Hebblethwaite Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Yorkshire Dales National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 June 1984. Farmhouse. 1 related planning application.

Hebblethwaite Hall

WRENN ID
calm-pilaster-mint
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Yorkshire Dales National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
14 June 1984
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Hebblethwaite Hall is a farmhouse, now a house, dating probably to the 16th or early 17th century, but significantly altered and rebuilt, mainly in the late 18th or early 19th century, and recently restored. It is constructed of coursed sandstone rubble with large quoins, and has a stone slate roof, with some blue slate on the north slope of the main range. The building has a modified L-plan. The original range, running north-south, forms a wing to the east of the present main range, which runs east-west and incorporates earlier fabric but was largely rebuilt or enlarged in the late 18th or early 19th century. A short extension at the east end of the main range appears to incorporate masonry from the earlier structure.

The exterior has no clearly defined "front". The north side of the main range has a square-headed doorway next to where it joins the wing, with a single-light window to the right, as well as a stone-slate drip-band over both. Above this is a two-light casement, and a chimney is located at the west gable. The west side of the wing displays restored sash windows on each floor, along with a blocked doorway, containing a large monolith lintel, to the right of the ground floor windows. The north gable of the wing has a square fixed window in the blocked opening of another doorway, a stone slate drip-course, and a wide stepped gable chimney. The east wall showcases old masonry at the south end of the main range, containing a mullioned window with two round-headed lights, and remains of what was formerly a third light to the left. Above the mullioned window is a restored six-pane sash, and to the right are two square windows on each floor—a six-pane sash at ground floor and a recently exposed and restored six-light oak mullion-and-transom window above, with chamfered mullions and some surviving wooden saddle-bars. The lean-to extension to the east has a doorway at ground floor and a square 16-pane fixed window above with one opening pane. The rear, or south façade, includes a narrow inserted doorway, a rectangular twelve-pane stair-window, and two restored six-pane sashes on each floor.

The interior kitchen, located in the south end of the earlier range, features a high ceiling with a large lateral beam slotted as if for a former partition, moulded joists on the south side, and chamfered joists on the north side. A large 18th-century fireplace with a corbelled lintel has been recently raised. A room at the north end of this range includes a section of a small brick bread-oven in the north gable wall and a late 18th-century built-in cupboard to the right. There is a late 18th-century dog-legged staircase with a square newels and two turned balusters per tread, as well as a small cellar beneath the stairs.

The property forms a group with Hebblethwaite Hall Cottage and an attached barn to the north.

Detailed Attributes

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