Stafford Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Calderdale local planning authority area, England. First listed on 17 November 1993. House. 2 related planning applications.

Stafford Hall

WRENN ID
hollow-rampart-alder
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Calderdale
Country
England
Date first listed
17 November 1993
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Stafford Hall is a large detached house built in 1861. It is constructed of coursed stone with ashlar dressings, and has a graduated slate roof with coped gables, kneelers, finials, and three ridge and one external chimney stack. The building is in the Gothic Revival style and is two storeys plus an attic. It features a chamfered plinth, quoins, and a first-floor band.

The south entrance front has three windows, with a recessed centre flanked by gabled wings. The central doorway has a part-glazed door within a four-light mullion window surround. Either side, there are single five-light canted bay windows with trefoil panelled parapets. Above the doorway is a two-light window, flanked by single three-light windows in pointed arch surrounds with hood moulds. Above that is a central 20th-century dormer, with single-light windows in the gables. The west front has three windows and an off-centre, projecting, gabled wing. It contains a central four-light canted bay window with a battlemented parapet. To the left is a two-light window, and to the right is a large projecting seven-light canted bay window with trefoil panelled parapet. Above are a three-light window with a shallow pointed head, flanked by single two-light windows, and above again, a single light window in the gable. The east front has a tall external stack to the left, inscribed with the date 1861, a central two-light window, and above it a two-light pointed arch stair window. To the right is a projecting gabled wing with two flat-headed two-light windows and a single light window in the gable. The north, rear front has a pointed arch doorway with a plank door and irregular fenestration mainly consisting of flat-headed mullion windows. A single-storey, flat-roofed addition from the 20th century is attached to the north-west. Inside, a wooden single flight staircase with return treads features bulbous turned balusters and newels, and a moulded handrail.

Detailed Attributes

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