History in Structure

Stable and Outbuildings Range Approximately 10 Metres South West of Burton Hall Farmhouse

A Grade II Listed Building in Burton Leonard, North Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 54.0703 / 54°4'12"N

Longitude: -1.502 / 1°30'7"W

OS Eastings: 432687

OS Northings: 463930

OS Grid: SE326639

Mapcode National: GBR KPYC.MN

Mapcode Global: WHC81.WYYJ

Plus Code: 9C6W3FCX+46

Entry Name: Stable and Outbuildings Range Approximately 10 Metres South West of Burton Hall Farmhouse

Listing Date: 4 May 1978

Last Amended: 29 October 1987

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1289425

English Heritage Legacy ID: 331763

ID on this website: 101289425

Location: Burton Leonard, North Yorkshire, HG3

County: North Yorkshire

District: Harrogate

Civil Parish: Burton Leonard

Built-Up Area: Burton Leonard

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Burton Leonard St Leonard

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: Stable

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Description


SE 36 SW BURTON LEONARD MILL LANE
(north side, off)

3/6 Stable and outbuilding
range approximately
10 metres south-west of
Burton Hall Farmhouse
(formerly listed as barn
4.5.78 immediately south-west of
Old Hall Farmhouse)

GV II


Stable and outbuilding range with hayloft over. Early-mid C18 and early-mid
C19 enclosing the remains of a C16 structure, possibly a barn. Coursed
squared limestone rubble and timber framing, pantile roof with eaves course
of stone slates. 2 storeys, 8 bays with outshut on west side, and
additional 2 bays to north. Board stable doors to centre and each end, and
another door to left of added bays. Those to main range have timber
lintels; that to north block has a segmental header-brick arch. 2 blocked
ground-floor doorways and an inserted small-paned window to bay 1. 2 square
loading doors to first floor, main range and 5 slit vents. The added 2
bays have 2 X-shaped cast-iron ties at first-floor level. Left return:
rebuilt stone stair to board door with 3-piece keyed lintel. Interior, main
range: the west aisle has 4 principal posts, 3 surviving complete on
padstones and one top section surviving with curved braces to an aisle plate
and straight braces to tie beams. On the east side of the building the tie
beams are resting on the top of the corresponding principals but the lower
parts of these posts are built into the stone walling. The roof structure
of struts and rafters is nailed and probably C19. The timbering of the
flooring is composed of cross-beams fastened into the thickened upright
posts. The building was possibly a barn in its original form, but it could
have been a stable or byre range with lofts over. North Yorkshire and
Cleveland Vernacular Buildings Study Group Report No 1058, 1985.


Listing NGR: SE3270063931

External Links

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