. The entry to No. 17 is from an alley on the left. No. 19 has a simple porch with a pitched roof of two green slates. | |||
9 and 11 Howgill Lane 54.3239°N -2.5295°W | A small house (No. 9. Winder Cottage) and a cottage in stone with quoins on the right and a roof in blue slate. There are two storeys, No. 9 has two bays, and No. 11 has one. Both have square-headed doorways and sash windows. | |||
4 Main Street 54.3235°N -2.53°W | A stone house with large irregular quoins and a slate roof with stone ridge slates. There are two storeys with an attic, and two bays. The doorway has a square head, and the windows in the lower two floors are sashes. The windows in the upper floor have segmental heads and voussoirs. In the attic is a fixed window. | |||
35 Main Street 54.3236°N -2.5278°W | Originally two shops with accommodation above, later combined into one shop, it is in stone with a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys, the upper storey jettied and roughcast, and three structural bays. In the centre of the ground floor are three doors, and these are flanked by shop windows. The upper floor contains two widely separated casement windows. There is a set-back part at the left containing a garage door with a two-light window above. | |||
Abbot Holme House (east) and barn 54.3119°N -2.5421°W | The farmhouse and barn are in stone with quoins, and roofs partly of slate and partly of stone-slate. The house has two storeys and two bays, with a square-headed doorway, and windows, those in the upper floor being sashes. At the rear are through-stones, a doorway, and windows that include a stair window and a mullioned window. To the right is an attached cart shed linking to the barn that is canted back. The cart shed contains a wagon doorway, and the barn has ventilation slits, a blocked doorway with a massive lintel, and a lean-to porch. At the rear is an outshut. | |||
Barn northwest of Archer's Hall 54.3147°N -2.5266°W | A bank barn in stone with some quoins, and a roof mainly of stone-slate with some blue slate. In the south side is a wagon doorway with a lean-to porch, and on the north side are five shippon doorways with massive lintels, and a loading door. On both sides are square ventilation holes. | |||
Banty Gill Bridge 54.3495°N -2.5641°W | The bridge carries Howgill Lane over Chapel Beck. It is in stone and consists of a single almost semicircular arch, with voussoirs, a thin stone-slate band, and straight parapets with flat coping. | |||
Birks Cottage 54.3173°N -2.5376°W | A stone cottage, partly pebbledashed, with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, and on the right return is a porch. | |||
Former barn, Catholes Farm 54.3114°N -2.5357°W | Originally a bank barn, later converted for other uses, it is in stone with quoins and a stone-slate roof. It has a rectangular plan, with a former shippon under the south end, and an outshut at the north. On both sides are wagon doorways with shallow segmental heads and voussoirs, and there are also ventilation slits, now glazed. | |||
Barn, Cautley Thwaite Farm 54.3624°N -2.4715°W | The barn is built in stone and boulders with through-stones, quoins, a stone-slate roof, and a long rectangular plan. It contains doorways, windows and loading doorways. | |||
Danny Bridge 54.3162°N -2.4653°W |