Listed buildings in Fylingdales

Fylingdales is a civil parish in the Scarborough district of North Yorkshire, England. It contains over 230 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, one is listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, four are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains the village of Robin Hood's Bay, the smaller settlements of Fylingthorpe and Raw, and the surrounding countryside. Most of the listed buildings are houses, cottages and associated structures, many crowded together in Robin Hood's Bay. The others include churches and chapels, farmhouses and farm buildings, a hotel and public houses, mile posts, a collecting box, a former pigsty, a museum and a war memorial.


Grade Criteria[1]
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

Buildings

edit
Name and location Photograph Date Notes Grade
Jays House and outbuildings
54°26′06″N 0°32′09″W / 54.43495°N 0.53589°W / 54.43495; -0.53589 (Jays House and outbuildings)
 
c. 1320 A range including a stable and coach house were added to the house in the 18th century. The building is in sandstone, and has purple slate roofs, with a stone ridge, copings and prominent curved kneelers. The house and the outbuilding each has an L-shaped plan, forming an overall U-shaped plan. The house has two storeys and a front of four bays. The door has a patterned fanlight, and a bracketed cornice hood, to the left is a canted bay window, and the other windows are sashes. The outbuilding has a half-dormer, and a hipped roof with two louvred ridge vents and ball finials.[2] II
Farsyde House
54°25′34″N 0°32′13″W / 54.42604°N 0.53697°W / 54.42604; -0.53697 (Farsyde House)
16th century An entrance extension was added in 1670. The house is in sandstone on a chamfered plinth, and has pantile roofs with a stone ridge, broad copings and rolled kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and a T-shaped plan, with a rear wing, a main front of three bays, a massive chimney stack on the left, mullioned windows and a dormer. At the rear is a sash window and chamfered mullioned windows. The entrance extension has a blocked window with a moulded surround, and a doorway with a lintel inscribed with three sets of initials.[3][4] II*
Cliff Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43152°N 0.53267°W / 54.43152; -0.53267 (Cliff Cottage)
Early 17th century (probable) A sandstone house, the upper floor partly rendered, with quoins, and a pantile roof with stone copings and kneelers. The main part has two storeys, the upper storey jettied on beams with curved ends, and two bays. There is a two-storey bay to the left, and a single-storey extension. The main part contains a blocked doorway with a chamfered surround, a modern doorway, a casement window and a sash window. The right bay is linked by an enclosed bridge.[5] II
Fyling Old Hall and wall
54°24′43″N 0°32′52″W / 54.41203°N 0.54768°W / 54.41203; -0.54768 (Fyling Old Hall and wall)
 
1629 A house with an earlier origin, it was remodelled in the 1820s, and is in stone, mainly pebbledashed, on a plinth with quoins and some chamfered coping. The roof is in tile with stone copings and kneelers. The house has two storeys and attics, a main front of three bays and a stair tower with a pyramidal roof and a ball finial. The garden front has four bays, and contains a doorway with alternating block jambs, a patterned fanlight, a keystone, a frieze and a hood mould. The windows are sashes with flat heads and keystones. In the right return are mullioned windows with hood moulds, the window in the upper floor is larger with a transom, and in the attic is an oculus. There is a wall round three sides of the garden to the east with wrought iron gates.[6][7] II
Brook House Farmhouse and outbuilding
54°26′13″N 0°33′33″W / 54.43698°N 0.55919°W / 54.43698; -0.55919 (Brook House Farmhouse and outbuilding)
1632 The farmhouse, which was rebuilt in 1826, is in sandstone on a plinth, and has pantile roofs with a stone ridge and gable copings on block kneelers. There are two storeys, two bays, a single-storey recessed entrance bay on the left, and a single-storey outbuilding with a loft. The doorway has a fanlight, in the left bay is a tripartite window, and the other widows are sashes. The outbuilding has stable doors, other doorways, small windows and a raking loading dormer.[8] II
Littlewood Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43049°N 0.53317°W / 54.43049; -0.53317 (Littlewood Cottage)
 
17th century The cottage was extended in the 19th or 20th century. The lower part of the original building is in stone, the upper part is in brick, the gable end is rendered, and it has a pantile roof. There is one storey, a basement and an attic, and one bay. On the street front is a fixed light and a casement window, and in the left return are two sash windows in the attic and a horizontally-sliding sash below. The extension is in sandstone and is canted. In the very narrow end is a stable door and a small casement window above.[9] II
Seacote
54°25′54″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43179°N 0.53272°W / 54.43179; -0.53272 (Seacote)
17th century The house, which has been much altered, is in stone on the ground floor, on a rendered plinth, with rendered timber framing above, and a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler on the right. There are two storeys, the upper storey jettied, and one wide bay, curved on the right. On the front is a doorway with a small sash window to the right, and at the top is a small window under the eaves.[10] II
Sherwood Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43087°N 0.53244°W / 54.43087; -0.53244 (Sherwood Cottage)
17th century (possible) The house has painted incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof. The front is gabled and has two storeys and an attic, and two bays, with a single-bay in the right return. In the ground floor are two small-pane fixed-light windows, the upper floor has a casement window on the left and a sash window on the right, and in the attic is a casement. The doorway is in the right return and has a bracketed cornice, and to the right is a shopfront.[11] II
St Stephen's Bede House and The Crypt
54°25′55″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43181°N 0.53339°W / 54.43181; -0.53339 (St Stephen's Bede House and The Crypt)
17th century A house with the ground floor forming a separate dwelling, in sandstone with a pantile roof, stone copings and kneelers. There are three storeys and three irregular bays. In the ground floor is a doorway with a small window to the left, and to the right is a fire window ornamented as a grotto. The upper floors contain fires windows, and small modern windows, and there is a small horizontally-sliding sash window. In the left return is a doorway with a gabled head on long brackets.[12] II
Whitegates
54°25′53″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43130°N 0.53262°W / 54.43130; -0.53262 (Whitegates)
17th century The house is in sandstone, the north front with incised rendering, and it has a pantile roof with stone curved coping and a kneeler on the right. The entrance front has two storeys, an attic and a tall basement. In the basement is a door and a fixed light, and on the left is a weatherboarded porch. Also on the front is a sash window and a dormer, and elsewhere are sash windows.[13] II
Lilly's Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43141°N 0.53310°W / 54.43141; -0.53310 (Lilly's Cottage)
Mid to late 17th century A house and shop in rendered stone on a plinth, with moulded eaves coping. There are two storeys and an attic, and one wide bay, with the gable end facing the street. In the ground floor is a doorway with a bracketed gabled hood, to the right is a transomed shop window, and the upper floors contain sash windows.[14] II
Bay Ness Old Farmhouse
54°26′33″N 0°31′53″W / 54.44239°N 0.53127°W / 54.44239; -0.53127 (Bay Ness Old Farmhouse)
Late 17th century (probable) The farmhouse, later used for other purposes, is in sandstone on a plinth, with a pantile roof and some tiles, a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There is one storey and an attic, and an L-shaped plan, with a main range of three bays and a rear wing. On the front is a stable door, and the windows are a mix, some chamfered and mullioned and others are casements.[15] II
Bramblewick Cafe
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43048°N 0.53253°W / 54.43048; -0.53253 (Bramblewick Cafe)
 
Late 17th century (probable) The building has a rendered front, and a pantile roof with stone coping. The front facing the road is gabled, the main part has three storeys and an attic, and one wide bay, and to the left is an extension with two storeys and an attic. In the ground floor is a doorway and a shop window, and elsewhere are various modern windows.[16] II
Dock Cottage
54°25′49″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43041°N 0.53244°W / 54.43041; -0.53244 (Dock Cottage)
 
Late 17th century The house has incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof with stone copings and kneelers. There are two storeys, a basement and an attic, and a gabled main front. In each floor is a sash window, that in the upper floor flanked by roundels. Steps with a wrought iron handrail lead up to a doorway in a porch extension to the right. The left return is canted, and contains a basement doorway and a round window.[17] II
Green Cottage and Summer Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43084°N 0.53271°W / 54.43084; -0.53271 (Green Cottage and Summer Cottage)
Late 17th century (probable) A house divided into two, in large stone blocks, with a pantile roof, stone copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, a basement on the left, and an L-shaped plan with a front of three bays. The right cottage has a doorway with a segmental-arched lintel, the left cottage has a wooden architrave, and the windows are sashes.[18] II
Rokeby House
54°25′55″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43184°N 0.53277°W / 54.43184; -0.53277 (Rokeby House)
Late 17th century (probable) The house has incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof with rendered copings and stone kneelers. On the front are two storeys and two very wide bays. In the centre is a doorway with a hood on full-length brackets. The windows are paired pivoted casements, those in the upper floor in architraves, and there are attic half-dormers. At the rear is one storey and an attic.[19] II
The Old Forge
54°25′50″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43067°N 0.53268°W / 54.43067; -0.53268 (The Old Forge)
Late 17th century A house with a shopfront added in the 20th century, it has a rendered front, and a pantile roof with stone copings and curved kneelers. The gable end faces the street, there are three storeys and an attic, and two bays. The ground floor contains a full-width shopfront with a central recessed doorway, and above is a balcony with a wood rail, and sash windows. There are steps and sash windows on the right return.[20] II
Thorpe Hall
54°25′52″N 0°32′47″W / 54.43112°N 0.54641°W / 54.43112; -0.54641 (Thorpe Hall)
 
1680 A large house that was extended in the 19th century, in sandstone with quoins, and a Welsh slate roof with stone copings, small gabled kneelers, stone ridges on the older part and tile ridges on the extensions. The original part has two parallel ranges, the 1835 extension is parallel and extended to the south with a porch, and the 1844 extension is a parallel east range linked to the porch. There are two storeys and attics, and an entrance front of three bays, with string courses, and a small central gable with a chamfered slit. In the centre is a doorway with a Tudor arched head, a chamfered surround, and a coat of arms with initials and the date. Above it is a single-light window, and the other windows on the front are double-chamfered and mullioned. Elsewhere, there are more Tudor-arched doorways and coats of arms.[3][21] II
Bank House and Bank House Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43064°N 0.53247°W / 54.43064; -0.53247 (Bank House and Bank House Cottage)
c. 1700 The oldest part is the rear wing, with the front range dating from the early 19th century. The building is in sandstone, with pantile roofs, stone coping and kneelers. The front has two storeys and an attic and one wide bay, and the rear wing has two storeys and four bays. The doorway is on the right, the windows are sashes and there is a small skylight.[22] II
Eva Cottage
54°25′52″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43102°N 0.53258°W / 54.43102; -0.53258 (Eva Cottage)
 
c. 1700 The house is in sandstone, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler on the right. There are two storeys and an attic, and one bay. On the left is a doorway with a bracketed gabled hood, to the right is a sash window in an architrave, and above is a horizontally-sliding sash window. To the right is an added rendered bay with a passage entry.[23] II
House south of Fisherman's Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43081°N 0.53293°W / 54.43081; -0.53293 (House south of Cottage)
c. 1700 The house is in sandstone, the basement is rendered, and it has a pantile roof with stone kneelers. The gable end faces the road, and has three storeys, a basement, and two bays. The entrance is in the left return of the basement, and has reeded pilasters, a shaped and initialled lintel, and an open pedimented hood. Most of the windows are sashes, there is one casement window in an old chamfered surround, and a large fixed window.[24] II
Fulmar Cottage
54°24′30″N 0°31′41″W / 54.40830°N 0.52807°W / 54.40830; -0.52807 (Fulmar Cottage)
c. 1700 The house is in sandstone on an older plinth, and it has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and block kneelers. There is a single storey and an attic, three bays, and lower outbuildings to the west. The doorway is slightly chamfered, most of the windows are casements, there is a fire window, and raking dormers. In the outbuilding is a mullioned window, and inside the house is a large inglenook fireplace.[25] II
High Normanby Old Farmhouse and byre
54°26′27″N 0°33′50″W / 54.44093°N 0.56396°W / 54.44093; -0.56396 (High Normanby Old Farmhouse and byre)
 
c. 1700 The farmhouse is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There is one storey and an attic, and two wide bays, with an added bay on the right. On the front are two doors, a blocked doorway flanked by multipane windows with central opening sections, a blocked mullioned window and a blocked fire window, and two raking dormers. The projecting byre range has one storey and five bays, and contains blocked doors and small windows.[26] II
Maid Marian
54°25′55″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43189°N 0.53359°W / 54.43189; -0.53359 (Maid Marian)
c. 1700 The house is in sandstone with a pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. In the ground floor is a blocked doorway and an inserted lower doorway, the upper floor contains a fire window with a fixed light, and a modern casement window, and there is a dormer on the left.[27] II
Raw Farmhouse and outbuilding
54°26′17″N 0°33′41″W / 54.43802°N 0.56127°W / 54.43802; -0.56127 (Raw Farmhouse and outbuilding)
c. 1700 A longhouse consisting of a farmhouse and an integral barn and byre. It is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and it contains a doorway with a heavy chamfered lintel, and casement windows and a fire window with chamfered surrounds, and between them is a stair window. At the rear are stable doors and slit vents, and in the extension is a segmental-arched cart entrance.[28][29] II
Stable and byre north of Bay Ness Old Farmhouse
54°26′33″N 0°31′53″W / 54.44256°N 0.53137°W / 54.44256; -0.53137 (Stable and byre north of Bay Ness Old Farmhouse)
Late 17th to early 18th century The building is in sandstone with a pantile roof and stone copings. There is one storey and five bays, with a gable on the return of the left bay. It contains stable doors with heavy lintels and a landing door, and at the rear are two raking dormers. Inside, there is an upper cruck truss.[30] II
Bow Cottage
54°25′52″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43102°N 0.53260°W / 54.43102; -0.53260 (Bow Cottage)
 
Late 17th to early 18th century A sandstone house with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with coping and a kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. In the centre is a doorway with a fanlight flanked by bow windows, all under a continuous flat hood on prominent brackets. The upper floor contains sash windows, and above are two dormers.[31] II
Coralline
54°25′54″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43179°N 0.53304°W / 54.43179; -0.53304 (Coralline)
Late 17th or early 18th century Two houses, later joined, in sandstone, with a pantile roof, a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. In the right two bays is a segmental-headed doorway under a segmental-headed lintel with a keystone. To its right is a sash window, to the left is a tripartite window, and above are sash windows and a dormer. The left bay has a plinth and a casement window, above which is a sash window and a dormer.[32] II
King's Head Cottages
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43057°N 0.53260°W / 54.43057; -0.53260 (King's Head Cottages)
Late 17th or early 18th century A house later divided into two, it has incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof with stone coping. The gable end faces the road, and to the left is an almost full height outshut. There are two storeys, an attic and a basement. In the basement is a door, steps lead up to another doorway, and the windows are sashes.[33] II
Moorsons House
54°25′53″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43140°N 0.53277°W / 54.43140; -0.53277 (Moorsons House)
Late 17th or early 18th century A sandstone house, the right return rendered, with a pantile roof, a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and three irregular bays. The doorway is dated 1630, and has a gabled hood on decorative brackets. To its right is a small casement window, and to the left is an 18-pane window. The upper floors contain sash windows, and there is a flat-roofed dormer. The right return is gabled, and contains a doorway with a bracketed gabled hood.[34] II
Endways
54°25′54″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43177°N 0.53295°W / 54.43177; -0.53295 (Endways)
1709 The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays. On the front is an inserted doorway, and a blocked doorway with an initialled and dated lintel. On the right is a 24-light window, and elsewhere are a fire window, a sash window, a horizontally-sliding sash window and a dormer.[35] II
Holme Dale and Sunny Vale
54°25′55″N 0°32′04″W / 54.43182°N 0.53437°W / 54.43182; -0.53437 (Holme Dale and Sunny Vale)
1709–10 The left of he two houses was added later in the 17th century. They are in sandstone, and have a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings, and kneelers of different patterns. Each house has three storeys and one wide bay, The right house has a doorway with a gabled bracketed hood, The left house has an inscribed stone, and the windows in both houses are sashes.[36] II
Mariners and forecourt wall
54°25′55″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43191°N 0.53283°W / 54.43191; -0.53283 (Mariners and forecourt wall)
 
1713 A public house, later a private house, in sandstone, with a pantile roof, and a stone ridge, copings, and kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and one wide bay. In the ground floor is a doorway with a dentilled surround and a gabled hood with a lantern, and to the right is a shop window. The upper floor contains sash windows in architraves, and in the attic is a horizontally-sliding sash. The forecourt wall enclosing the front garden is about 2 feet (0.61 m) high and has flat coping.[37] II
Park Gate and barn
54°25′41″N 0°33′21″W / 54.42816°N 0.55597°W / 54.42816; -0.55597 (Park Gate and barn)
1715 The farmhouse, later a private house, and the barn are in sandstone with pantile roofs, stone copings and kneelers. The house has two storeys and five bays, and at the rear is a dairy extension and a barn. On the front is a central gabled porch, and above the door are initials and the date. Throughout, there are two-light chamfered mullioned windows with casements. At the rear are stair and cellar windows.[38] II
3 Chapel Street
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43147°N 0.53319°W / 54.43147; -0.53319 (3 Chapel Street)
 
Early 18th century (probable) A stone house in a terrace, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler on the right. There are two storeys and an attic, and one bay. On the left is a doorway with a bracketed gabled hood, the windows are sashes and in the attic is a dormer.[39] II
6 Littlewood Terrace
54°25′50″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43045°N 0.53320°W / 54.43045; -0.53320 (6 Littlewood Terrace)
Early 18th century (probable) A house in two parts, the left part is rendered on stone and brick, and the right part is in sandstone. The roofs are in pantile with stone copings and kneelers. The left part has two storeys and attics, and two bays, and it contains a doorway, sash windows and a dormer. The right part is recessed and lower, with one storey and a basement, and two bays. Steps lead down to the cellar door, and the windows are sashes.[40] II
Cockpit Cottage and Arts, Crafts and Books
54°25′55″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43186°N 0.53390°W / 54.43186; -0.53390 (Cockpit Cottage and Arts, Crafts and Books)
 
Early 18th century Two houses, one with a shop, in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs. There is an L-shaped plan, with two gabled bays facing the street. The left bay has two storeys and an attic, steps lead up to a doorway with a shop window on the left, and above is a sash window and a small attic casement window. In the right bay is a doorway and a sash window, above which is a large canted oriel window, and on the apex of the gable is a ball finial. Cockpit Cottage is recessed on the left, and has two storeys and one wide bay.[41] II
Ben Marie
54°25′50″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43059°N 0.53341°W / 54.43059; -0.53341 (Ben Marie)
Early 18th century (possible) The house is in sandstone, partly rendered, with a pantile roof and stone copings. There are two storeys at the front, one at the rear, two wide bays, and a small outhouse on the right. The doorway has a wooden hood on brackets, and the windows have been altered.[42] II
Birkby Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43148°N 0.53325°W / 54.43148; -0.53325 (Birkby Cottage)
Early 18th century (probable) A sandstone house, part of a terrace, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with stone gable copings, and large moulded kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway has a gabled hood on long brackets, there is a blocked fire window, the other windows are sashes, and there is a three-light dormer with casements.[43] II
Brow Cot and Brow Hill Cottage
54°24′21″N 0°30′54″W / 54.40581°N 0.51496°W / 54.40581; -0.51496 (Brow Cot and Brow Hill Cottage)
Early 18th century The house and cottage are in sandstone with pantile roofs. Each part has two storeys and two bays, the house wider. The house has quoins, wide gable copings, and moulded kneelers. In the centre are double doors, and the windows are casements, those in the upper floor with mullions. The ground floor openings in the cottage have lintels with keystones, and in the upper floor are small sash windows.[44] II
Browside Farmhouse and outbuilding
54°24′32″N 0°31′57″W / 54.40879°N 0.53240°W / 54.40879; -0.53240 (Browside Farmhouse and outbuilding)
 
Early 18th century The farmhouse is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, coping and kneelers. The house has two storeys and four bays, to the right is a recessed wing with one storey and a loft and one bay, and to the left is a recessed outbuilding with one storey and a loft and two wide bays. The main house has a central doorway with a fanlight, sash windows and coved eaves. The right wing contains a mullioned window in the ground floor and a horizontally-sliding sash above. In the outbuilding is a loft door is a half-dormer.[45] II
Burton House and Cliff Heads
54°25′52″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43099°N 0.53246°W / 54.43099; -0.53246 (Burton House and Cliff Heads)
 
Early 18th century A house divided into two, in sandstone, the right return rendered, with quoins, a floor band, coved eaves, and a pantile roof with gable copings and square kneelers. There are two storeys and a basement and four bays. The doorways are in the centre, each with a bracketed hood. To the left is a basement opening with a chamfered surround, and a horizontally-sliding sash window in a well, and the windows elsewhere are sashes.[46] II
Chiltern and Stormville
54°25′50″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43055°N 0.53312°W / 54.43055; -0.53312 (Chiltern and Stormville)
Early 18th century (possible) A house divided into two, in sandstone, the right house with incised rendering, and both with coved eaves, and pantile roofs with stone coping and kneelers. There are two storeys, an attic and a basement, and each house has one bay. Steps lead up to paired doorways in the centre. The right house has a mullioned window in the ground floor, and a canted oriel window with a cornice and a lead roof in the upper floor. The left house has an extension with a doorway, and casement windows. Both houses have dormers with paired sashes and a deep bracketed soffit.[47] II
Cook House and outbuildings
54°23′36″N 0°32′48″W / 54.39326°N 0.54670°W / 54.39326; -0.54670 (Cook House and outbuildings)
Early 18th century (possible) The farmhouse is in sandstone, with stepped eaves, and a pantile roof with a tile ridge, stone copings and block kneelers. There is one storey and an attic, two bays, and a rear wing. On the front is a porch, a small sash window and a six-pane window. To the right is an outbuilding on a boulder plinth, containing three stable doors, and a low single-storey outbuilding projects to the left.[48] II
Eve Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43125°N 0.53260°W / 54.43125; -0.53260 (Eve Cottage)
Early 18th century The house is in sandstone, with coved eaves, and stone coping and kneelers. The east front has two storeys and an attic and two bays, and the south front and sea fronts each have three storeys and two bays. The windows are a mix, and include sashes, some horizontally sliding, casements and a fire window. On the south front are end pilasters and a parapet with ball finials.[49] II
Fenay Cottage and Ravensworth Cottage
54°25′54″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43166°N 0.53318°W / 54.43166; -0.53318 (Fenay Cottage and Ravensworth Cottage)
Early 18th century (probable) A pair of houses in sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and each house has two bays. The doorways are paired in the centre, the left doorway has a bracketed gabled hood with a painting in the tympanum, and the right doorway has pilasters and an entablature. Both houses contain sash windows and dormers, and the right house also has a large 24-pane window.[50] II
Foulsyke House
54°24′32″N 0°35′41″W / 54.40901°N 0.59461°W / 54.40901; -0.59461 (Foulsyke House)
Early 18th century (probable) A farmhouse in sandstone and in two parts. The lower downhouse has two storeys, one bay, and a tile roof. On the front is a doorway and a fixed light, and two small casements above, and at the rear are horizontally-sliding sashes and casements above. The main house has one storey and attics and two wide bays, and a Welsh slate roof with a stone ridge, copings and curved kneelers. On the front are a doorway, modern windows, a stair window, and dormers with casements, and at the rear are tripartite windows, and three dormers with sashes. Inside the main house is an inglenook fireplace.[51] II
Gallery Cottage and 2 Martin's Row
54°25′55″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43194°N 0.53360°W / 54.43194; -0.53360 (Gallery Cottage and 2 Martin's Row)
Early 18th century Two houses in sandstone with a pantile roof. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre are paired doorways, the left blocked, flanked by horizontally-sliding sash windows. The other doorway is in the upper floor and is approached by steps and a bridge. On the left of this are casement windows and to the right is a small sash. In the roof, to the left, is a large dormer.[52] II
Guides Cottage and The Retreat
54°25′49″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43037°N 0.53290°W / 54.43037; -0.53290 (Guides Cottage and The Retreat)
Early 18th century Two houses in sandstone, with quoins, and a pantile roof with stone copings and small curved kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The windows are sashes, and there is a raking dormer. In the left return is a doorway with a chamfered and alternating block surround, and a heavy lintel.[53] II
Hillcot
54°25′50″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43054°N 0.53340°W / 54.43054; -0.53340 (Hillcot)
Early 18th century A cottage in incised rendering on sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone coping and a curved kneeler. There is one storey, an attic and a basement, and a small right extension. The doorway is in the basement, most of the windows are sashes, and in the extension is a casement window.[54] II
Ladysmith Farmhouse and outbuildings
54°24′31″N 0°31′54″W / 54.40872°N 0.53179°W / 54.40872; -0.53179 (Ladysmith Farmhouse and outbuildings)
Early 18th century The farmhouse, which has been extended, and the outbuildings, are in sandstone and have pantile roofs with a stone ridge, coping and kneelers. The downhouse and the house each has two storeys and two bays, and the windows are a mix of mullioned windows, horizontally-sliding sashes and a casement. The outbuilding has one storey and a loft, and at the rear is a pigsty with four blocked feeding chutes.[55] II
Peacock Cottage
54°25′52″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43098°N 0.53313°W / 54.43098; -0.53313 (Peacock Cottage)
 
Early 18th century The house is in sandstone on a plinth, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with stone coping and large kneelers. There are two storeys and two bays. The doorway has a flat bracketed hood, and to its right is a bootscraper recess. The windows are sashes, and in the upper floor is a panel containing a sundial.[56] II
Roseberry Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43137°N 0.53317°W / 54.43137; -0.53317 (Roseberry Cottage)
Early 18th century (possible) The house is in sandstone, the front in incised render, with a pantile roof, and a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys on the front and two irregular bays. On the left is a doorway with a gabled bracketed hood, on the right is a boarded passage door, and in the upper floor is a sash window. The left return contains two attic sashes.[57] II
Sherwood
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43194°N 0.53308°W / 54.43194; -0.53308 (Sherwood)
 
Early 18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The doorway has pilasters, a radial fanlight and an archivolt. The windows are sashes in architraves, and there is a large dormer.[58] II
Shirley House
54°25′54″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43162°N 0.53307°W / 54.43162; -0.53307 (Shirley House)
Early 18th century The house, possibly with an earlier core, is in sandstone with a pantile roof. There are two storeys, an attic and a basement, and two bays. Five steps with a wooden handrail lead up to a doorway with a gabled hood on decorative brackets. To the left is a basement door and a window. The windows in the ground and upper floors are sashes, and there is a modern dormer with a small-paned casement.[59] II
Staithe Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43082°N 0.53258°W / 54.43082; -0.53258 (Staithe Cottage)
Early 18th century or earlier The house has incised rendered walls, stepped eaves, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and one bay. The doorway on the right has a gabled bracketed hood, and the windows are sashes, one horizontally-sliding.[60] II
Storm Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43068°N 0.53309°W / 54.43068; -0.53309 (Storm Cottage)
Early 18th century The house is in stone with incised render at the rear, coved eaves, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings, and prominent moulded kneelers. On the front are two storeys and two irregular bays. On the left is a doorway with a gabled hood on shaped brackets, and the windows are sashes in architraves. At the rear is one storey and an attic, a doorway, small windows and a raking dormer.[61] II
Sunnyside Farmhouse and outbuilding
54°25′39″N 0°33′22″W / 54.42758°N 0.55614°W / 54.42758; -0.55614 (Sunnyside Farmhouse and outbuilding)
 
Early 18th century The buildings are in sandstone, with pantile roofs, stone ridges, copings and block kneelers. The main house and downhouse have plinths and two storeys. On the front is a porch, the main house contains tripartite windows, and in the downhouse are sashes, all but one horizontally-sliding. The outbuilding has one storey and a loft, and five bays, the central barn flanked by byres and stables. The openings include doorways, stable doors, a loading door, a casement window and slit vents.[62] II
Formerly The Anchorage
54°25′50″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43068°N 0.53268°W / 54.43068; -0.53268 (Formerly The Anchorage)
 
Early 18th century A house, formerly incorporating a shop, in sandstone, with a coved eaves course and a parapet. There are three storeys, a basement and an attic, and three narrow bays. In the basement is a doorway, and steps with a wrought iron handrail lead up to an entrance terrace and doorway. The windows are sashes, and in the attic are two wide three-light windows. At the rear is a doorway with a gabled bracketed hood and a modern window.[63] II
The Laurel Inn
54°25′55″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43189°N 0.53357°W / 54.43189; -0.53357 (The Laurel Inn)
 
Early 18th century The public house was extended to the west in the 19th century. The older part has incised rendered walls, and the newer part is in sandstone. The roof is in pantile with stone copings and kneelers. The older part has three storeys and its gable end facing the road. The newer part has four storeys and one bay, and it contains a projecting porch. The windows in both parts are sashes, some of them horizontally-sliding.[64] II
Woodside
54°25′49″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43038°N 0.53353°W / 54.43038; -0.53353 (Woodside)
Early 18th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone coping on the left with block kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and two narrow bays. On the left is a small gabled porch, to its right is a 20th-century window, above are sash windows, and in the roof is a dormer. The left return has a porch, a modern window and a sash window, and at the rear is a blocked fire window.[65] II
Ramsdale Cottage
54°25′14″N 0°34′26″W / 54.42065°N 0.57388°W / 54.42065; -0.57388 (Ramsdale Cottage)
1726 The house, which was later extended, is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone copings and kneelers. There is one storey and an attic, four bays, and a rear wing on the right. The doorway is in the left bay, to its left is a casement window, to its right is a fire window with an initialled and dated lintel, and further to the right are three tripartite windows. The upper floor contains five sash windows, and inside the house is an inglenook fireplace.[66] II
Odinsfield
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43181°N 0.53295°W / 54.43181; -0.53295 (Odinsfield)
1734 The house has incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers, the right kneeler curved. There are two storeys and two irregular bays. The doorway has a dated and initialled lintel and a bracketed hood, and the windows are sashes in architraves. The left return has a basement, and contains a doorway and a variety of windows.[67] II
1 and 2 Cliffroyd
54°25′49″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43017°N 0.53261°W / 54.43017; -0.53261 (1 and 2 Cliffroyd)
Early to mid 18th century A pair of houses in a terrace, in rendered stone, with a coved eaves course and pantile roofs. There are three storeys, and each house has one bay. On the front are two doorways, the right one with a fanlight, and the windows are sashes. At the rear is a gabled bay with a stable door.[68] II
1, 2 and 3 Ocean View
54°25′49″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43015°N 0.53247°W / 54.43015; -0.53247 (1, 2 and 3 Ocean View)
 
Early to mid 18th century A house in a terrace, divided into three, in rendered stone, with a coved eaves course, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings, and large curved kneelers. The main block has three storeys and attics, and four bays. On the front are two doorways, and the windows are sashes. In the attics are three dormers, the outer ones with flat roofs, and the middle one gabled with bargeboards. To the left is a lower wing with two storeys and two bays.[69] II
Colcroft
54°24′25″N 0°33′25″W / 54.40691°N 0.55681°W / 54.40691; -0.55681 (Colcroft)
 
Early to mid 18th century The farmhouse is in sandstone and has a Welsh slate roof with a stone ridge, coping and a block kneeler. There is one storey and an attic and two bays, and a lower wide bay. The farmhouse contains a two-light mullioned window, a stair window and a fire window, and the other windows are later casements.[70] II
Ebor Cottage and West Lea
54°25′52″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43122°N 0.53282°W / 54.43122; -0.53282 (Ebor Cottage and West Lea<)
 
Early to mid 18th century A house divided into two, in sandstone, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with a large curved kneeler. There are two storeys and three bays. The doorways are paired, both have blocked fanlight s, one with a bracketed cornice, and the other with a ball-bordered serpentine hood on full-length reeded brackets. The windows in Ebor Cottage are sashes, and in West Lea they are casements. At the rear is a mullioned window.[71] II
Fielding's Shop and Leaf's Shop
54°25′54″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43179°N 0.53372°W / 54.43179; -0.53372 (Fielding's Shop and Leaf's Shop)
 
Early to mid 18th century A house and shops in sandstone, with a coved eaves course, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge. There are two storeys and an attic, and four narrow bays. The building contains a shop window, a shop front, sash windows, some of them horizontally-sliding, and two dormers.[72] II
Greenwood Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43056°N 0.53345°W / 54.43056; -0.53345 (Greenwood Cottage)
Early to mid 18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge. There are two storeys and two irregular bays. The doorway has a bracketed quasi-cornice, most of the windows are sashes, there is one small casement window and a wide roof dormer.[73] II
Hensingham
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43134°N 0.53296°W / 54.43134; -0.53296 (Hensingham)
Early to mid 18th century (probable) The house is in sandstone on a plinth, with coved eaves and a pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and three irregular bays. The doorway has a reeded frame, a blocked radial fanlight, and a dentilled pedimented hood on curved brackets, and to its right is a cast iron bootscraper. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor in wooden architraves, and there are two flat-headed dormers.[74] II
Hillcliffe and walls
54°25′55″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43200°N 0.53285°W / 54.43200; -0.53285 (Hillcliffe and walls)
Early to mid 18th century The house has incised rendered walls, and pantile roofs with stone copings. There are two storeys, two irregular bays, and a canted single-bay extension on the left. The doorway has an architrave with a keystone, and the windows are sashes with circular keystones. On the seaward side is a tall retaining wall enclosing a small garden, and the forecourt wall enclosing the front garden is about 2 feet (0.61 m) high, with flat coping.[75] II
Millbank Farmhouse and outbuilding
54°25′15″N 0°32′07″W / 54.42085°N 0.53520°W / 54.42085; -0.53520 (Millbank Farmhouse and outbuilding)
 
Early to mid 18th century (probable) The farmhouse and outbuilding are in sandstone, the larger low end has a pantile roof, and the upper end has a Welsh slate roof, both with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. The is one storey and attics, and both the main house and the downhouse have two bays. On the front are doorways and casement windows, and at the rear are doorways, a horizontally-sliding sash window and slit vents.[76] II
Red Brae
54°25′54″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43155°N 0.53305°W / 54.43155; -0.53305 (Red Brae)
Early to mid 18th century A house at a street junction with flat-iron plan, two storeys and one wide bay. It is in sandstone with a pantile roof, stone copings and a block kneeler on the left. The doorway has a bracketed cornice hood, on the corner are sash windows, there are small windows at the rear, and a roof dormer.[77] II
Rosslyn House and The Little Shop
54°25′49″N 0°32′53″W / 54.43039°N 0.54812°W / 54.43039; -0.54812 (Rosslyn House and The Little Shop)
Early to mid 18th century A house with a shop in sandstone, with a pantile roof, and a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays, and an outhouse to the right. To the left are paired doorways with pilasters and a shallow bracketed hood, and to the right is a square shop bay window. The upper floor contains three two-light chamfered mullioned windows, and above the left doorway is the relief of a ship.[78] II
Sharrowhead
54°25′49″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43040°N 0.53298°W / 54.43040; -0.53298 (Sharrowhead)
Early to mid 18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with copings and a kneeler. There are two storeys and a basement, and one bay. In the ground floor is a fixed window with a central opening section, the upper floor contains a sash window, and the entrance is at the rear.[79] II
Wesley Cottage
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43183°N 0.53300°W / 54.43183; -0.53300 (Wesley Cottage)
 
Early to mid 18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and prominent kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and two irregular bays. The doorway on the left has a bracketed wooden hood on a heavy lintel, and the windows are sashes. To the right is a shed with a window and a door, and a plaque depicting the head of John Wesley.[80] II
Merrymen
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43096°N 0.53262°W / 54.43096; -0.53262 (Hensingham)
 
1737 The house is in sandstone, with moulded eaves, and a pantile roof with shaped copings and curved kneelers. There are two storeys and a front of one wide bay. The doorway has a heavy dated and initialled lintel and a gabled bracketed hood. In the left return is a casement window. The right return is gabled, with incised rendering, two storeys, an attic and a basement, and two bays. It contains sash windows, and in the basement is a horizontally-sliding sash.[81] II
Middlewood Farmhouse
54°25′40″N 0°32′42″W / 54.42779°N 0.54511°W / 54.42779; -0.54511 (Middlewood Farmhouse)
1739 The farmhouse is in sandstone on a plinth, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and a basement, three bays, and a lower single-bay extension on the right. Steps lead up to an arched doorway with a moulded surround, above which is a datestone. There are various openings in the basement, and above are sash windows in architraves in moulded reveals.[82] II
Avery House and Osborne Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43063°N 0.53299°W / 54.43063; -0.53299 (Avery House and Osborne Cottage)
Mid 18th century (probable) A pair of cottages in incised render on stone, with a moulded eaves cornice, and a pantile roof with stone coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and each cottage has one wide bay. The left cottage has a doorway with a bracketed cornice hood, and the right cottage has a bracketed pedimented hood. The windows are a mix of sashes and casements, and there is an attic dormer.[83] II
Bay Cottage
54°25′52″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43105°N 0.53269°W / 54.43105; -0.53269 (Bay Cottage)
18th century (possible) The house is in incised render with a pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, one wide bay, and a narrow canted bay. The doorway has a bracketed gabled hood with bargeboards. The windows are sashes, there is a dormer, and in the narrow bay is a tiny bow window.[84] II
Beachholme
54°25′48″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43006°N 0.53222°W / 54.43006; -0.53222 (Beachholme)
 
18th century (possible) The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone copings and kneelers. The south front has three storeys and an attic, and three bays. In the ground floor is a doorway and casement windows, one transomed, and the middle floor has a full-length wooden balcony, and a central doorway flanked by square oriel windows with tile roofs. The top floor contains transomed windows, and the attic has two flat-roofed dormers. In the left return is a gabled porch.[85] II
Boundary stoneA
54°25′22″N 0°36′26″W / 54.42275°N 0.60736°W / 54.42275; -0.60736 (Boundary stone)
 
18th century The boundary stone on the south side of the B1416 road consists of a sandstone monolith. It is about 0.6 metres (2 ft 0 in) high with a rounded top, and the east side is inscribed "C XI C".[86] II
Bronte Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43069°N 0.53258°W / 54.43069; -0.53258 (Bronte Cottage)
Mid 18th century (probable) A small sandstone house with a pantile roof, two storeys and an attic, and two narrow bays. In the centre is a doorway, the left bay contains sash windows, the right bay casement windows, and in the attic is a four-light dormer.[87] II
Brudenell Cottage and Cramford
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43138°N 0.53304°W / 54.43138; -0.53304 (Brudenell Cottage and Cramford)
 
Mid 18th century A house divided into two, in sandstone, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with large curved kneelers. There are two storeys and two bays. The doorways are paired in the centre under flat hoods on long brackets. The windows are sashes, one with a moulded surround.[88] II
Friars Cottage
54°25′54″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43154°N 0.53282°W / 54.43154; -0.53282 (Friars Cottage)
Mid 18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone coping on the left. There are two storeys and an attic, and two wide bays. The central doorway has a gabled wooden hood on decorative brackets, the ground floor windows are sash windows, in the upper floor are four casements and there is a three-light dormer.[89] II
Walls south of Ladysmith Farmhouse
54°24′31″N 0°31′54″W / 54.40859°N 0.53169°W / 54.40859; -0.53169 (Walls south of Ladysmith Farmhouse)
18th century The walls consist of big blocks of roughly-squared sandstone with heavy flat slab coping. They run in a curve around the garden to the south of the farmhouse.[90] II
Georgian House and house to left
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43073°N 0.53237°W / 54.43073; -0.53237 (Georgian House and house to left)
Mid 18th century A pair of brick houses on a stone plinth with stone dressings, alternating quoins, a sill band, an eaves cornice, and a pantile roof. There are three storeys and four bays. The doorways are paired in the centre, and have pilasters, blocked fanlights, and a modillion cornice on brackets. To the right is a casement window, and the other windows are sashes with gauged-brick arches and keystones, those in the top floor horizontally-sliding.[91] II
Little John Cottage
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43201°N 0.53303°W / 54.43201; -0.53303 (Little John Cottage)
Mid 18th century The house is rendered and has a pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, two wide bays, and a narrow bay on the left. The doorway has a gabled wood hood, the windows are sashes, there is a small chamfered fire window, and there are two square-headed dormers.[92] II
Little John House
54°25′50″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43049°N 0.53277°W / 54.43049; -0.53277 (Little John House)
 
18th century The house is in sandstone on a plinth, and has a pantile roof with flat stone gable copings and rolled kneelers. There are three storeys and one wide bay. The gabled front faces the street, and the left return is canted. On the front, to the right, steps lead up to a recessed doorway, to its left is a sash window and above is a horizontally-sliding sash window., and there are similar windows on the left return.[93] II
Meadow Croft
54°25′53″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43129°N 0.53288°W / 54.43129; -0.53288 (Meadow Croft)
Mid 18th century (probable) The house is in stone, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with large kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and three bays. The doorway has a bracketed cornice, the windows are sashes, and there is a three-light dormer.[94] II
Men's Institute
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43058°N 0.53249°W / 54.43058; -0.53249 (Men's Institute)
 
18th century The building is in stone, and has a pantile roof with stone copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and a cellar, and three bays. The doorway has a fanlight, the windows are sashes with extended lintels and keystones, and there are two small cellar openings.[95] II
Oak Tree House and Oak Dene
54°25′53″N 0°32′49″W / 54.43151°N 0.54696°W / 54.43151; -0.54696 (Oak Tree House and Oak Dene)
Mid 18th century Two houses in sandstone, with a roof partly in pantile and partly in Welsh slate, with a stone ridge, copings, and a kneeler on the right. Oak Tree House on the left has two storeys and two narrow bays. It contains a doorway with a gabled hood on long shaped brackets, and the windows are sashes. Oak Dene has two storeys and two wide bays, The central doorway has a fanlight and an extended lintel with a keystone. The windows are tripartite sashes, those in the right bay with extended lintels and keystones.[96] II
Outhouse opposite Traycliffe
54°25′49″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43030°N 0.53281°W / 54.43030; -0.53281 (Outhouse opposite Traycliffe)
18th century The outhouse is in sandstone and has a pantile roof. There is one storey, a loft and a basement, and one bay. The gabled end faces the road and contains a doorway. In the right return is a casement window, a fixed light above, and two small basement windows. The left return contains a basement door.[97] II
Primrose Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43085°N 0.53270°W / 54.43085; -0.53270 (Primrose Cottage)
Mid 18th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and small kneelers. There are two storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a doorway on the left, and the upper floor contains a small modern window on the left, and a horizontally-sliding sash window on the right.[98] II
Ramsdale South Farmhouse, outbuildings and wall
54°25′06″N 0°34′26″W / 54.41828°N 0.57376°W / 54.41828; -0.57376 (Ramsdale South Farmhouse, outbuildings and wall)
18th century (possible) The outbuildings are the older part, with the farmhouse dating from the early 19th century. The buildings are in sandstone and have pantile roofs with a stone ridge and copings. The farmhouse has two storeys, three wide bays, and large curved kneelers, and it contains a central doorway and sash windows. To the left is a single-storey two-bay outhouse, and to the right is a barn with one storey, a loft and four bays. It has stepped eaves, block kneelers, and contains stable doors, a loft door, and slit vents. To the front is a wall with half-round coping, containing two pairs of monolith gate piers.[99] II
Resthaven
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43203°N 0.53311°W / 54.43203; -0.53311 (Resthaven)
18th century An outbuilding converted into a cottage, it is in sandstone on a plinth, and has a pantile roof with stone coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and two bays. On the right is a doorway, and to its right is a pivoted casement window. The upper floor contains a sash window and a fixed window, and in the roof are two flat-headed dormers.[100] II
St Stephen's Vicarage
54°26′02″N 0°32′17″W / 54.43380°N 0.53807°W / 54.43380; -0.53807 (St Stephen's Vicarage)
Mid 18th century A farmhouse, later a vicarage, it was extended in the 20th century. It is in sandstone, partly rendered, with a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys and an L-shaped plan, with a main range of three bays, and a north wing on the left. The middle bay of the main range projects and is gabled, and contains a doorway with a fanlight and a pedimented hood on brackets. This is flanked by canted bay windows, and in the upper floor are sash windows with lintels and triple keystones. The wing is lower with four bays, and contains a porch, sash windows and a stair Venetian window.[101] II
The Keyhole
54°25′55″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43181°N 0.53339°W / 54.43181; -0.53339 (The Keyhole)
18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone copings and footstones. There are two storeys and an attic, the gable end facing the road, and there is a single-bay lean-to on the left. Steps lead up to an entrance in the upper floor in the left return. On the front is a large square oriel window, and the attic contains a horizontally-sliding sash window. In the recessed left bay is a modern casement window.[102] II
The Old Drapery
54°25′55″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43184°N 0.53373°W / 54.43184; -0.53373 (The Old Drapery)
 
18th century A house and shop on a corner site, there is incised rendering on the front, and the right return is in sandstone on the ground floor and in red brick above. The roof is in pantile with a stone ridge and gable copings. There are two storeys, a basement and an attic, and one wide bay. In the ground floor is a doorway with a shop window to the left, both under a cornice, the upper floor contains a canted oriel window, and above is a small light. In the left return is a basement door, a shop windows in the ground floor and a sash window above.[103] II
Traycliffe
54°25′49″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43019°N 0.53271°W / 54.43019; -0.53271 (Traycliffe)
18th century The house is in sandstone with a pantile roof. There are two storeys and a basement, and a rear lean-to. The entrance is at the rear with a modern porch, and the windows are sashes.[104] II
Waverley Cottage
54°25′49″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43041°N 0.53345°W / 54.43041; -0.53345 (Waverley Cottage)
18th century The house has incised rendered walls, it is on a plinth, and has coved eaves, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, and copings and a kneeler on the right. There are two storeys and an attic, and two irregular bays. The doorway has a small porch, the windows are sashes, and there is a roof dormer.[105] II
Willow Cottage (rear)
54°25′51″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43075°N 0.53363°W / 54.43075; -0.53363 (Willow Cottage (rear))
Mid 18th century The house is in sandstone, the west front is rendered, and it has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and block kneelers. There are two storeys, an attic and a basement, and three irregular bays. In the centre is a doorway with a bracketed cornice hood, to the right is a sash window, and the other windows are casements; all the openings have long raised keystones.[106] II
The Bay Tree
54°26′04″N 0°32′05″W / 54.43458°N 0.53477°W / 54.43458; -0.53477 (The Bay Tree)
 
1764 A house, later used for other purposes, in stone, with sill bands, a modillion eaves cornice, a parapet, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge and broad gable copings. There are two storeys and a basement, and five bays, the middle bay wider. Three steps lead up to a central doorway with an architrave, a fanlight, a narrow frieze and a cornice. In the basement are low three-pane windows, and in the floors above are sash windows.[3][107] II
Eastwood
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43144°N 0.53317°W / 54.43144; -0.53317 (Eastwood)
Mid to late 18th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with coping and a kneeler on the right. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway to the right has a small gabled hood, the windows are sashes, and there is a dormer.[108] II
Ledson House
54°25′54″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43159°N 0.53291°W / 54.43159; -0.53291 (Ledson House)
Mid to late 18th century The house is in sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone coping and a small kneeler. There are two storeys and two irregular bays. The doorway has a gabled wood hood on shaped brackets, there is one fixed light, the other windows are sashes, and there are two skylights.[109] II
Mariners' Cottage and Olsen Cottage
54°25′49″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43038°N 0.53324°W / 54.43038; -0.53324 (Mariners' Cottage and Olsen Cottage)
Mid to late 18th century A pair of houses in sandstone with pantile roofs. Each house has two storeys and an attic, and one wide bay. The doorways are paired in the centre, and each has a keystone and a bracketed flat hood. Most of the windows are sashes in architraves, there is one fixed-light window, the ground floor windows have extended lintels and keystones, and there are two dormers.[110] II
Millbrook
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43091°N 0.53262°W / 54.43091; -0.53262 (Millbrook)
Mid to late 18th century The house, which may have an earlier core, is in sandstone, with two storeys, a basement, and two irregular bays. The doorway is on the left, to its right is a small sash window with a basement opening below. The upper floor contains two sash windows, one horizontally-sliding.[111] II
Plane Tree Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43043°N 0.53353°W / 54.43043; -0.53353 (Plane Tree Cottage)
Mid to late 18th century The cottage is in sandstone, the gable end with incised render, and it has a pantile roof with a stone ridge and copings. There are two storeys and one bay. In the gable end is a doorway and a tripartite sash window with an extended lintel. Above is a 24-pane window, and a raking roof dormer.[112] II
Stoupe Bank Farmhouse and outbuildings
54°25′00″N 0°31′32″W / 54.41677°N 0.52547°W / 54.41677; -0.52547 (Stoupe Bank Farmhouse and outbuildings)
 
Mid to late 18th century The buildings are in sandstone, with pantile roofs, stone ridges, copings and curved kneelers. The main house has two storeys and an attic, and two wide bays. The downhouse to the left has one storey and one bay, the outhouse further to the left has one storey and a loft and one bay, to the right is an outbuilding with one storey and a loft and three bays, and at the rear of the house is a dairy extension. In the centre of the main house is a doorway with an alternate block surround and a heavy downcurved lintel. The windows are sashes and there is a raking dormer. The openings elsewhere include stable doors and casement windows.[113] II
2 The Bolts
54°25′54″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43173°N 0.53382°W / 54.43173; -0.53382 (2 The Bolts)
Late 18th century A house in sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone copings and curved kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway has a blocked radial fanlight, a cornice head, and a wooden open pediment on brackets. The windows are sashes and there is a square dormer.[114] II
Outhouse opposite 2 The Bolts and wall
54°25′54″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43164°N 0.53387°W / 54.43164; -0.53387 (Outhouse opposite 2 The Bolts and wall)
Late 18th century (probable) A wash kitchen in sandstone, with a pantile roof, a stone ridge, copings and block kneelers. There is one storey and one bay. There is a doorway on the street front, on the river front is a doorway with bracketed gabled hood, and the windows are sashes. The forecourt wall is in sandstone with chamfered coping, it is ramped in places, and it contains a small gateway.[115] II
8 Sunnyside
54°25′49″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43028°N 0.53345°W / 54.43028; -0.53345 (8 Sunnyside)
Late 18th century (probable) The house is rendered, and has a pantile roof with stone gable coping and a kneeler on the right. There are two storeys, two bays, a single-storey entrance bay on the right, and a lean-to on the left. There are two doorways, each with a decorative hood, a casement window in the ground floor, and the upper floor contains a sash window and a later pivoted window.[116] II
Arndale Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43070°N 0.53297°W / 54.43070; -0.53297 (Arndale Cottage)
Late 18th century (probable) The cottage is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a large stone kneeler. There are two low storeys and two narrow bays. It contains a stable-like door, with a casement window to the left, and in the upper floor are sash windows.[117] II
Beadle Cottage and Downhill Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43058°N 0.53283°W / 54.43058; -0.53283 (Beadle Cottage and Downhill Cottage)
Late 18th century A pair of houses in sandstone on a stepped plinth with a pantile roof. There are two storeys and three bays. The left house has a stable-type door, and the right house has a recessed doorway. The windows are a mix, and include fixed windows, a casement window, and sashes, some horizontally-sliding.[118] II
Former Bligh's Restaurant
54°25′49″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43041°N 0.53274°W / 54.43041; -0.53274 (Former Bligh's Restaurant)
 
Late 18th century The building, which has been used for various purposes, is pebbledashed on the front facing the road, and rendered elsewhere, and has a tile roof. There are three storeys and a recessed attic, and one bay. In the centre is a doorway, above which is a fascia board, and the windows are sashes.[119] II
Bramblewick
54°25′54″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43174°N 0.53390°W / 54.43174; -0.53390 (Bramblewick)
Late 18th century (probable) The house is in sandstone with a pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The doorway is in a round-headed porch with a shallow bracketed hood, the windows are sashes, and there are two raking dormers with a deep bracketed soffit.[120] II
Bransby Cottage
54°25′54″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43164°N 0.53400°W / 54.43164; -0.53400 (Bransby Cottage)
Late 18th century A house in sandstone with some render and brick in the basement, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. The river front has two storeys and a basement, and two bays, and on the left is an outhouse. The basement windows are tripartite, and above are sash windows. Steps alongside the right return lead to a doorway.[121] II
Cartwhinzean
54°25′51″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43070°N 0.53339°W / 54.43070; -0.53339 (Cartwhinzean)
Late 18th century (probable) The house is rendered, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and three narrow bays. The doorway has a bracketed hood, the windows are sashes, and there is a large dormer.[122] II
Clarkia
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43144°N 0.53304°W / 54.43144; -0.53304 (Clarkia)
Late 18th century (possible) A cottage with incised render, and a pantile roof with stone coping and a block kneeler. There is one storey and two bays. It contains two doorways, a fixed light and a casement window.[123] II
Glenhowen
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43091°N 0.53256°W / 54.43091; -0.53256 (Glenhowen)
Late 18th century (or earlier) The house has incised rendered walls, a pantile roof, two storeys and one bay. To the right is a passage entry, and to the left is a sash window in the ground floor, and a horizontally-sliding sash in the upper floor.[124] II
Hawsker Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43151°N 0.53301°W / 54.43151; -0.53301 (Hawsker Cottage)
Late 18th century (probable) A house in sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone gable copings and block kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway has a shallow flat bracketed hood, most of the windows are sashes, there is a 24-light fixed-light window, and a dormer with a horizontally-sliding sash.[125] II
Hilda Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43069°N 0.53299°W / 54.43069; -0.53299 (Hilda Cottage)
Late 18th century The house is in sandstone with an incised rendered front, sill bands, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys, two irregular bays, and a single-storey single-bay extension on the left. The doorway has a fanlight, and the windows are sashes. In the extension is a door with a sidelight, and a parapet.[126] II
Hillside
54°25′51″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43092°N 0.53385°W / 54.43092; -0.53385 (Hillside)
 
Late 18th century The house is in sandstone, with a Welsh slate roof and broad stone gable copings on block kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and two bays. The doorway has a lintel with a keystone, the windows are sashes with lintels and keystones, and there are two flat-headed dormers.[127] II
Homestead
54°25′51″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43083°N 0.53365°W / 54.43083; -0.53365 (Homestead)
Late 18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone gable coping, and a prominent curved kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway has a blocked segmental radial fanlight, and a gabled wooden hood on shaped brackets, the windows are sashes, and here is a central roof dormer.[128] II
Hooks House
54°26′20″N 0°32′33″W / 54.43898°N 0.54259°W / 54.43898; -0.54259 (Hooks House)
Late 18th century The house, which was extended in the 19th century, is in sandstone, with a pantile roof and stone gable copings on curved kneelers. There are two storeys and four bays. On the front are doorways and sash windows, some with extended lintels and keystones, and at the rear are varied windows.[129] II
Lantern Cottage
54°25′52″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43101°N 0.53318°W / 54.43101; -0.53318 (Lantern Cottage)
 
Late 18th century (probable) The cottage is in sandstone, with a stepped eaves course, and a pantile roof with stone copings. There are two storeys and two bays. Steps lead up to a doorway on the left, and the windows are casements.[130] II
Laurel Cottage
54°25′55″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43195°N 0.53371°W / 54.43195; -0.53371 (Laurel Cottage)
 
Late 18th century The house is in sandstone, with a floor band, a coved eaves course, and a pantile roof with broad stone coping on a shaped kneeler. There are two storeys and an attic, and one wide bay. The doorway on the right has a cornice hood on brackets, the windows are sashes, and in the roof is a square-headed dormer with a horizontally-sliding sash.[131] II
Rose Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°32′51″W / 54.43052°N 0.54750°W / 54.43052; -0.54750 (Rose Cottage)
 
Late 18th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, with coved eaves, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge, gable coping and curved kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre is a doorway with a four-light fanlight in a trellis porch with a segmental head. Above the doorway is a copper sundial, and the outer bays contain sash windows.[132] II
Sea View Cottage
54°25′48″N 0°32′50″W / 54.43000°N 0.54734°W / 54.43000; -0.54734 (Sea View Cottage)
 
Late 18th century The house is in sandstone on a plinth, with a pantile roof, and a stone ridge, gable coping and a prominent kneeler on the right. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays, and a and a small extension to the right. Steps lead up to a central doorway, above which is a fixed light. The other windows are sashes, and there are two flat-headed dormers.[133] II
Selborne House
54°25′50″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43051°N 0.53298°W / 54.43051; -0.53298 (Selborne House)
Late 18th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone copings and prominent curved kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre is a doorway with a small fixed light to the left and a sash window to the right. In the middle floor are modern windows, and the top floor contains sash windows.[134] II
Sunnyside
54°25′50″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43047°N 0.53306°W / 54.43047; -0.53306 (Sunnyside)
Late 18th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone copings and block kneelers. There are two storeys and two irregular bays. The doorway on the left has a gabled hood on full-length brackets. The windows are fixed lights with transom openings.[135] II
The Bolts House and walls
54°25′54″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43167°N 0.53375°W / 54.43167; -0.53375 (The Bolts House and walls)
Late 18th century The house is in sandstone and has a pantile roof with stone copings and prominent moulded kneelers. There are two storeys and a basement, and two bays. In the right bay is the passage to The Bolts. In the basement is a doorway and a fixed light, and the floors above contain sash windows. Under the passage arch is a doorway and a fixed light. The forecourt is enclosed by low walls with chamfered coping.[136] II
The Haven and The Hoe
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43067°N 0.53237°W / 54.43067; -0.53237 (The Haven and The Hoe)
Late 18th century (probable) A pair of sandstone houses with a pantile roof, stone copings and block kneelers. There are three storeys, and each house has one bay. In the centre are paired doorways in plain surrounds, and the windows are sashes.[137] II
The Nook
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43068°N 0.53250°W / 54.43068; -0.53250 (The Nook)
Late 18th century (probable) The house has incised rendered walls and a pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and one bay. On the right is a through passage containing a doorway. The windows are sashes, and there is a wide dormer.[138] II
Viewley Cottage and Willow Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43080°N 0.53357°W / 54.43080; -0.53357 (Viewley Cottage and Willow Cottage)
Late 18th century A house later divided into two houses, in sandstone, the left house with incised rendering, and a pantile roof with stone coping and a prominent kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and attics, and each house has one wide bay. The doorways are in the centre, the left with a small porch, and the right with a bracketed hood. There is one casement window, the other windows are sashes, and there are two roof dormers.[139] II
Outbuilding opposite Windy Ridge
54°25′56″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43209°N 0.53287°W / 54.43209; -0.53287 (Outbuilding opposite Windy Ridge)
Late 18th century The wash kitchen and outhouse are in sandstone with a concrete tile roof. There is one storey and two bays. The building contains paired central doors flanked by small sash windows.[140] II
Former Methodist Chapel
54°25′52″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43111°N 0.53263°W / 54.43111; -0.53263 (Former Methodist Chapel)
1779 The chapel, which has been converted for other uses, is in sandstone on a plinth, with quoins, a stepped eaves band, and a hipped pantile roof with stone ridges and coping. The street front has one tall storey and two wide bays, and contains a doorway and fixed lights with wedge lintels and keystones. Along the left return are steps, there are two storeys and five bays, and it contains sash windows and a small flat-roofed porch.[3][141] II
Bridge over Ramsdale Beck
54°25′15″N 0°32′57″W / 54.42079°N 0.54907°W / 54.42079; -0.54907 (Bridge over Ramsdale Beck)
c. 1800 The bridge, which carries a road over the stream, is in sandstone, and consists of a single round arch. It has raised voussoirs and a band, and it is framed by stepped abutments. The parapets recede at the ends to form pedestrian refuges.[142] II
Demesne Farmhouse, farmbuildings and walls
54°24′58″N 0°33′08″W / 54.41604°N 0.55222°W / 54.41604; -0.55222 (Demesne Farmhouse, farmbuildings and walls)
 
c. 1800 All the buildings are in sandstone, and most roofs are in Welsh slate with coped gables and kneelers. The farmhouse has two storeys and an attic, and three bays, and flanking recessed single-storey wings linking with the farm buildings. It contains a central doorway with a porch and a fanlight and sash windows. The farm buildings are in one and two storeys, and are arranged around a rectangular courtyard. The garden to the south of the farmhouse is enclosed by a sandstone wall with stone coping, and it contains a gateway with an iron gate.[28][143] II
Glencoe
54°25′54″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43171°N 0.53295°W / 54.43171; -0.53295 (Glencoe)
Late 18th or early 19th century A house in sandstone, with a pantile roof, a stone ridge, roll-moulded gable copings, and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and a three-bay width The doorway has an open pediment, to its left is a bootscraper hole, and above it is a sash window. In the left return are two sash windows, and the right return is blank.[144] II
Outbuilding range east of Hooks House
54°26′21″N 0°32′32″W / 54.43907°N 0.54216°W / 54.43907; -0.54216 (Outbuilding range east of Hooks House)
18th or early 19th century The range consists of barns and byres in sandstone with pantile roofs. Nearer the house there is one storey, and further away there is one storey and lofts. The building contains doorways, one with a heavy chamfered lintel, loading doors, slit vents, and a raking dormer in red brick.[145] II
Peters House and Summerest
54°25′51″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43074°N 0.53348°W / 54.43074; -0.53348 (Peters House and Summerest)
 
Late 18th or early 19th century A pair of houses with incised rendering, and a pantile roof with a tile ridge, and stone coping and a kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and each house has two bays. Both houses have a gabled porch, Summerest, to the right of the door has a 15-pane fixed light, Peters House has a tripartite window to the left of the door, in the upper floors are sash windows, and each house has a dormer.[146] II
The Dolphin Hotel
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43074°N 0.53250°W / 54.43074; -0.53250 (The Dolphin Hotel)
 
Late 18th or early 19th century The public house is in painted brick, and has a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys and three irregular bays. The doorway on the left has a fanlight, and the windows are sashes, most under flat brick arches.[147] II
Windy Ridge
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43208°N 0.53296°W / 54.43208; -0.53296 (Windy Ridge)
Late 18th or early 19th century The house is in sandstone, partly rendered, with a moulded eaves course, and a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and a basement, one wide bay, and a canted bay on the right with an attic. Steps lead up to the doorway in the left bay that has a small bracketed hood, and the windows are sashes.[148] II
Fyling Hall
54°25′32″N 0°33′27″W / 54.42549°N 0.55763°W / 54.42549; -0.55763 (Fyling Hall)
 
1819 A large house, later a school, in sandstone with a purple slate roof. It consists of a main block with three storeys and four bays, and flanking wings. In the centre is a three-bay porch with four pilasters, containing a door with sidelights, all with fanlights, and a pediment-shaped top with corner urns. Most of the windows on the front are sashes, there is a central round-headed stair window with impost blocks and a keystone, and at the top is a cornice and a parapet. At the rear are three storeys and a basement, and three bays. Steps lead to a central porch with a door, flanked by two-storey canted bay windows. There is a two-bay billiard-room extension, and a terrace with a balustrade.[28][149] II
Old St Stephen's Church
54°26′25″N 0°32′59″W / 54.44017°N 0.54965°W / 54.44017; -0.54965 (Old St Stephen's Church)
 
1821 The church, now redundant, is in sandstone with a purple slate roof. It consists of a nave, a south porch, a north vestry and a small sanctuary. On the west gable is a bell-cupola. The porch has a pediment, a segmental-arched entrance with rusticated voussoirs. Above it is a sundial, and inside are wooden benches.[3][150] I
3 Sunny Place
54°25′54″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43166°N 0.53336°W / 54.43166; -0.53336 (3 Sunny Place)
Early 19th century A sandstone house in a terrace that has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, coping and curved kneelers. There are two storeys, a basement and an attic. A flight of seven steps with a wrought iron handrail leads to a doorway with a radial fanlight and a segmental-headed porch. The windows are sashes, and in the attic are dormers with segmental pediments.[151] II
Wall south of 3 Sunny Place
54°25′54″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43162°N 0.53342°W / 54.43162; -0.53342 (Wall south of 3 Sunny Place)
Early 19th century The wall on the right side of the garden to the front of the house is in sandstone. It is high on the right, and slopes down to a pair of square gate piers with stepped cornices and ball finials.[152] II
8 and 9 Sunny Place
54°25′54″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43172°N 0.53329°W / 54.43172; -0.53329 (8 and 9 Sunny Place)
Early 19th century (probable) A pair of houses in incised render with a pantile roof. There are two storeys and attics, and each house has one wide bay. On the front are two doorways and sash windows, and each house has a dormer.[153] II
1 Albion Street
54°25′49″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43025°N 0.53284°W / 54.43025; -0.53284 (1 Albion Street)
 
Early 19th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and one bay. Steps lead up to a doorway with a casement window to the right and a garage door below. In the attic is a three-light dormer, and in the right return is a sash window.[154] II
Auburn Cottage and Beeston Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43150°N 0.53277°W / 54.43150; -0.53277 (Auburn Cottage and Beeston Cottage)
Early 19th century (probable) A pair of houses in sandstone with a pantile roof. Each house has two storeys and an attic, and one wide bay. The doorways are paired in the centre, the windows are sashes, and each house has a later large dormer.[155] II
Bay Bank House and The Cellar
54°25′56″N 0°32′03″W / 54.43220°N 0.53420°W / 54.43220; -0.53420 (Bay Bank House and The Cellar)
 
Early 19th century A house and a shop in sandstone with a hipped Welsh slate roof. The front facing the road has three storeys and one wide bay. In the ground floor is a stable door and two shop windows, and the upper floors contain sash windows. The left return is the main front, it is approached by steps, and has two storeys and a basement, three bays, and a single-bay extension on the left. The central doorway has a gabled hood on brackets, and the windows are sashes.[156] II
Beach House
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43046°N 0.53239°W / 54.43046; -0.53239 (Beach House)
 
Early 19th century (probable) A house in sandstone with a hipped pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The central doorway has a fanlight and a plain surround, the windows are sashes, and there is a raking dormer. The left return has a basement, a raking dormer, coping on the left and a kneeler.[157] II
Beck Cottage and garage
54°25′53″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43125°N 0.53320°W / 54.43125; -0.53320 (Beck Cottage and garage)
 
Early 19th century The house and garage to the left are in sandstone, and have a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and each part has two bays. In the house is a doorway, the garage contains garage doors under a lintel with a carved mask, and the windows are a mix of casements and sashes. At the rear are three storeys and a basement, and there is a small lean-to on the south.[158] II
Bedlington
54°25′54″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43163°N 0.53330°W / 54.43163; -0.53330 (Bedlington)
 
Early 19th century A pair of houses in sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone copings and prominent curved kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and each house has one bay. Three steps lead up to the central paired doorways, the windows are sashes, and in the attic are flat-headed dormers with horizontally-sliding sashes.[159] II
Blacksmiths Cottage
54°25′48″N 0°32′50″W / 54.42994°N 0.54729°W / 54.42994; -0.54729 (Blacksmiths Cottage)
 
Early 19th century The house and forge are in sandstone, and have pantile roofs with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. The house has three storeys and two bays, and the forge to the left has one storey and two bays. The house has a doorway with a bracketed hood, and sash windows. In the forge is a door, a small horizontally-sliding sash window, and two loft openings.[160] II
Brereton
54°25′56″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43212°N 0.53326°W / 54.43212; -0.53326 (Brereton)
Early 19th century The house is in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof. On the front are two storeys, an attic and a basement, one bay and a narrow staircase bay. On the front is a doorway, above which is a sash window, a fixed attic window, and two fixed staircase windows.[161] II
Brock Hall and outbuilding
54°24′33″N 0°34′07″W / 54.40915°N 0.56868°W / 54.40915; -0.56868 (Brock Hall and outbuilding)
 
Early 19th century The farmhouse and outbuilding are in sandstone, and have a Welsh slate roof with a stone ridge, coping and curved kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays, a single-storey extension to the right, and a two-bay outbuilding on the left. The house has a central doorway and sash windows, and in the outbuilding are doorways, and at the rear is a segmental-arched cart entrance.[162] II
Daisy Cottage
54°25′54″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43176°N 0.53282°W / 54.43176; -0.53282 (Daisy Cottage)
Early 19th century Two houses combined into one, with incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof with stone copings and small curved kneelers. There are two storeys and two bays, the left bay slightly canted back. In the centre are paired doorways under a bracketed gabled hood, and the windows are sashes.[163] II
Cliff House
54°25′54″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43169°N 0.53272°W / 54.43169; -0.53272 (Cliff House)
Early 19th century (probable) The house, which may have an earlier core, has incised rendering, it is on a plinth, and has a pantile roof with stone coping. There are three storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway is in the centre, in the lower two floors are sash windows, the top floor contains a casement window, and in the attic is a blank window.[164] II
Ewden
54°25′52″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43102°N 0.53319°W / 54.43102; -0.53319 (Ewden)
Early 19th century (possible) The house is in re-used stone, partly rendered, and has a pantile roof with some Welsh slate, a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, two bays, and a single-bay extension to the right. The doorway has a bracketed cornice hood, to its right is a former shop window with fluted pilasters and a bracketed cornice hood. In the upper floor are 20th-century windows, and the attic contains a casement window.[165] II
Fieldside
54°25′49″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43037°N 0.53343°W / 54.43037; -0.53343 (Fieldside)
Early 19th century The cottage has a sandstone ground floor, the upper part is in brick, the gable end facing the road is rendered, and it has a pantile roof with wide stone copings and block kneelers. There is one storey and an attic, and two bays. To the left of the doorway is a small sash window, to the right is a two-light casement, and above is a half-dormer with a sash.[166] II
Friends House and September Cottage
54°25′54″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43170°N 0.53347°W / 54.43170; -0.53347 (Friends House and September Cottage)
 
Early 19th century A pair of houses with basement flats, in sandstone with a pantile roof, curved kneelers, and stone gable copings. There are three storeys and basements, each house has one bay, and to the left is an extension with one storey and a basement. Steps lead up to a terrace in front of the doorways, which are paired in the centre of the houses, and have bracketed flat hoods, The windows are sashes, and there are small basement windows.[167] II
Wall and gate piers, Fyling Hall
54°25′27″N 0°33′26″W / 54.42406°N 0.55733°W / 54.42406; -0.55733 (Wall and gate piers, Fyling Hall)
Early 19th century The wall and gate piers to the south of the house are in sandstone. The walls are about 7 feet (2.1 m) high with flat coping. The gate piers are square and taller, and each has a cornice, and a ball finial on a pedestal.[168] II
Low Hall Farmhouse and wall
54°25′23″N 0°33′01″W / 54.42296°N 0.55024°W / 54.42296; -0.55024 (Low Hall Farmhouse and wall)
 
Early 19th century The farmhouse is in sandstone, with a sill band, an eaves cornice, and a hipped purple slate roof with stone ridges. The main block has two storeys and an attic, and three bays, the middle bay projecting under a pediment containing an oculus with keystones. Steps lead up to a central doorway with pilasters, a patterned fanlight, and a cornice on large console brackets, and the windows are sashes. The main block is flanked by single-storey wings, and at the rear is a doorway with a fanlight and casement windows. The wall enclosing the area at the rear has four courses and rounded coping.[28][169] II
Farmbuildings northeast of Low Hall Farmhouse
54°25′23″N 0°33′00″W / 54.42306°N 0.54989°W / 54.42306; -0.54989 (Farmbuildings northeast of Low Hall Farmhouse)
Early 19th century The farm buildings are in sandstone with purple slate roofs. They have one storey and loft, and are ranged around a courtyard. The openings include segmental arches, some with keystones, and stable doors and windows with plain lintels.[170] II
Garden walls, Low Hall Farmhouse
54°25′22″N 0°33′01″W / 54.42284°N 0.55038°W / 54.42284; -0.55038 (Garden walls, Low Hall Farmhouse)
Early 19th century The walls are in sandstone, and consist of four courses of large stones with semicircular coping. They flank the driveway, and also enclose a quadrant-shaped space.[171] II
Hollington
54°25′55″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43197°N 0.53320°W / 54.43197; -0.53320 (Hollington)
Early 19th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and one wide bay. On the front is a modern doorway, sash windows and a small square-headed dormer.[172] II
Inthorpe and wall
54°25′55″N 0°32′49″W / 54.43184°N 0.54698°W / 54.43184; -0.54698 (Inthorpe and wall)
Early 19th century The house is in sandstone, with rusticated quoins, and a purple slate roof with a stone ridge, copings and prominent shaped kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays. The central doorway has a three-pane fanlight, and the windows are sashes. Short side walls run forward from the house, the front wall is ramped down near the outer ends, and they have chamfered copings. In the centre is a pair of monolith piers with cornices and a gate in wood and iron.[173] II
Joyce Cottage
54°25′49″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43036°N 0.53327°W / 54.43036; -0.53327 (Joyce Cottage)
Early 19th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, the ground floor partly rendered, with a pantile roof, and stone gable copings on curved kneelers. There are two storeys and two irregular bays. The doorway on the right has a gabled hood on decorative brackets, there is one casement window, and the other windows are sashes in architraves.[174] II
Langwood
54°25′50″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43054°N 0.53332°W / 54.43054; -0.53332 (Langwood)
Early 19th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and one wide bay. The doorway on the right has a bracketed quasi-cornice, the windows are sashes, and there is a roof dormer. On the left is a small single-storey extension with a doorway and a fixed window.[175] II
Leafs Shop Muir Lea
54°25′54″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43172°N 0.53372°W / 54.43172; -0.53372 (Leafs Shop Muir Lea)
 
Early 19th century A house and a shop in sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone copings and kneelers. There are four storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with flanking windows, and the upper floors contain sash windows. To the left is an archway leading to The Bolts, containing a house doorway in a small porch.[176] II
Roseworth
54°25′55″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43189°N 0.53320°W / 54.43189; -0.53320 (Roseworth)
Early 19th century The house is in sandstone, with chamfered quoins on the right, and a pantile roof with moulded stone gabled copings. There are three storeys on the front, and one wide bay. In the ground floor is a doorway with pilasters and a cornice on tall brackets, above which are sash windows. On the right return are steps, and at the rear are four storeys.[177] II
Rothwell Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43059°N 0.53320°W / 54.43059; -0.53320 (Rothwell Cottage)
Early 19th century The house, which possibly contains earlier material, is in sandstone with a pantile roof. There are two storeys, the gable end faces the street, and there is one wide bay. The house has one inserted casement window, and the other windows are sashes.[178] II
Sea View and High Sea View
54°25′56″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43217°N 0.53325°W / 54.43217; -0.53325 (Sea View and High Sea View)
 
Early 19th century A house divided into two, it has incised rendered walls and a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys, a basement and attics, and two wide bays. Steps with a handrail and railings lead up to a doorway, and there is a separate basement entrance. There is one pivoted casement window, the other windows are sashes, and there are two dormers.[179] II
Seacroft
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43188°N 0.53292°W / 54.43188; -0.53292 (Seacroft)
Early 19th century The house is in sandstone with a pantile roof, two storeys and two bays. The central doorway has reeded pilasters, a frieze, and a bracketed open pediment containing a beaded panel. The windows are sashes.[180] II
Storm Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43144°N 0.53268°W / 54.43144; -0.53268 (Storm Cottage)
Early 19th century The house has incised rendered walls and a pantile roof. There are two storeys and two bays. On the right is a door with a fanlight, and to its left are two sash windows. The upper roof contains two square oriel windows.[181] II
The Bay Hotel
54°25′49″N 0°31′55″W / 54.43039°N 0.53205°W / 54.43039; -0.53205 (The Bay Hotel)
 
Early 19th century The hotel, which was extended later in the 19th century, is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, copings and kneelers. The original part has two storeys and a tall basement, and a T-shaped plan with a projecting central bay. A wide flight of steps leads to the entrance, with a shop in the angle and a store under the steps, and the windows are sashes. The extension to the right is rendered, with floor bands, and the roof is hipped on the right. There are three storeys and two bays. On the left is a doorway and to the right a public house window. The middle floor contains two canted oriel windows, and in the top floor are sashes.[182] II
The Cottage and outbuildings
54°25′26″N 0°33′27″W / 54.42383°N 0.55756°W / 54.42383; -0.55756 (The Cottage and outbuildings)
Early 19th century Two houses, later combined, in sandstone. The house has a deep eaves soffit, and a purple slate roof with a stone ridge, ridged gable copings and square kneelers on big brackets. There are two storeys and five bays. On the front are two doorways in architraves with flattened ogee heads. Above the doorway are single-light windows, the other windows are chamfered and mullioned, and all have architraves. To the right is a single-storey outbuilding with a pantile roof, a doorway and a mullioned window.[183] II
The Little House
54°25′52″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43098°N 0.53290°W / 54.43098; -0.53290 (The Little House)
 
Early 19th century The house is in sandstone with a pantile roof, and has two low storeys and one narrow bay. The doorway has a bracketed gabled hood, to its left is a sash window, and the upper floor contains a 24-pane fixed light with a sliding bottom centre section.[184] II
The Sweet Shop
54°25′49″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43036°N 0.53266°W / 54.43036; -0.53266 (The Sweet Shop)
Early 19th century (probable) A house and a shop with incised rendered walls and a pantile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and one bay, with the gable end facing the street. In the ground floor is a shopfront, with a central door and flanking windows under a cornice on shaped brackets. The upper floor contains a four-light 20th-century window, and in the attic is a horizontally-sliding sash window. In the left return are scattered windows.[185] II
Wavecrest
54°25′48″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43013°N 0.53268°W / 54.43013; -0.53268 (Wavecrest)
Early 19th century (probable) The house is in sandstone, and has stepped eaves and a parapet. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The doorway has a cornice, and the windows are sashes in architraves, other than one that has been converted into a casement.[186] II
1–9 Bloomswell
54°25′56″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43211°N 0.53358°W / 54.43211; -0.53358 (1–9 Bloomswell)
 
Early to mid 19th century A terrace of nine rendered houses with pantile roofs. Each house has three storeys and one bay. Some doorways have reeded pilasters, a radial fanlight, and a bracketed open pediment, and some have been altered. Most windows are sashes, those in the top floor horizontally-sliding, some have been altered, and there is one modern dormer.[187] II
2–11 Esplanade
54°25′56″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43223°N 0.53360°W / 54.43223; -0.53360 (2–11 Esplanade)
 
Early to mid 19th century A terrace of ten houses in pinkish brick, some rendered, with roofs of blue and purple Welsh slate. Each house has three storeys, one wide bay, and a doorway. Most of the windows are sashes, some have been altered, and all the openings have wedge lintels. There is an added bay window, a porch and various rear extensions.[188] II
Ballina and Greystones
54°25′55″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43182°N 0.53325°W / 54.43182; -0.53325 (Ballina and Greystones)
Early to mid 19th century A pair of houses in sandstone on a plinth with a pantile roof. There are two storeys, attics and basements, and two wide bays. Five steps lead up to paired doorways with a bracketed double hood. In the basement are small windows, elsewhere there are sashes and a paired dormer.[189] II
Brigholme
54°25′52″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43117°N 0.53326°W / 54.43117; -0.53326 (Brigholme)
Early to mid 19th century A house and shop in sandstone, with a pantile roof, a stone ridge, coping on the right, and a curved kneeler. In the ground floor is a garage door and a shop window to the right, and the upper floors contain sash windows. The doorway at the rear has pilasters and a bracketed hood, and on the right return is a flight of stone steps.[190] II
Burley Cottage
54°25′52″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43121°N 0.53332°W / 54.43121; -0.53332 (Burley Cottage)
 
Early to mid 19th century The house is in sandstone, with a pantile roof, a stone ridge, coping on the right, and a curved kneeler. There are three storeys and one wide bay. In the ground floor is a doorway and a small sash window to the right. The middle floor contains a canted oriel window, and there is a sash window in the top floor. At the rear is a doorway with pilasters and a bracketed hood.[191] II
Burn Close
54°25′52″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43111°N 0.53318°W / 54.43111; -0.53318 (Burn Close)
 
Early to mid 19th century A sandstone house, the attic rendered, with a pantile roof, and a stone ridge, coping and a kneeler on the left. There are three storeys and an attic, and one bay. In the ground floor is a garage door, above are sash windows, and in the attic is a casement window and a skylight. The doorway at the rear has pilasters and a bracketed hood.[192] II
Darnholm and Oakfield
54°25′55″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43186°N 0.53312°W / 54.43186; -0.53312 (Darnholm and Oakfield)
Early to mid 19th century Two houses in sandstone, with a Welsh slate roof, stone copings and kneelers. There are two storeys, and each house has one wide bay. The doorways are paired in the centre, and each has a gabled hood. The windows are sashes, and there is a flat-headed dormer.[193] II
Eden House
54°25′51″N 0°32′02″W / 54.43087°N 0.53375°W / 54.43087; -0.53375 (Eden House)
 
Early to mid 19th century The house, which may have an earlier origin, is in sandstone, with a pantile roof, a tile ridge, and stone gable coping and a curved kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The doorway has raised jambs, a fanlight, and a bracketed hood. The windows are sashes with moulded sills, and there are two raking dormers.[194] II
Elm House
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43151°N 0.53314°W / 54.43151; -0.53314 (Elm House)
Early to mid 19th century The house has incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof with stone coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and two bays, and a small extension on the left. On the front is a doorway, most of the windows are sashes, there is a fixed light in the extension, and a skylight.[195] II
Heath Cottage and the Good Earth Cafe
54°25′51″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43077°N 0.53298°W / 54.43077; -0.53298 (Heath Cottage and the Good Earth Cafe)
 
Early to mid 19th century A house and a shop in sandstone, with a pantile roof and a stone curved kneeler on the right. There are three storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with a bracketed cornice, flanked by small windows, and to the left is a doorway. The middle floor contains sash windows, and in the top floor are horizontally-sliding sashes.[196] II
Oakridge Cottage
54°25′53″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43152°N 0.53317°W / 54.43152; -0.53317 (Oakridge Cottage)
Early to mid 19th century The cottage is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler. There are two storeys and two bays, the right bay is canted at the left and the left bay projects and is square. The doorway has a bracketed hood and is in a larger stone-filled opening. In the right bay are sash windows in architraves, and the left bay has inserted vents.[197] II
Former Post Office
54°25′50″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43047°N 0.53226°W / 54.43047; -0.53226 (Former Post Office)
 
Early to mid 19th century A house and a shop in sandstone with sill bands, and a Welsh slate roof with stone copings and kneelers. There are three storeys and a cellar on the right, and two bays. Steps lead to a central doorway flanked by shop windows with pilasters, and over all is a bracketed cornice. The upper floors contain sash windows. At the rear are two earlier rendered wings with pantile roofs, each with two storeys and three bays.[198] II
Seascape
54°25′51″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43084°N 0.53230°W / 54.43084; -0.53230 (Seascape)
 
Early to mid 19th century The house is in sandstone, with a slate roof, stone copings and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and two wide bays. The central doorway has panelled pilasters, and a low gabled hood. The windows are sashes, and there is a large dormer.[199] II
St Robert's Chantry
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43070°N 0.53250°W / 54.43070; -0.53250 (St Robert's Chantry)
Early to mid 19th century The house is in incised render on sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler on the right. There are two storeys and an attic, and one bay. The doorway on the left has a gabled hood on full-length brackets, the windows are sashes in architraves, and there is a raking dormer.[200] II
Strauton and Roma
54°25′51″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43070°N 0.53299°W / 54.43070; -0.53299 (Strauton and Roma)
Early to mid 19th century A pair of houses with incised rendered walls, and a pantile roof with stone copings and large curved kneelers. At the front are two storeys, and each house has two bays. There are two doorways and a variety of small windows. On the right return, steps lead down to a basement door. At the rear are three storeys and a basement, and three bays. The openings include sashes, a tripartite window, French windows and casements.[201] II
The Gable
54°25′48″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43013°N 0.53225°W / 54.43013; -0.53225 (The Gable)
Early to mid 19th century The house is in sandstone, the west end with incised rendering, and it has a pantile roof with stone copings and large curved kneelers. The south front has two storeys and two bays. It contains a doorway with a pedimented hood on console brackets, and the windows are sashes. The left return has three storeys and two bays under a gable, and there is a single-storey projection. At the rear are three storeys and three bays.[202] II
The Rainbow
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43067°N 0.53251°W / 54.43067; -0.53251 (The Rainbow)
 
Early to mid 19th century A house and a shop, later a museum, in sandstone, with a pantile roof, stone copings and small curved kneelers. There are two tall storeys and an attic, and two wide bays. In the ground floor is a doorway, to its left is a casement window, and further to the left is a four-light shop window set in a former segmental-arched cart entrance with voussoirs. Above the shop window is a small casement window, the upper floor contains horizontally-sliding sash windows, and there are two flat-headed dormers.[203] II
4 Martin's Row
54°25′55″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43194°N 0.53353°W / 54.43194; -0.53353 (4 Martin's Row)
1836 The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with broad stone coping and a moulded kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays, the right bay wider. In the left bay is a doorway with a casement window above, in the right bay are sash windows, and in the attic is a small dormer. One lintel is dated.[204] II
6 Martin's Row
54°25′55″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43192°N 0.53346°W / 54.43192; -0.53346 (6 Martin's Row)
c. 1840 The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, coping, and moulded kneelers. There are two storeys, an attic and a basement, and three bays. Steps with cast iron handrails lead up to a doorway with pilasters, a fanlight and an open pediment. The windows are sashes, and there is a large modern dormer.[205] II
United Reformed Church
54°25′51″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43082°N 0.53327°W / 54.43082; -0.53327 (United Reformed Church)
 
1840 The chapel is in sandstone, and has a Welsh slate roof with stone copings and block kneelers. The entrance front is gabled, and has two storeys and three wide bays. Steps lead up to a central gabled porch with a trefoil finial containing double doors. The windows have pointed arches and hood moulds, and above the porch is an oval plaque with the date and an inscription.[3][206] II
York House
54°25′51″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43084°N 0.53230°W / 54.43084; -0.53230 (York House)
c. 1840 The house has incised rendered walls, and a Welsh slate roof with bargeboards and spike finials. There are two storeys, a basement and an attic, and two bays. The doorway on the left has pilasters, an entablature and a modillion cornice. To is right is a square oriel window on brackets, with a cast iron top guard and part of a ship's stem post attached in the centre. In the upper floor and attic are sash windows with chamfered surrounds and keystones. The basement has windows with chamfered surrounds, and the basement area is enclosed by railings.[207] II
Fyling Hall Lodge
54°25′35″N 0°33′55″W / 54.42628°N 0.56528°W / 54.42628; -0.56528 (Fyling Hall Lodge)
1842 An estate lodge, later a private house, in sandstone on a stepped plinth, with carved dressings, and a purple slate roof with a stone ridge, ridged gable copings and ball finials. There is a single storey and an L-shaped plan. On the front is a gabled porch with a stable-type door. The windows are chamfered with mullions, some mullions lost, and hood moulds. Over one window is a coat of arms and an inscription.[208] II
Avery Cottage
54°25′54″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43155°N 0.53328°W / 54.43155; -0.53328 (Avery Cottage)
Mid 19th century The cottage is in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys and one narrow bay. It contains a doorway and a small sash window.[209] II
Bramley Cottage
54°25′51″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43086°N 0.53305°W / 54.43086; -0.53305 (Bramley Cottage)
Mid 19th century The house is in incised render, and has a pantile roof with rendered copings and curved stone kneelers. There are three storeys and an attic, a gabled front bay, and two bays on the right return. On the front is a doorway with a fanlight under a flat hood, and the windows are sashes.[210] II
Downholme and the Cranny
54°25′51″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43075°N 0.53249°W / 54.43075; -0.53249 (Downholme and the Cranny)
 
Mid 19th century (probable) A pair of houses in painted brick, with a floor band, a stepped and dentilled eaves cornice, and a roof of pantile and French tile. There are two storeys and attics, and three bays. The doorways share a bracketed hood, the windows are sashes, there are two dormers, and to the left is a small basement window.[211] II
Former Fisherman's Cottage and Sea View
54°25′51″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43090°N 0.53294°W / 54.43090; -0.53294 (Former Fisherman's Cottage and Sea View)
 
Mid 19th century A pair of houses with shops beneath, in sandstone, with raised chamfered quoins and a pantile roof. There are three storeys and a basement, and three bays. In the basement are two shop fronts with pilasters, end brackets and bracketed cornices. Between them are two doorways under a flight of steps leading up to paired doorways with fanlights. Above these are blind windows, and in the outer bays are sash windows.[212] II
Gilroy House
54°25′51″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43097°N 0.53300°W / 54.43097; -0.53300 (Gilroy House)
Mid 19th century A house with a restaurant beneath, in sandstone with a pantile roof, stone copings and kneelers. There are three storeys and a high basement, and three bays. In the basement is a double shop front and an off-centre doorway. To the left, steps with a handrail lead to a balcony in front of the ground floor of the house. This has a central doorway with a fanlight, and to its right is a canted bay window with a moulded cornice. To the left, and in the middle floor, are sash windows, and the top floor contains casement windows.[213] II
Garden walls in front of The Bay Tree
54°26′04″N 0°32′07″W / 54.43454°N 0.53518°W / 54.43454; -0.53518 (Garden walls in front of The Bay Tree)
 
Mid 19th century (probable) The walls to the north and west of the garden are in sandstone, with rolled rounded coping. The left wall is tall near the house, but ramped down at the west end to meet the lower front wall, which has a series of ramps down the hillside. It contains a central pair of gate piers, with cornices and pyramidal caps, and a single wrought iron gate.[214] II
Lancelot Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°32′01″W / 54.43053°N 0.53353°W / 54.43053; -0.53353 (Lancelot Cottage)
Mid 19th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone copings and prominent curved kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The door has a flat hood on curved brackets, the windows are sshes, and there is a roof dormer with a three-light horizontally-sliding sash.[215] II
Medora and Holmlea
54°25′55″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43205°N 0.53321°W / 54.43205; -0.53321 (Medora and Holmlea)
Mid 19th century A pair of sandstone houses with pantile roofs, a stone ridge, coping and kneelers. Each house has three storeys and one wide bay. The doorways are paired in the centre, and each has alternately-reeded panelled pilasters, a radial fanlight, a reeded frieze and an open pediment. The windows are sashes, some in architraves.[216] II
Maryondale Cottage and shop
54°25′49″N 0°31′58″W / 54.43022°N 0.53291°W / 54.43022; -0.53291 (Maryondale Cottage and shop)
Mid 19th century A house with a shop in sandstone, the left return in red brick, with a pantile roof, stone copings and a kneeler on the right. There are three storeys and three wide bays. In the left bay is a segmental-arched carriage entrance converted into a shop. In the centre is a doorway with a fanlight and a bracketed cornice, and to the right is a pivoted window and a passage door with a fanlight. The upper floors contain sash windows, and above them are raking dormers.[217] II
Premises of Tony Straw
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43051°N 0.53246°W / 54.43051; -0.53246 (Premises of Tony Straw)
 
Mid 19th century A house with business premises below, adjacent to the Men's Institute, it i s in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with a stone ridge, and coping and a kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre is a doorway, flanked by windows that are blocked at the bottom and with slats above. Further to the left is another doorway, and the upper floor contains sash windows in architraves. Below the central window is a coat of arms with a motto.[218] II
Primrose and Primrose Flat
54°25′49″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43015°N 0.53297°W / 54.43015; -0.53297 (Primrose and Primrose Flat)
Mid 19th century A house divided into two flats, the ground floor once a store, in sandstone, with a pantile roof, and stone coping and a kneeler on the right. At the front are three storeys and two wide bays. In the centre is a doorway, to its left is a casement window, and the other windows are sashes. To the right are eternal steps to the doorway of Primrose Flat, with a casement window to the right. At the rear there is one storey, two doorways with hoods, and sash windows.[219] II
Sandal House
54°25′50″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43061°N 0.53232°W / 54.43061; -0.53232 (Sandal House)
Mid 19th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler on the right. There are three storeys and one wide bay. On the right is a doorway with a fanlight and a gabled hood on full-height brackets, and to its right is a 21-pane window with a flat hood. The upper floors contain sash windows, in the top floor is a small casement window, and there is an inscribed plaque.[220] II
The Pottery
54°25′54″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43154°N 0.53334°W / 54.43154; -0.53334 (The Pottery)
 
Mid 19th century A house and shop in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof. There are three storeys and two wide bays. In the ground floor is a doorway with a shop window to the left and a sash window to the right, all under a continuous lintel. The upper floors contain sash windows.[221] II
Woodside
54°25′48″N 0°31′59″W / 54.43012°N 0.53304°W / 54.43012; -0.53304 (Woodside)
Mid 19th century The house is in sandstone, and has a pantile roof with stone coping and a kneeler on the right. There are three storeys, and one wide bay, canted back on the right. On the left is a doorway with a small modern window to the right, and the upper floors contain sash windows. In the right return is a door and scattered windows.[222] II
Fishermans Cottage
54°25′50″N 0°31′57″W / 54.43045°N 0.53237°W / 54.43045; -0.53237 (Fisherman's Cottage)
 
1860 A public house, later a private house, with rendered walls, and a pantile roof with a stone ridge and gable coping. There are three storeys and an attic, the gable end faces the road, and there is one wide bay. The doorway is to the right, and the windows are casements. On the left is a projecting chimney stack with a small inserted light to its right.[223] II
The Launderette
54°25′50″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43060°N 0.53232°W / 54.43060; -0.53232 (The Launderette)
Mid to late 19th century A house and a shop on an older base, in sandstone, with a Welsh slate roof, three storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a garage door and a shop window to the right, both under a continuous cornice. There are flanking doors with fanlights, and the windows in the upper floors are sashes.[224] II
St Stephen's Church
54°26′03″N 0°32′21″W / 54.43414°N 0.53912°W / 54.43414; -0.53912 (St Stephen's Church)
 
1868–70 The church, designed by G. E. Street, is in sandstone with a red tile roof and a decorative ridge. It consists of a nave with a clerestory, a south aisle, a south porch, a chancel with a north organ chamber, a south chapel and vestry, and an apse at the east end, and a southeast tower. The tower has four stages, angle buttresses, string courses, lancet windows and a roundel in the second stage, the bell openings have moulded surrounds and hood moulds, and at the top is a saddleback roof.[225][226] II*
Gateway south of St Stephen's Church
54°26′02″N 0°32′21″W / 54.43396°N 0.53924°W / 54.43396; -0.53924 (Gateway south of St Stephen's Church)
 
Late 19th century The gateway has square sandstone gate piers with stepped curved caps, and oak gates with panelled lower parts. Flanking these are quadrant walls with stepped moulded copings. Attached to the west wall is a lamp holder on a two-stage octagonal post, with a cast iron gooseneck and ornamental rings.[227] II
Conservatory southwest of Jays House
54°26′05″N 0°32′10″W / 54.43484°N 0.53623°W / 54.43484; -0.53623 (Conservatory southwest of Jays House)
Late 19th century The conservatory is about 5 metres (16 ft) long, with half-octagonal ends. It has a plinth in red brick with a chamfered top, and a glazed wooden superstructure. At the top is a stained glass frieze and a hip-ended roof with ball finials.[228] II
Mile post south of junction of High Normanby Road
54°26′52″N 0°33′58″W / 54.44776°N 0.56616°W / 54.44776; -0.56616 (Mile post south of junction of High Normanby Road)
Late 19th century The mile post on the east side of the A171 road is in cast iron. It has a triangular plan with a forward-sloping triangular top. On the top is inscribed "WHITBY STRAND HD", and on the lower faces are trees in relief. On the left face is the distance to Scarborough, and on the right face to Whitby.[229] II
Mile post south of entrance to St Ives Farm
54°24′34″N 0°35′03″W / 54.40953°N 0.58413°W / 54.40953; -0.58413 (Mile post west of Low Flask Farm)
Late 19th century The mile post on the east side of the A171 road is in cast iron. It has a triangular plan with a forward-sloping triangular top. On the top is inscribed "WHITBY STRAND HD", and on the lower faces are trees in relief. On the left face is the distance to Scarborough, and on the right face to Whitby.[230] II
Mile post west of Low Flask Farm
54°23′49″N 0°34′38″W / 54.39687°N 0.57719°W / 54.39687; -0.57719 (Mile post west of Low Flask Farm)
Late 19th century The mile post on the east side of the A171 road is in cast iron. It has a triangular plan with a forward-sloping triangular top. On the top is inscribed "WHITBY STRAND HD", and on the lower faces are trees in relief. On the left face is the distance to Scarborough, and on the right face to Whitby.[231] II
Mile post northeast of Wragby
54°23′33″N 0°33′22″W / 54.39237°N 0.55622°W / 54.39237; -0.55622 (Mile post northeast of Wragby)
Late 19th century The mile post on the northeast side of the A171 road is in cast iron. It has a triangular plan with a forward-sloping triangular top. On the top is inscribed "WHITBY STRAND HD", and on the lower faces are pointing hands, the left face indicating the distance to Scarborough, and the right face to Whitby.[232] II
The Old School HouseA
54°25′51″N 0°32′58″W / 54.43078°N 0.54949°W / 54.43078; -0.54949 (The Old School House)
 
Late 19th century The school, later a private house, is in sandstone, and has a Welsh slate roof with stone coping. There are two storeys and three bays, the right bay projecting and gabled. The middle bay is narrow and contains a porch in a concave-shouldered arch, the upper storey of which is broached and canted, containing a small oculus, and surmounted by a hexagonal spirelet. In the ground floor are three-light mullioned windows with long-shouldered heads and hood moulds, and the upper floor contains two-light windows with trefoil heads, the left in a gabled half-dormer.[3][233] II
The Fish
54°25′49″N 0°31′56″W / 54.43031°N 0.53233°W / 54.43031; -0.53233 (The Fish)
 
1887 A collecting box for donations to the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. It is a painted sculpture in cast iron depicting a cod standing on its tail, with its mouth open forming a slot. The sculpture is about 1.2 metres (3 ft 11 in) high, and it weighs just over 110 kilograms (240 lb).[3][234] II
The Pigsty
54°25′25″N 0°33′28″W / 54.42369°N 0.55790°W / 54.42369; -0.55790 (Pigsty)
 
1891 The Pigsty is in the form of a Classical or Egyptian temple, and is in stone on a basement with buttress-plinths. At the front is a hexastyle portico, with timber quasi-Ionic columns on stone bases, supporting an entablature with a reeded frieze, a mutuled cornice, and a pediment with acroterion, all in wood. In the tympanum are the remains of a trophy of arms. The frieze and cornice continue round the building, which also has a pediment at the rear, and along the sides are five bays.[235] II*
Boggle House
54°24′56″N 0°32′22″W / 54.41543°N 0.53948°W / 54.41543; -0.53948 (Boggle House)
 
1898–99 The house is in red engineering brick with terracotta dressings, and a tile roof with terracotta copings, and is in Arts and Crafts style. There are two storeys and attics, and an L-shaped plan with a front of two bays. The doorway has a chamfered surround, and a lobed lintel containing a panel with decoration and the date. The windows have chamfered and moulded surrounds and mullions.[3][236] II
Robin Hood's Bay Museum and Reading Room
54°25′50″N 0°32′00″W / 54.43065°N 0.53332°W / 54.43065; -0.53332 (Robin Hood's Bay Museum and Reading Room)
 
c. 1900 The museum and reading room were remodelled from an earlier building. It is in stone with a string course, and a swept pantile roof with a stone ridge, and coping and a kneeler on the left. There are two storeys and two bays, and a single-storey entrance bay on the left. To the left of the main block is a doorway with a hollow-chamfered surround and a flattened ogee lintel. Above is a single-light window, and in the right bay are mullioned windows. The entrance bay is gabled and contains a similar doorway, above which is a round-headed window and a cross finial.[237] II
War memorial
54°26′03″N 0°32′21″W / 54.43404°N 0.53922°W / 54.43404; -0.53922 (War memorial)
 
c. 1919 The war memorial is in the churchyard of St Stephen's Church, and is in sandstone. It is in the form of a Saxon cross on a tall sloping base. The memorial has cable-moulded borders, and panels with interlace, and two with figures in relief. On the lower part of the cross is an inscription, under which is a copper plate with the names of those lost in the Second World War. The names of those lost in the First World War are inscribed on the base.[225][238] II
Cottage opposite Sunny Vale
54°25′54″N 0°32′04″W / 54.43174°N 0.53435°W / 54.43174; -0.53435 (Cottage opposite Sunny Vale)
Undated A wash house converted into a cottage, in sandstone with a pantile roof, hipped to the north. On the left return is a doorway, a sash window and a fixed light, and on the river front is a casement window.[239] II

Notes

edit
A.^ ^ These structures are in the Lands common to Fylingdales and Hawsker-cum-Stainsacre.

References

edit

Citations

edit
  1. ^ Historic England
  2. ^ Historic England & 1316239
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Grenville & Pevsner (2023), p. 571
  4. ^ Historic England & 1167925
  5. ^ Historic England & 1148710
  6. ^ Grenville & Pevsner (2023), pp. 571–572
  7. ^ Historic England & 1148723
  8. ^ Historic England & 1316215
  9. ^ Historic England & 1148691
  10. ^ Historic England & 1167493
  11. ^ Historic England & 1148689
  12. ^ Historic England & 1148693
  13. ^ Historic England & 1173124
  14. ^ Historic England & 1316193
  15. ^ Historic England & 1148680
  16. ^ Historic England & 1316191
  17. ^ Historic England & 1148695
  18. ^ Historic England & 1167848
  19. ^ Historic England & 1148709
  20. ^ Historic England & 1148655
  21. ^ Historic England & 1148707
  22. ^ Historic England & 1148686
  23. ^ Historic England & 1316196
  24. ^ Historic England & 1296599
  25. ^ Historic England & 1148639
  26. ^ Historic England & 1296731
  27. ^ Historic England & 1167962
  28. ^ a b c d Grenville & Pevsner (2023), p. 572
  29. ^ Historic England & 1296527
  30. ^ Historic England & 1148681
  31. ^ Historic England & 1167337
  32. ^ Historic England & 1316216
  33. ^ Historic England & 1316208
  34. ^ Historic England & 1148652
  35. ^ Historic England & 1296500
  36. ^ Historic England & 1301025
  37. ^ Historic England & 1172874
  38. ^ Historic England & 1172760
  39. ^ Historic England & 1148697
  40. ^ Historic England & 1167909
  41. ^ Historic England & 1148666
  42. ^ Historic England & 1148668
  43. ^ Historic England & 1316192
  44. ^ Historic England & 1148638
  45. ^ Historic England & 1172973
  46. ^ Historic England & 1167348
  47. ^ Historic England & 1148714
  48. ^ Historic England & 1148728
  49. ^ Historic England & 1316195
  50. ^ Historic England & 1148644
  51. ^ Historic England & 1148729
  52. ^ Historic England & 1167946
  53. ^ Historic England & 1296369
  54. ^ Historic England & 1316214
  55. ^ Historic England & 1172961
  56. ^ Historic England & 1316175
  57. ^ Historic England & 1148703
  58. ^ Historic England & 1172911
  59. ^ Historic England & 1148643
  60. ^ Historic England & 1167457
  61. ^ Historic England & 1172840
  62. ^ Historic England & 1316213
  63. ^ Historic England & 1316209
  64. ^ Historic England & 1316210
  65. ^ Historic England & 1148690
  66. ^ Historic England & 1148669
  67. ^ Historic England & 1316218
  68. ^ Historic England & 1316198
  69. ^ Historic England & 1296855
  70. ^ Historic England & 1148722
  71. ^ Historic England & 1148701
  72. ^ Historic England & 1148665
  73. ^ Historic England & 1172774
  74. ^ Historic England & 1316194
  75. ^ Historic England & 1316217
  76. ^ Historic England & 1167185
  77. ^ Historic England & 1148645
  78. ^ Historic England & 1173075
  79. ^ Historic England & 1316207
  80. ^ Historic England & 1172894
  81. ^ Historic England & 1167442
  82. ^ Historic England & 1167977
  83. ^ Historic England & 1148670
  84. ^ Historic England & 1148702
  85. ^ Historic England & 1148711
  86. ^ Historic England & 1174778
  87. ^ Historic England & 1316186
  88. ^ Historic England & 1148699
  89. ^ Historic England & 1296364
  90. ^ Historic England & 1148640
  91. ^ Historic England & 1148683
  92. ^ Historic England & 1316237
  93. ^ Historic England & 1148659
  94. ^ Historic England & 1148700
  95. ^ Historic England & 1296720
  96. ^ Historic England & 1296884
  97. ^ Historic England & 1167523
  98. ^ Historic England & 1148704
  99. ^ Historic England & 1172815
  100. ^ Historic England & 1167144
  101. ^ Historic England & 1173113
  102. ^ Historic England & 1316171
  103. ^ Historic England & 1296582
  104. ^ Historic England & 1167518
  105. ^ Historic England & 1167885
  106. ^ Historic England & 1148715
  107. ^ Historic England & 1148635
  108. ^ Historic England & 1148698
  109. ^ Historic England & 1316205
  110. ^ Historic England & 1148648
  111. ^ Historic England & 1167450
  112. ^ Historic England & 1296550
  113. ^ Historic England & 1316240
  114. ^ Historic England & 1301019
  115. ^ Historic England & 1148733
  116. ^ Historic England & 1316204
  117. ^ Historic England & 1148735
  118. ^ Historic England & 1148660
  119. ^ Historic England & 1316211
  120. ^ Historic England & 1316173
  121. ^ Historic England & 1167876
  122. ^ Historic England & 1296798
  123. ^ Historic England & 1173047
  124. ^ Historic England & 1148705
  125. ^ Historic England & 1296430
  126. ^ Historic England & 1148671
  127. ^ Historic England & 1148675
  128. ^ Historic England & 1167660
  129. ^ Historic England & 1316199
  130. ^ Historic England & 1167233
  131. ^ Historic England & 1148692
  132. ^ Historic England & 1148708
  133. ^ Historic England & 1316190
  134. ^ Historic England & 1148647
  135. ^ Historic England & 1296409
  136. ^ Historic England & 1148664
  137. ^ Historic England & 1167777
  138. ^ Historic England & 1296726
  139. ^ Historic England & 1167648
  140. ^ Historic England & 1316238
  141. ^ Historic England & 1167318
  142. ^ Historic England & 1148721
  143. ^ Historic England & 1272823
  144. ^ Historic England & 1172865
  145. ^ Historic England & 1167586
  146. ^ Historic England & 1316202
  147. ^ Historic England & 1167838
  148. ^ Historic England & 1148634
  149. ^ Historic England & 1148676
  150. ^ Historic England & 1148706
  151. ^ Historic England & 1296451
  152. ^ Historic England & 1148642
  153. ^ Historic England & 1296428
  154. ^ Historic England & 1148730
  155. ^ Historic England & 1148651
  156. ^ Historic England & 1296570
  157. ^ Historic England & 1167796
  158. ^ Historic England & 1148657
  159. ^ Historic England & 1296423
  160. ^ Historic England & 1148694
  161. ^ Historic England & 1167132
  162. ^ Historic England & 1316169
  163. ^ Historic England & 1316197
  164. ^ Historic England & 1167496
  165. ^ Historic England & 1148736
  166. ^ Historic England & 1316188
  167. ^ Historic England & 1148641
  168. ^ Historic England & 1148677
  169. ^ Historic England & 1316221
  170. ^ Historic England & 1148679
  171. ^ Historic England & 1316222
  172. ^ Historic England & 1148732
  173. ^ Historic England & 1167472
  174. ^ Historic England & 1173067
  175. ^ Historic England & 1316187
  176. ^ Historic England & 1172679
  177. ^ Historic England & 1172879
  178. ^ Historic England & 1167613
  179. ^ Historic England & 1316172
  180. ^ Historic England & 1148673
  181. ^ Historic England & 1316206
  182. ^ Historic England & 1148713
  183. ^ Historic England & 1316220
  184. ^ Historic England & 1148656
  185. ^ Historic England & 1148658
  186. ^ Historic England & 1148712
  187. ^ Historic England & 1301013
  188. ^ Historic England & 1296815
  189. ^ Historic England & 1148672
  190. ^ Historic England & 1148663
  191. ^ Historic England & 1168080
  192. ^ Historic England & 1168067
  193. ^ Historic England & 1148674
  194. ^ Historic England & 1316203
  195. ^ Historic England & 1148646
  196. ^ Historic England & 1316212
  197. ^ Historic England & 1173036
  198. ^ Historic England & 1316185
  199. ^ Historic England & 1148684
  200. ^ Historic England & 1148687
  201. ^ Historic England & 1167215
  202. ^ Historic England & 1296851
  203. ^ Historic England & 1168047
  204. ^ Historic England & 1316189
  205. ^ Historic England & 1167955
  206. ^ Historic England & 1316200
  207. ^ Historic England & 1167787
  208. ^ Historic England & 1316219
  209. ^ Historic England & 1316241
  210. ^ Historic England & 1167227
  211. ^ Historic England & 1148688
  212. ^ Historic England & 1148661
  213. ^ Historic England & 1148662
  214. ^ Historic England & 1148636
  215. ^ Historic England & 1148667
  216. ^ Historic England & 1148731
  217. ^ Historic England & 1167119
  218. ^ Historic England & 1148685
  219. ^ Historic England & 1316170
  220. ^ Historic England & 1148682
  221. ^ Historic England & 1148696
  222. ^ Historic England & 1167127
  223. ^ Historic England & 1167995
  224. ^ Historic England & 1167764
  225. ^ a b Grenville & Pevsner (2023), p. 570
  226. ^ Historic England & 1148649
  227. ^ Historic England & 1296394
  228. ^ Historic England & 1148637
  229. ^ Historic England & 1148724
  230. ^ Historic England & 1148725
  231. ^ Historic England & 1148726
  232. ^ Historic England & 1148727
  233. ^ Historic England & 1173141
  234. ^ Historic England & 1391560
  235. ^ Historic England & 1148678
  236. ^ Historic England & 1148734
  237. ^ Historic England & 1316201
  238. ^ Historic England & 1148650
  239. ^ Historic England & 1316174

Sources

edit