Kirkby Lonsdale is a civil parish in the South Lakeland District of Cumbria, England. It contains 163 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, two are listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, four are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains the town of Kirkby Lonsdale and the surrounding countryside. A high proportion of the listed buildings are near the centre of the town, and are mainly houses and associated structures, shops, business premises, public houses, and churches and associated structures. The other listed buildings include farmhouses and farm buildings, bridges, two market crosses, and milestones.
The church was altered and extended during the centuries, It was undated in the 16th century, the north aisle was added in 1574, in 1807 Francis Webster rebuilt the roof, and in 1866–68 E. G. Paley carried out a restoration and added the porch. The church is built in stone with a slate roof, and consists of a nave, two north aisles, a south aisle with a porch, a chancel, and an embraced west tower. The four-stage tower and the walls are embattled. Three doorways and the north aisle arcade are Norman; the outer north arcade is Perpendicular.[2][3]
The market cross was moved from Market Street to its present site in 1819. It consists of a round shaft with a square base on three octagonal steps. At the top is an octagonal capital to which a ball finial was added in the 19th century.[4][5]
Wings were added in the early 17th and in the 19th century, resulting in an L-shaped plan. The hall is in stone with quoins, a slate roof, and two storeys. There are windows of varying types, some of which are mullioned with hood moulds, and there is a surviving crocketedfinial.[6]
The bridge carries a road, Bridge Brow, over the River Lune. It is in stone, and consists of three segmental arches, the east arch being smaller. The bridge has chamfered arches, piers with triangular cutwaters on both sides, and the piers rise to canted refuges. There are canted abutments, string courses, and copedparapets. The roadway is about 4 metres (13 ft) wide. On the south parapet is an inscription, and at the east end is a sundial. The bridge is also a Scheduled Monument.[7][8][9]
Originally a manor house, it was refaced in the 18th century, and later became three properties, with a public house in the centre. The building is in stone, Nos. 5 and 7 are plastered, there are quoins on the left, and the roof is slated. There are three storeys and four bays, with an extension over an entry on the right. Each bay has a gable, that of the third bay being smaller, and the others containing Diocletian windows; the windows in the middle floor are sashes. In the ground floor of No. 5 is a doorway and a shop window. The public house occupies the middle bays, and has a doorway with Doricpilasters and an entablature; the windows are sashes, and at the left is an entry. In the ground floor of No. 9 is a shop front.[4][10]
The farmhouse is in stone with a slate roof, two storeys, and a symmetrical three-bay front. On the front is a two-storey gabled porch with four-gabled finial. In the upper floor is a crude Venetian window with a keystone and a solid tympanum. The doorway has a segmental head, above which is a shield-shaped initialled and dated plaque. The porch is flanked by mullioned windows, and all the windows are casements.[11]
A pair of stone houses, partly plastered, with a slate roof and two storeys. The windows were originally mullioned, but the mullions have been lost, and other alterations have been made.[12]
A pebbledashed stone shop with a slate roof, a gabled rear wing, and two storeys. In the ground floor is a yard entry, and to the right are modern doors and windows. In the upper floor are casement windows and a blocked mullioned window. The rear wing contains a mullioned and transomed window.[13]
A pebbledashed house with a slate roof and two storeys. To the right is a two-storey gabled porch with a round-headed doorway. The windows have chamferedmullions, and some have hood moulds. There is another doorway to the left with a plain surround.[4][14]
A stone house on a plinth, with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys, four bays, and a rear outshut. The windows in the front are sashes, and in the outshut is a mullioned window.[15]
The inn incorporates an 18th-century block at the rear. It is in stone with a slate roof, and has two storeys at the front and three at the rear. The front is gabled, the upper floor is jettied over the street and is carried on three monolithic columns. The doorway has a wooden architrave, and the windows are sashes, those on the ground floor with architraves.[4][16]
The summer house was originally mainly the front wall of a church porch, and was moved to its present site in 1866. It is in ashlar stone with a slate roof, and consists of a moulded segmental arch with a keystone, moulded jambs and an impost band. At the top is a gable with kneelers.[17]
A farmhouse, stable and barn in one range, built in stone and with a slate roof. The farmhouse has quoins, two storeys with an attic, string courses forming hood moulds, and mullioned windows. On the front is a gabled two-storey porch containing a doorway with mouldedjambs and a carved lintel. Above this is a decorated plaque containing initials and the date, and in the upper floor is a modified Venetian window. To the right is another doorway with an ogee head. At the rear are two outshuts.[18][19]
Shops that were refronted in the 19th century, they are plastered and have a slate roof. There are three storeys and four bays. On the left is a gabled projection containing a door and shop window with plain surrounds. To the right is a shop front with a wooden entablature and colonettes, and between is a yard entry. The upper floors contain sash windows.[21]
The farmhouse was extended in the 19th century. It is plastered, and has a slate roof, two storeys, and three bays. On the front is a gabled porch with a modern door. The windows are sashes, those in the right two bays are mullioned.[22]
The public house was altered in the 19th century. It is rendered, with a wooden eavescornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The central doorway has flutedpilasters and an entablature. This is flanked by paired sash windows, in the upper floor are two pairs of sash windows in the centre, and in the roof is a continuous dormer.[23]
A public house on a plinth, plastered, with rusticatedquoins and a slate roof. There are three storeys and five bays. In the ground floor is a doorway with an architrave, and to the right is an entrance with a chamfered segmental arch. Most of the windows are sashes.[24]
The monument to Rowland Tarham is in the churchyard of St Mary's Church. It consists of a table tomb with a gadroonedbaluster and an inscription in Latin.[26]
Originally a house, later used for other purposes, it is in ashlar stone with a sill band, a wooden cornice, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and four bays. The doorway has a plain surround and a cornice on consoles, in the right bay is a yard entrance with a segmental head, and the windows are sash windows. At the rear is a 19th-century stable with a pitching hole, and a doorway with an architrave and a cornice on consoles.[27]
A plastered shop with a slate roof, two storeys and three bays. In the ground floor is a double shop front with flutedpilaster strips and a cornice containing bow windows, and to the right is a door and a shop window with plain surrounds. In the upper floor are sash windows.[28]
A pebbledashed house with a slate roof, two storeys and two bays. In the ground floor are two small rectangular bay windows, and a doorway with a plain surround, and in the upper floor are sash windows. At the rear is a stone workshop with a slate roof, three storeys, and stone steps leading up to the first floor doorway.[29]
A pair of stone cottages with quoins, a slate roof, and two storeys. On the Fairbank front are two bays, a doorway with a wooden lintel, and sash windows. On the Vicarage Lane front is a gabled porch with seats and a slate roof.[30]
Originally two houses, later combined into one, it is in stone with quoins, and a slate roof with copedgables and kneelers. There are two storeys, two sash windows and a doorway, and two blocked windows and a blocked doorway.[31]
A pair of plastered buildings on a plinth, with quoins, a cornice, a slate roof, and two storeys. No. 29 to the right has a symmetrical front of three bays, and a door and windows with moulded surrounds. The windows are sashes, those in the outer bays having three lights, and in the middle bay one light. To the left is an extension, No. 31, with one bay, a shop front in the ground floor and a sash window above.[33]
A pebbledashed shop with a slate roof, two storeys and two bays. In the ground floor are a fixed window, a doorway, and to the left a yard entry. In the upper floor are two sash windows.[34]
A pebbledashed shop with a slate roof, two storeys and one bay. In the ground floor is a 19th-century shop front, and in the upper floor is a sash window.[35]
A stone shop with a slate roof, two storeys and two bays. In the left bay is a yard entry with a segmental head, and to the right is shop front with Doricpilasters. The upper floor has two sash windows.[36]
A pair of shop to which the rusticated plastered façade was added in the 19th century. It has a slate roof and three storeys, and each shop has two bays. In the ground floor are shop fronts and a passage on the right, and the upper floors contain sash windows. At the rear of No. 65 is a porch with Doric columns, pilasters and an entablature.[37]
A stone shop on a plinth, with quoins, a slate roof, and three storeys. In the ground floor is a shop front incorporating two octagonal stone pillars, and the windows are sashes.[38]
A public house on a plinth, plastered, with quoins, a slate roof, three storeys and two bays. The central doorway has a canopy, and the windows are sashes.[a][42]
The house was extended in the 19th century. It is roughcast with a slate roof and two storeys, and consists of a small central block with larger flanking ranges. On the central block is a plaque with a cartouche and a date. Above the windows are hood moulds, and inside the central block is a large bressumer.[44]
An inn on a corner site, incorporating an older house at the rear, in stone with chamferedrustication in the ground floor, a sill band, a dentilled and modillionedcornice, a blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical five-bay front. The central doorway has a porch with Ionic columns and pilasters, a pulvinated frieze, a modillion cornice and a pediment. To the right is a three-storey extension with a rounded corner, one bay on Main Street and five on New Road. It has a doorway with an open pediment on consoles. Most of the windows are sashes.[47]
The farmhouse is in pebbledashed stone with a slate roof, two storeys, three bays, and a 19th-century extension to the left. The windows have chamfered surrounds, those in the upper floor are sashes, there is one mullioned window, and all but one have hood moulds. In the centre is a gabled porch and a doorway with a moulded surround.[48]
The monument to two members of the Preston family, the second dying in 1814, is in the churchyard of St Mary's Church. It consists of a table tomb with an inscription relating to the war service of the latter.[49]
A stone house with rusticatedquoins, a band, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of five bays. The central doorway has Doricpilasters, an entablature and a pediment. The windows are sashes with plain surrounds. At the rear is a stone barn with a hipped slate roof and round pitching holes.[4][51]
Originally two houses, later a shop, it is in stone with chamferedrusticatedquoins on the left, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and two bays. In the ground floor are two 19th-century shop fronts with Doricpilasters and a cornice. Above the door is a rectangular fanlight, and the windows are sashes.[53]
A stone house with a slate roof, two storeys, and a symmetrical three-bay front. It has a central doorway and sash windows, all with plain surrounds.[54]
A stone house with quoins, a string course, and a slate roof with copedgables. There are two storeys, a central three-bay block, and flanking one-bay wings. In the centre is a semi-octagonal porch, and a doorway with a pediment. The windows are sashes, and a high wall containing a yard entrance connects the house to No. 4 Fairbank.[55]
The building, which was extended in the early 1830s, is in stone with quoins, a band, a projecting eavescornice forming an open pediment on the gable ends, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and a symmetrical front of five bays. The doorway has a wooden surround and a hood on mouldedconsoles, and the windows are sashes. At the rear is a large bow window with curved windows.[58][59]
The monument to Richard Turner and members of his family is in the churchyard of St Mary's Church. It consists of a table tomb with flutedpilasters and with fluted paterae on the sides.[61]
A stone house on a plinth, with rusticatedquoins, a band and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. The central doorway has a plain surround, a dated lintel, and a cornice. The windows are sashes with plain stone surrounds, and at the rear is a stair window.[62]
A house in ashlar stone on a plinth, with chamferedrusticatedquoins, two bands, a cornice, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and three bays. The windows are sashes, the central window in the middle floor is blind with a round head and a triple keystone. The doorway facing the yard has a plain surround, and there is a blocked doorway facing the road. At the rear are two tall stair windows. Running from the rear is a garden wall with small rusticated piers. Extending from the right of the house is a later 19th-century extension in rubble, containing a large elliptical-headed recess containing a staircase to the middle floor, and beyond that is a blocked carriage entrance.[63][64]
A pair of stone houses with quoins, a slate roof, and three storeys. Each house has a sash window in each floor, and above the doorway of No. 6 is a hood on consoles.[66]
A pair of stone cottages on a plinth with a slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre are three doors with plain surrounds, the middle one leading to a passage. The windows have plain surrounds, and those of No. 8 are sashes.[67]
A pair of stone cottages on a plinth, with quoins on the left and a slate roof. There are two storeys and each cottage has one bay. The windows and doors have plain stone surrounds, and the windows are modern casements.[68]
A plastered shop on a plinth, with a slate roof containing a gableddormer. There are 2+1⁄2 storeys and one bay. In the ground floor is a modern shop front, and the windows in the upper floors are sashes. At the rear is a doorway with a hood on consoles.[71]
The façade is on an older building that was originally part of an inn. The front is plastered, the roof is slated, and there are 3+1⁄2 storeys and three bays. In the ground floor is a yard entry with a segmental head to the left, and a shop front to the right. In the upper floors are sash windows with moulded sills and architraves, and in the roof is a continuous flat-roofed dormer. No. 49 is to the rear, it is in stone with a slate roof, and has two storeys, and the windows are sashes.[72]
A plastered shop with a slate roof, 3+1⁄2 storeys, and two bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with flanking pilasters and a cornice. Above are sash windows with architraves, those in the middle floor also with cornices on consoles. In the roof is a flat-roofed dormer, and at the rear is a two-storey extension.[73]
A stone house with quoins, a slate roof and three storeys. The windows are sashes with plain surrounds, there is a staircase window, and some doorways have been blocked.[75]
A pebbledashed house with a slate roof, two storeys, two bays, and a single-bay extension to the right. The doorway has a hood on mouldedconsoles, the ground floor windows are modern, and above the windows are paired with mullions.[76]
A stone house with quoins at the left side, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. The windows are sashes, there is a modern door, and at the extreme right is a passage entrance.[77]
The house and outbuilding are in stone with quoins, a slate roof, and two storeys. The house has an eavescornice, and a symmetrical front of three bays. The doorway has a cornice on consoles, and the windows are sashes. The outbuilding is to the left and is at right angles.[82]
A row of stone houses with some quoins, a slate roof, and three storeys. The windows are sashes with thin stone surrounds, and the doors are modern.[83]
The gazebo, formerly in the vicarage garden, is in the churchyard of St Mary's Church. It is an octagonal stone structure with two storeys, quoins, a band, and coping. Steps with railings lead up to a first floor entrance. The other alternate faces contain a doorway, and above a round-headed window with impost blocks and keystones. On the top are cement blocks imitating battlements.[58][84]
Originally an inn, later a private house, it is in stone with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. The doorway has a chamfered surround, and the windows are sashes.[86]
A stone house with quoins and a slate roof, later divided into two dwellings. There are three storeys, and a symmetrical front of four bays with a central yard entrance. The doorways are in the passage, most of the windows are sashes, and in the third and fourth bays are gabled half-dormers with bargeboards.[87]
This originated as a workhouse and has since been divided into flats. It is in stone, on a plinth, and has quoins and a slate roof. There are three storeys and a basement, four bays, and a doorway with a plain surround. Attached to the rear is a former mill that has two and three storeys, and a doorway with a segmental head and a fanlight.[88]
The monument to Edward Theobalds is in the churchyard of St Mary's Church. It consists of a table tomb with triple colonnettes and panels with cusped heads.[89]
The library originated as a Sandemanian chapel. It is in stone with quoins, and a slate roof. There are two storeys on the east side, and one on the west. On the sides are round-headed windows with plain surrounds, keystones and impost blocks. There is a 20th-century porch and a doorway with a fanlight.[90][91]
The monument is in the churchyard of St Mary's Church, and it commemorates the loss of five women in a fire the previous year. The monument consists of an obelisk on a pedestal. On the pedestal is an inscribed plaque, and on the other sides are biblical texts.[58][92]
A row of shops and houses forming the south side of Market Square. They are in stone with three storeys, and each building has two bays. In the ground floor are 19th-century shop fronts, some with bow windows and others with Doricpilasters and a cornice, and yard entries. In the upper floors are sash windows.[56][93]
A house in ashlar stone with a slate roof and two storeys. It has two shaped gables, clasping buttresses rising to spear-shaped finials, and a datestone.[94]
The house was extended in 1866, and is in Tudor style. Both parts have slate roofs. The earlier part is pebbledashed with a symmetrical front of three bays. In the centre is a two-storey porch with a triangular gable and three finials, and to the right is a shaped gable. The doorway is in Tudor style with a hood mould. The windows have chamfered surrounds and mullions, and in the ground floor they also have transoms and hood moulds. The later part to the left is in ashlar stone with a shaped gable and a single-storey gabled porch.[95]
A stone house with a slate roof, three storeys and one bay. The doorway has three-quarter Doric columns and an entablature, and the windows are sashes.[97]
A stone house with a slate roof, three storeys and one bay. The doorway is at the rear, and the windows are sashes. The curved corner into the yard is built with large blocks.[99]
A stone house on a plinth, with two sill bands, a plain frieze, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre is a doorway approached by steps, with a plain surround and an open pediment on consoles. To the right is a passage doorway, and the windows are sashes, some coupled.[100]
A pair of stone shops with a slate roof and three storeys. Each shop has one bay. In the ground floor are 19th-century shop fronts with Doricpilasters and a cornice, and above are sash windows.[101]
A house and a shop in stone with a slate roof, three storeys and three bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with Doricpilasters and a cornice, to the left is a doorway with a plain surround and a modern window. The upper floors contain sash windows.[102]
Behind the front is probably an older house. It is in stone with rusticatedquoins, bands, and a slate roof with a flat copedgable. All the windows are sashes. In the ground floor, to the left, is a doorway with a plain stone surround and a fanlight, and there are three windows to the right. In the upper floors are coupled windows, those in the top floor with round heads.[103]
A house and a shop in stone with a slate roof, three storeys and three bays. In the ground floor is a shop front and an altered window. The upper floors contain blind windows in the middle bays, and sash windows in the outer bays.[104]
A shop on a corner site, in stone, with a string course, an eavescornice, and a slate roof. There are three storeys, one bay on Market Street, four on New Street, and a canted corner. On the New Street front is a doorway with a cornice on consoles, and there is a plain doorway in the corner. Elsewhere in the ground floor are shop front, there are sash windows in the middle floor, and casements in the top floor.[105]
A stone shop with a slate roof, three storeys and one bay. In the ground floor is a shop front with paired Doricpilasters and a cornice. Above is a fixed window in the middle floor, and a sash window in the top floor.[106]
A row of three plastered shops with a slate roof and 2+1⁄2 storeys. The ground floor is rusticated, and contains shop fronts. The shop front of No. 48 has Doricpilasters. In the upper floors are sash windows in plain surrounds.[107]
Behind the shop front is probably an older building. The building is in stone on a plinth, with bands, a cornice, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and three bays. In the ground floor is a double shop front with Doricpilasters and a cornice. The windows are sashes with plain surrounds.[108]
A row of two shops and a bank, in stone with a slate roof. There are three storeys and five bays. The central bay projects forward and contains an archway, above which is a blind arch containing the upper floor windows, the central one having a cornice on consoles. To the left of the arch are shop fronts with Corinthianpilasters, and to the right is a modern bank front. In the upper floors are sash windows, and at the rear is a two-storey stone cottage with a slate roof and sash windows.[109]
A stone house, rendered on the front, with a slate roof. There are three storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, and have plain surrounds, as does the doorway.[111]
A pair of stone shops on a plinth, with a string course, quoins on the left, and a slate roof. There are three storeys, and each shop has two bays. In the ground floor are a double shop front flanked by Doricpilasters and with a continuous cornice. In the upper floor are sash windows, at the rear is a stair windows, and outbuildings.[112]
A stone shop with a slate roof, three storeys and four bays. In the ground floor is a yard entrance with a segmental head, and to the right is a shop front with Doricpilasters and a cornice. The upper floors contain sash windows.[113]
A pair of stone houses with rusticatedquoins on the right, and a slate roof. In the centre are paired doorways, the windows in No. 19 are modern, in No. 21 they are sashes, and above the doorway is a blocked window with a mullion. All openings have plain stone surrounds.[114]
A stone house with rusticatedquoins, a string course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The square windows have plain stone surrounds with modern glazing, and the doorway is modern.[115]
Originally a row of five houses, most since converted into shops with living accommodation above. They are in stone with a slate roof, three storeys, and one bay to each unit. At the ends are giant Doricpilasters with discs in the capitals, and an entablature that continues as an eavescornice. In the ground floor are shop fronts, doorways and sash windows, and in the upper floor most windows are sashes.[116]
A stone house with a sill band, an eavescornice, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys, the front on Chapel Lane is symmetrical with three bays, and there are two bays facing New Road. On the front is a trellis porch and a doorway with Doricpilasters and a cornice. The windows are sashes.[117]
A stone house with quoins, a string course, a cornice with brackets, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and four bays. In the centre is a yard entrance with a segmental arch and a triple keystone. The windows are sashes, and the window above the arch is coupled.[118]
The farmhouse is in stone with a slate roof. There are two storeys at the front, three at the back, and three bays. The windows are sashes with Gothick heads, and the doorway in the right gabled return has a Gothick fanlight. To the side is an embattled wall, at the rear is a block with casement windows, and behind this is a barn with a moulded timber lintel.[120]
The cottage is in picturesque style, built in stone with quoins, an eavescornice, and a hippedslate roof with lead ridges. There are two storeys, and the windows are casements with Gothic lights. A triple window has been converted, with the central light a door, and the outer lights blocked.[121]
A pair of pebbledashed houses at right angles, with slate roofs. They have two storeys, and the windows, most of which are sashes, have plain stone surrounds.[122]
A house with a barn attached to the right, in stone with a slate roof and two storeys. The house has a Doric porch with two columns and a cornice. The windows are sashes, and at the rear is a staircase window. On the gable of the barn is a ball finial.[124]
A pair of stone cottages with a slate roof, two storeys and a Z-shaped plan. Each cottage has a timber porch with a slate roof, and the windows are casements with latticed glazing.[127]
This was built as a country house designed by George Webster in Jacobean style, it was extended in 1872 by Paley and Austin, and later used as a school. The building is in ashlar stone with slate roofs with lead cupolas, and has two storeys. The south front has seven bays with mullioned and transomed windows, an openwork parapet, and turrets with cupolas at each end. There is a two-storey porch with coupled columns, Doric in the ground floor, and Ionic above. The east font has five bays, and contains a single-storey Roman Doric tetrastyle porch. On the west side is the service wing with gableddormers, and a three-stage tower. The newer part is to the north, and includes a four-stage tower.[125][128]
A stone house that was extended later in the century, it is on a plinth, with chamferedrusticatedquoins, a string course, a wooden cornice, and a slate roof, hipped at the rear. There are two storeys, and the original part has a symmetrical three-bay front. The central doorway is set in a blind arch, and there is a trellis porch. The windows are sashes, and in the extension to the left is a coupled round-headed window with a transom.[4][129]
Two stone houses on a plinth, in Tudor Gothic style, with slate roofs. No. 17, facing the road has four bays, the outer bays projecting forward and having copedgables with finials. The doorway has a triangular head and a hood mould. The two central windows in the upper floor have mullions, and the other windows also have transoms and hood moulds. No. 19 faces the square to the left, it is pebbledashed with three bays, the outer bays projecting forward and gabled as No. 17.[130]
A pair of stone houses with chamferedrusticatedquoins, a band, a slate roof, and three storey with cellars. The doorways are paired in the centre, and have plain stone surrounds and fanlights. There is one window in each floor; sashes in the lower two floors, and casements in the top floor.[131]
The schoolroom is in stone on a plinth with a slate roof, one storey and three bays. The windows are casements with chamfered surrounds and mouldedhood moulds. Above the central window is a re-set inscribed plaque, and in the right gable end is a lettered panel. Entrances with embattled porches were added in 1903.[134]
The bank, designed by Miles Thompson, is ashlar stone, with a rusticated ground floor, a string course, a frieze, an eavescornice, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and three bays, the central bay projecting forward, and containing a porch with paired Doricpilasters and an entablature. The entrance has a rounded moulded arch with a keystone, and a doorway in an architrave. Above the porch is a balcony, a window with two rounded lights, a clock face, a pediment and a bellcote. The upper floor is flanked by paired corner pilasters. The other windows are sashes in architraves, those in the ground floor having cornices.[56][135]
A pair of stone cottages with a slate roof. There are two storeys, and each cottage has two bays. In the right bay of No. 8 is a passage. Above the doors are canopies, the windows of No. 8 are sashes, and those of No. 12 are casements.[137]
A pair of stone cottages with a slate roof. There are two storeys, and each cottage has two bays. Above the doors are canopies, and the windows are casements.[138]
A cottage with a former smithy attached to the right. They are in stone with a slate roof, and have two storeys. The cottage has two bays, a doorway with a canopy, and casement windows. The former smithy has various openings, including a segmental-headed entrance.[139]
A stuccoed shop with a cornice and a slate roof. There are 2+1⁄2 storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with Doricpilasters and an entablature. The doorway has a segmental fanlight, and the windows have segmental heads. The windows are sashes, those in the middle floor have flattened pediments, and in the top floor they have a segmental cornice above the roofline.[141]
A stone shop with chamferedrusticatedquoins, a wooden cornice, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and a front of three bays. On the ground floor is a double shop front with Doricpilasters, and the windows are sashes. At the rear is a stone range with three storeys, two bays and windows. most of which are sashes.[143]
A shop, plastered, on a plinth, with a slate roof. The gable faces the street and has bargeboards and a pendant. There are two storeys with an attic, and two bays. In the ground floor is a double shop front with flanking Doricpilasters and a frieze, and in the upper floor and attic are sash windows.[144]
A stone shop with a slate roof and three storeys. In the ground floor is a shop front with Doricpilasters and a cornice, and above are sash windows with plain surrounds.[145]
A pebbledashed shop with a slate roof, three storeys and three bays. In the ground floor is an entry in the left bay with quoins in the right jamb, and to the right is a shop front with flanking Doricpilasters and a cornice. Above are sash windows, two in the middle floor and three in the top floor. At the rear are outbuildings in a similar style.[147]
A stone house with a slate roof, two storeys, two bays, and a rear outshut. The windows are casements in plain surrounds, there is a small round-headed opening in the gable, and a blocked entry.[152]
The milestone is on the north side of the A65 road. It has a triangular plan, and is inscribed with the distances in miles to Kirkby Lonsdale, Kendal and Milnthorpe.[153]
The building is in stone with rusticatedquoins and a slate roof. There are two round-headed doorways with impost blocks, rusticated jambs and voussoirs, one of which has a fanlight. The windows are sashes, on one gable is a spike finial, and on a recessed gable is a clock with a circular surround.[154]
The market hall, which incorporates rooms for other functions, was designed by Miles Thompson, and turns the corner between Main Street and Market Street. It is in stone on a plinth, the plinth and ground floor are rusticated, and it has imposts bands, a cornice, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and nine bays. The ground floor consists of an arcade, originally open, now all but one arch filled with shop windows. In the upper floor are round-headed sash windows with panels beneath, and on the top of the building is a raised panel containing the date and scrolls.[4][156]
The bank is in ashlar stone on a plinth, with a band, an entablature, a blocking course, a slate roof, and a rusticated ground floor. There are two storeys with attics, and front of seven bays. The fourth and fifth bays project forward under a pediment. There are two doorways, each with a cornice on consoles and a fanlight. Most of the windows are sashes, and beneath the ground floor windows are recessed panels. In the roof is a hippeddormer.[90][157]
A row of four stone houses with quoins, slate roofs, and two storeys. There are three projecting gabled wings with dormers between, all with bargeboards. The windows are casements with lattice glazing, and they have hood moulds. The doorways have plain surrounds and slate hoods on wooden brackets.[161]
A row of four stone houses with slate roofs and two storeys. There are two projecting gabled wings with dormers between, all with bargeboards. The doorways have hipped hoods. In front of the gardens is a stone wall with dressed coping.[162]
The octagonal game larder is in limestone with rusticatedsandstonequoins and dressings, and a slate roof with lead ridges. There is a wooden cornice with pendants at the corners, the doorway has a triangular head, and above it is a panel with the date and a monogram. The windows have segmental heads and louvred shutters.[125][165]
The farmhouse is in limestone with sandstone dressings, a slate roof, and two storeys. It is in Tudor Gothic style and has a complex plan. Most of the windows have two lights and hood moulds, there are two cantedbay windows, a canted porch, and a Tudor doorway above which is a plaque with a date and a monogram. The gables have decorated bargeboards and finials. Attached at the left is a coach house with segmental arches, from which a wall leads to an octagonal game larder with a mullioned and transomed window.[166]
The bridge carries a roadway over the River Lune. It is in stone, and consists of two equal segmental arches and a smaller segmental arch to the north. The pier between the equal arches has triangular cutwaters that rise to form pedestrian refuges. The parapets are embattled, those on the main arches being corbelled. On the smaller arch are panels with armorial bearings.[125][167]
The lodge is in brick with sandstone dressings, some applied timber-framing, and a red tiled half-hipped roof. It is in Tudor style. There are two storeys, parts of the upper storey are jettied, and on the front are three gables with pierced bargeboards. The windows have three lights and chamfered surrounds, they contain ornamental lattice glazing, and those in the ground floor are mullioned.[125][168]
A memorial hall in free Gothic style, it is in stone and has a hippedslate roof with small gablets. On the front facing the road are two large gabled Gothic windows in the centre, flanked by dissimilar doorways. The windows have arched heads, mullions and transoms, ogee heads, and a circle at the top. The left doorway has a flat head and a trefoiltympanum, and the right doorway has mouldedjambs. Beside each doorway is a plaque.[170]
The building is in Tudor Gothic style, it is built in stone, and consists of an octagonal canopy with a low pyramidal slate roof. There are eight arches with leaf decoration in the spandrels. The piers have stepped buttresses containing round-headed niches, and each is surmounted by an obelisk and a ball. The frieze is inscribed, above it is an embattledparapet, and on the apex of the roof is a large stone cross.[56][171]
The gates at the entrance to the churchyard of St Mary's Church are in wrought iron. They have two ornate pillars, and there is a central arch with initials and a date.[172]