Listed buildings in New Hutton

New Hutton is a civil parish in the South Lakeland District of Cumbria, England. It contains 12 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. All the listed buildings are designated at Grade II, the lowest of the three grades, which is applied to "buildings of national importance and special interest".[1] The parish contains the village of New Hutton, and is otherwise rural. The listed buildings include farmhouses, farm buildings, houses, one of which is used as a school, a monument, a church and associated structures, and a dam and machinery house.

Buildings

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Name and location Photograph Date Notes
Strawberry Bank Farmhouse
54°18′44″N 2°40′51″W / 54.31212°N 2.68074°W / 54.31212; -2.68074 (Strawberry Bank Farmhouse)
Late 16th to early 17th century (probable) The farmhouse is pebbledashed on a plinth with a slate roof. It has two storeys with an attic, a symmetrical front of three bays, a rear wing and outshut, and a lean-to the right. In the centre is a full-height gabled porch, and most of the windows are sashes.[2][3]
Hay Close Farmhouse
54°18′30″N 2°42′41″W / 54.30841°N 2.71140°W / 54.30841; -2.71140 (Hay Close Farmhouse)
1713 The farmhouse is in stone with quoins and a green slate roof. There are two storeys, a symmetrical front of three bays, and a rear wing. The central door has a fanlight, and the windows are sashes. In the rear wing is a mullioned window.[4]
Barn, Hay Close Farmhouse
54°18′29″N 2°42′39″W / 54.30810°N 2.71077°W / 54.30810; -2.71077 (Barn, Hay Close Farm)
Early 18th century (probable) A threshing barn and byre in stone with quoins and a green slate roof. It has a single tall storey with a loft at the north end, and six bays. The barn contains doorways, a casement window, ventilation slits, and there are external steps leading to a loft door.[5]
Holme Park School
54°18′52″N 2°41′48″W / 54.31440°N 2.69664°W / 54.31440; -2.69664 (Holme Park School)
18th century (probable) Originally a country house, later extended and used as a school, it is in pebbledashed stone with moulded cast iron gutters, and slate roofs. It has mainly two storeys, and the main block has a symmetrical front of nine bays. In the centre is a full-height canted porch with a flat roof. The windows are sashes with architraves. To the west of the main block is a courtyard range, and to the east is a former single-storey billiard room.[6]
Toll Bar Cottage
54°19′29″N 2°40′56″W / 54.32480°N 2.68210°W / 54.32480; -2.68210 (Toll Bar Cottage)
Mid 18th century (probable) Originally a toll house, later a private dwelling, it is pebbledashed stone with a slate roof. The house has a two-storey curved gable end flanked by single-storey outshuts. The windows on the front are casements with stone mullions, and at the rear is a wing with sash windows.[7]
Midge Monument
54°18′56″N 2°41′54″W / 54.31558°N 2.69820°W / 54.31558; -2.69820 (Midge Monument)
1766 The monument is in stone, it is about 15 feet (4.6 m) high, and has a square plan with sides about 4 feet (1.2 m) wide. The monument has a pyramidal cap with a rectangular aperture on each side, and an inscribed slab.[8]
Fairthorn with outbuildings
54°18′25″N 2°39′35″W / 54.30690°N 2.65976°W / 54.30690; -2.65976 (Fairthorn)
Late 18th to early 19th century (probable) A stone house that has a slate roof with stone copings. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. The central porch is gabled with a ball finial and the windows are sashes. Attached to the left is a lower outbuilding, and to the right is a lean-to outbuilding.[9]
Gatepiers to west of former school
54°18′51″N 2°40′26″W / 54.31410°N 2.67399°W / 54.31410; -2.67399 (Gatepiers to west of former school)
 
Late 18th to early 19th century (probable) The gate piers are in rusticated stone on a plinth, they are square with a cornice, and are about 9 feet (2.7 m) high. On top of each pier is a cast iron statue of a running greyhound on the letter "S". Between the piers is a low wall.[2][10]
Gatepiers, north entrance of
St Stephen's churchyard
54°18′54″N 2°40′26″W / 54.31489°N 2.67382°W / 54.31489; -2.67382 (Gatepiers, north entrance of St Stephen's churchyard)
 
Late 18th to early 19th century (probable) The gate piers are in rusticated stone on a plinth, they are square with a cornice, and are about 9 feet (2.7 m) high. On top of each pier is a cast iron statue of a running greyhound on the letter "S". The gates, dating from about 1911, are in wrought iron.[2][11]
St Stephen's Church
54°18′53″N 2°40′26″W / 54.31476°N 2.67386°W / 54.31476; -2.67386 (St Stephen's Church)
 
1828–29 The church, designed by George Webster is in pebbledashed stone on a plinth, and has a slate roof with stone copings. It consists of a nave, a chancel, and a west tower, partly embraced by the nave. The tower has a parapet with stepped crenelation, and the windows are lancets.[2][12]
Dam and machinery house,
Fisher Tarn Reservoir
54°19′42″N 2°41′35″W / 54.32827°N 2.69293°W / 54.32827; -2.69293 (Dam and machinery house, Fisher Tarn Reservoir)
 
1896 The dam is about 30 feet (9.1 m) high, and has a walkway along the top. In the middle are three semicircular sluice gates flanked by mock medieval towers. The machinery house is in stone with a square plan, chamfered corners, Diocletian windows, and a pyramidal stone roof.[13]
West entrance, St Stephen's churchyard
54°18′54″N 2°40′26″W / 54.31488°N 2.67402°W / 54.31488; -2.67402 (West entrance, St Stephen's churchyard)
1911 The entrance to the churchyard commemorates the Coronation of George V. It consists of a pointed stone arch with a stepped gable and an apex cross, and contains a wrought iron gate.[14]

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