Hemingbrough is a civil parish in the former Selby district of North Yorkshire, England. It contains 16 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, one is listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains the village of Hemingbrough and the surrounding countryside. Most of the listed buildings are houses and associated structures, and the others are a church and a school.
The house is in reddish-pink brick with dressings in red brick, floor bands, an eavescornice, and a swept pantile roof with stone coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and five bays. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor with flat rubbed red brick arches. In the right gable end is a partly blocked pitching door.[4][5]
The house, later divided into two, is in pinkish-brown brick, with a floor band, a cogged eaves band and a pantile roof. There are two storeys, a double depth plan and three bays. The central doorway has pilasters and a hood on decorative brackets, and the windows are sashes with painted wedge lintels.[6]
The house on a moated site, with earlier origins, has been divided into two. It is in orange and pinkish-brown brick, with a floor band, and a pantile roof with stone coping. There are two storeys and six bays. The doorway has a fanlight, and the windows are sashes, most under painted flat arches of red gauged brick.[7][8]
The house is in pinkish-brown brick, with dressings in red brick and stone, a three-course floor band, a modillioneavescornice, and a swept tile roof with stone coping and kneelers, one kneeler dated. There are two storeys, a double depth plan, and three bays. The central doorway has a fanlight, and the windows are sashes under cambered heads of red gauged brick with keystones.[9]
The house is in colourwashed rendered brick, with a floor band, dentilledeaves, and a swept pantile roof with rendered coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays. The central doorway has a fanlight, above it is a blocked window with an elliptical-arched head, and the windows are casements.[11]
The house is in reddish-pink brick on a plinth, with stone dressings, a three-course floor band, and a pantile roof with brick coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and four bays. The doorway is in the third bay, and the windows are casements, all with wedge lintels.[4][12]
The stables with haylofts are in pinkish-brown brick, with red brick dressings and a hipped asbestos roof. There are two storeys and four bays, the middle two bays projecting. The buildings contain three stable doors and a double door in the ground floor, and casement windows above, all under flat arches of gauged brick.[13]
The house, which was later extended, is in pinkish-brown brick, the extension is in pinkish-yellow brick, and it has a three-course floor band, a dentilledeaves band, and a pantile roof with stone coping and kneelers. There are two storeys, the original part has three bays, and the extension has two. The original part has a central doorway and casement windows, all under flat arches of rubbed brick. The extension contains sash windows with wedge lintels, and one horizontally-sliding sash window.[14]
The coach house and stables are in reddish-pink brick, with dressings in red brick, a stepped eaves band, and a pantile roof hipped on the left. There are two storeys and seven bays. The ground floor contains two stable doors, one blocked, a cart opening, and blind openings, all with cambered heads of red rubbed brick, and inserted casement windows. In the upper floor is a central Venetian window and oculi.[15]
The house, later divided, is in pinkish-brown brick, with stone dressings, brick quoins, floor bands, a modillioneavescornice, a frieze, a pediment containing a semicircular recess, and a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys, a double depth plan, and three bays, the middle bay recessed and taller. The central doorway is in a round-arched recess, and has a dentilled frieze, an open pediment, and side windows. Above the doorway and in the ground floor of the outer bays are sash windows under painted flat arches. The outer bays in the upper floor contain Diocletian windows with rubbed brick architraves.[4][16]
The cowshed and granary are in pinkish-brown brick, with two storeys and a single bay. In the centre is a blocked entrance with a cambered arch. The later entrance is on the side, and in the gable end is a pitching door.[17]
The house is in pinkish-brown brick on a plinth, with stone dressings, and a tile roof with stone coping and kneelers. There are two storeys and three bays, and a later extension to the right. Three steps lead up to a doorway with engaged columns, a radial fanlight with decorative glazing, a frieze and a hood. The windows are pivoting with twelve panes and wedge lintels. At the rear is a round-arched stair window with imposts and a keystone.[18]
The house is in gault brick, the service wing is in red brick, and the house has stone dressings, an overhanging cornice, a low parapet, and a Welsh slate roof. The main block has two storeys and three bays. The doorway has a Roman Doric doorcase, a radial fanlight, a frieze and an open pediment, and above it is a stair Venetian window. The other windows are sashes in architraves. On the left side is a full-height cantedbay window, and the service wing has two storeys and two bays.[7][19]
The school is in pinkish-brown brick, with stone dressings, bracketed overhanging eaves and a hipped Welsh slate roof. There is a single storey, an oblong plan, and three bays. On the front are three round-arched windows with imposts, keystones, and mouldedmullions. The middle window is larger, it contains Y-tracery, and around it is an inscription and the date.[20][21]