History in Structure

Lightfoot Hall and Lightfoot House

A Grade II Listed Building in Redmire, North Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 54.316 / 54°18'57"N

Longitude: -1.9314 / 1°55'53"W

OS Eastings: 404560

OS Northings: 491164

OS Grid: SE045911

Mapcode National: GBR GLYJ.NL

Mapcode Global: WHB5K.9SJ3

Plus Code: 9C6W8389+CC

Entry Name: Lightfoot Hall and Lightfoot House

Listing Date: 24 January 1986

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1179207

English Heritage Legacy ID: 321822

ID on this website: 101179207

Location: Redmire, North Yorkshire, DL8

County: North Yorkshire

District: Richmondshire

Civil Parish: Redmire

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description


SE 09 SW REDMIRE REDMIRE

11/63 Lightfoot Hall and
Lightfoot House

- II


House, now 2 houses. Late C16-early C17. Rubble, stone slate roof.
2 storeys, 3 first-floor windows in all, T-shaped plan. To right,
forehouse, formerly of hearth-passage plan, now gable entry (Lightfoot
Hall). To left, parlour (now Lightfoot House). Ground floor: 2 round-
headed arches with rubble voussoirs, now filled in, with C20 window and
door, and C20 window, and on right a fire window with chamfered mullion oak
frame. First floor: paired C20 sash windows and 2 C20 sashes with glazing
bars. Shaped kneelers, ashlar copings, end stacks. Gabled rear wing with
2-light double-chamfered mullion window on ground floor; double-chamfered
cross window, perhaps enlarged, below hoodmould, on first floor; traces of
2-light window in gable. Shaped kneelers, ashlar coping. Left return:
large projecting chimney-breast clasped by adjoining cottage. Interior: in
forehouse, large timber fire-hood with decorated plasterwork of 4 stylised
flowers; oak door-frames with triangular lintels; moulded and stop-chamfered
beams. Stud partition between forehouse and parlour. Linen-fold panelling
removed from parlour, and stone fireplace no longer visible. NYCVBSG Report
No. 619. Harrison and Hutton, Vernacular Houses in North Yorkshire and
Cleveland (1984). The building is of importance in the understanding of the
evolution of vernacular architecture in the Northern Pennine Dales.


Listing NGR: SE0456091164

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