Bruntscar Hall Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Yorkshire Dales National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 February 1958. Farmhouse.
Bruntscar Hall Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- lone-joist-heron
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Yorkshire Dales National Park
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 20 February 1958
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Bruntscar Hall Farmhouse is a farmhouse that consists of two sections: a mid-17th century part, which is now derelict, and a right-hand extension dated 1689, along with alterations from the 18th and 20th centuries. The building is constructed of slobbered limestone rubble with stone dressings and a stone slate roof.
The left-hand mid-17th century section is two storeys high and has four bays. The central entrance features a plain 18th-century surround. To the left on the ground floor, there is a four-light chamfered mullioned window with a king mullion. To the right of the entrance is a former entrance that has been blocked in the 18th century to create a window, alongside a right-hand former two-light chamfered mullioned window, which is now missing its mullion. The upper floor has four two-light chamfered mullioned windows, some of which are missing their mullions and have no glazing. The left of the centre ridge and the former right-hand gable end ridge stack are now at the junction with the late-17th century house to the right. Inside, there is a basket-arched fireplace with a chamfered surround.
The late-17th century house is also two storeys high and has four bays, featuring a projecting two-storey gabled bay to the right of centre. The entrance on the right-hand return has a reset decorated lintel with a weathered inscription that is believed to read "1689 PP MP," and it has a plank door from around 1980. There are two narrow chamfered staircase windows. The gable contains two 20th-century single light windows on the ground floor and a former three-light chamfered mullioned window on the upper floor, which is now missing its mullions. To the left, there are two 20th-century ground floor windows and two upper floor windows: one is 20th-century on the right, and the other is a former two-light chamfered mullioned window on the right that has been heightened and is now missing its mullion. To the right, there are two 20th-century ground floor windows and upper floor former two-light chamfered mullioned windows, which have also been heightened and are missing their mullions. The windows include 20th-century casements and sashes. The right of centre features a corbelled right-hand gable end ridge stack. The interior of the late-17th century house is not available for inspection.
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