User:Peter I. Vardy/sandbox
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Dacre is a civil parish in the former Harrogate district of North Yorkshire, England. It contains * 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]
Buildings
Name and location | Photograph | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Barns, Pyefield House 54°02′19″N 1°41′48″W / 54.03867°N 1.69661°W |
1828 | The buildings consist of a barn and an attached, possibly earlier, hay barn at the rear. They are in gritstone with stone slate roofs, coped gables and shaped kneelers. The barn has three bays, a single-bay extension to the east, and a rear outshut. It contains a central double doorway with splayed voussoirs and a dated and initialled keystone, and byre doors, and in the extension is a cart entrance and a horizontally-sliding sash window. The hay barn has three bays, and contains a cart entrance and two pairs of tapering pillars.[2] |
References
Citations
Sources
- Historic England, "Barn and attached hay barn approximately 5 metres north-east of Pyefield House, Dacre (1150566)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 5 July 2024
- Historic England, Listed Buildings, retrieved 5 July 2024
- Leach, Peter; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2009). Yorkshire West Riding: Leeds, Bradford and the North. The Buildings of England. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-12665-5.