Thorganby Hall is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 17 November 1966. House. 2 related planning applications.

Thorganby Hall

WRENN ID
ruined-tin-moon
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Yorkshire
Country
England
Date first listed
17 November 1966
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

House. Dated 1822 on the pediment, with a later 20th-century addition to the left that is not of particular interest. The front facade is of gault brick with ashlar dressings, while the rear is red brick, and the roof is covered in Welsh slate. The house is two storeys high and originally three bays wide, with a slight projection in the center. It has a plinth and three steps lead to the central entrance, which features a six-panel door with an ornamented fanlight, all within a distyle Ionic portico with a dentil frieze and pediment. Flanking the entrance are oval windows. All windows are 12-pane sashes under wedge lintels with fluted keystones. A first-floor band runs around the building, topped by a cornice. The central pediment contains a coat of arms. The roof is hipped, and the building has side stacks. The interior includes shutters to most windows, a panelled ceiling in the hall, decorative cornices in most rooms, an open-well staircase with stick balusters, and rooms at the rear with coved arches.

Detailed Attributes

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