Farm Buildings To North East Of Manor Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 May 1987. Farm building.
Farm Buildings To North East Of Manor Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- second-turret-quill
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 21 May 1987
- Type
- Farm building
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The farm buildings located to the northeast of Manor Farmhouse date back to around 1832 and were built for the Duke of Northumberland. Constructed from rubble with ashlar dressings, the buildings feature roofs made of stone slate and artificial stone slate. They are arranged around a fold yard and include a gin-gang.
The range facing southwest consists of a single-storey cart-shed and riding-horse stable on the left, which has two segmental-arched ashlar cart openings, a shuttered window, and a board door in an ashlar surround. The roof is hipped to the left. To the right is a two-storey stable and hayloft range, which has a wide segmental-arched ashlar opening with a 20th-century plywood door leading to the fold yard, and a board stable door flanked by windows, all in ashlar surrounds. The first floor features three shuttered windows and a pitching door, all with ashlar surrounds, and the roof is hipped with artificial stone slate.
On the northeast side, there is a projecting six-sided gin-gang with ashlar quoins at the angles. The three easternmost sides have blocked openings with segmental-arched lintels, and there is an ashlar buttress on the easternmost corner. The two sides nearest the granary are open, and the roof is hipped with stone slate. The granary, which is attached to the gin-gang, has six internal bays and a hipped stone slate roof.
Single-storey side return ranges have segmental-arched brick openings onto the fold yard, which is now covered in, and these ranges remain unaltered in the northwest. Low walls project from them, forming pens with integral water and feed troughs. Inside, the riding-horse stable retains original wooden fittings, the gin-gang features strutted roof trusses, and the granary has a flagged floor.
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