Listed buildings in Stainton, South Yorkshire

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metropolitan borough of Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England. The parish contains 14 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England
. Of these, one is listed at Grade II*, the middle of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains the village of Stainton and the surrounding countryside. Most of the listed buildings are houses and associated structures, farmhouses and farm buildings, and the others are a church, memorials in the churchyard, and a milestone.


Key

Grade Criteria[1]
II* Particularly important buildings of more than special interest
II Buildings of national importance and special interest

Buildings

Name and location Photograph Date Notes Grade
St Winifred's Church
53°26′12″N 1°09′57″W / 53.43657°N 1.16578°W / 53.43657; -1.16578 (St Winifred's Church)
12th century The church was altered and extended through the centuries, and was
embattled parapet with eight crocketed pinnacles.[2][3]
II*
Lambcote Grange Farmhouse
53°26′13″N 1°11′35″W / 53.43683°N 1.19304°W / 53.43683; -1.19304 (Lambcote Grange Farmhouse)
Late 16th to early 17th century The oldest part is the rear wing, with the main range added in 1747. The main range is in
lintel, and an arched soffit, and the windows are casements.[4][5]
II
Hall Farmhouse
53°26′14″N 1°09′56″W / 53.43709°N 1.16557°W / 53.43709; -1.16557 (Hall Farmhouse)
Late 17th century A farmhouse in
cross windows. On the front is an inscribed stone plaque, and at the rear is a tall stair window.[4][6]
II
Barn range,
Lambcote Grange Farm
53°26′14″N 1°11′34″W / 53.43729°N 1.19264°W / 53.43729; -1.19264 (Barn range, Lambcote Grange Farm)
1694 The range includes a barn and cowhouses with a loft, and they are in
quoins and an asbestos sheet roof. There are two storeys, and an L-shaped plan, consisting of a barn range of eight bays, and a cowhouse at right angles with four bays. The openings in the barn include wagon entries, slit vents, and a dated oculus on the south gable end. The cowhouse has a doorway with a chamfered surround, slit vents, a single-light window, and external steps.[7]
II
Farm building,
Lambcote Grange Farm
53°26′13″N 1°11′33″W / 53.43689°N 1.19262°W / 53.43689; -1.19262 (Farm building, Lambcote Grange Farm)
1695 The farm building is in
quoins and an asbestos sheet roof. There are two storeys and four bays. On the east side are two flights of external steps, and the openings in the building include doorways, casement windows, and slit vents. On the south gable end is a date plaque.[8]
II
Raised slab
53°26′11″N 1°09′56″W / 53.43647°N 1.16560°W / 53.43647; -1.16560 (Raised slab)
1735 The raised slab in the churchyard of St Winifred's Church is to the memory of two children of the Staveley family. It is in magnesian limestone, and is a rectangular slab with a chamfered lower edge on plain blocks. On it is an arcaded panel with an inscription.[9] II
Wilsic Hall
53°27′24″N 1°09′03″W / 53.45670°N 1.15091°W / 53.45670; -1.15091 (Wilsic Hall)
c. 1750 A small
moulded imposts, and a keystone.[4][10]
II
Ha-ha and gate piers, Wilsic Hall
53°27′22″N 1°09′04″W / 53.45613°N 1.15107°W / 53.45613; -1.15107 (Ha-ha and gate piers, Wilsic Hall)
c. 1750 (probable) The
plinths and ogee tops.[11]
II
Chest tomb
53°26′11″N 1°09′57″W / 53.43646°N 1.16576°W / 53.43646; -1.16576 (Chest tomb)
Late 18th century The chest tomb in the churchyard of St Winifred's Church is in
plinth, apsidal ends, a dentilled cornice, and a concave blocking stone with a socket. On the north side is a recessed panel, on the south side is an indecipherable inscription, and the ends have guilloché and fluted ornamentation.[12]
II
Stainton Woodhouse and Cottage
53°26′13″N 1°09′20″W / 53.43701°N 1.15542°W / 53.43701; -1.15542 (Stainton Woodhouse and Cottage)
Late 18th to early 19th century A large farmhouse, later divided, in
plinth, with an eaves band, and a hipped roof of Westmorland and Welsh slate. There are two storeys, a garden front of five bays, and two rear wings. In the centre of the garden front is a doorway, the outer bays are bowed with conical roofs, and the windows are sashes. The main entrance is in the left return, where curved steps lead up to a doorway with an architrave, a fanlight, an archivolt, a keystone with a patera, and a hood mould.[4][13]
II
Dovecote, Stainton Woodhouse
53°26′15″N 1°09′20″W / 53.43760°N 1.15549°W / 53.43760; -1.15549 (Dovecote, Stainton Woodhouse)
c. 1800 (probable) The dovecote was later raised to contain a water tank. It is in magnesian limestone, it is raised in brick, and has a hipped pantile roof. There are three storeys and an octagonal plan. In the ground floor are three doorways and three windows, all with cambered heads, and the middle floor has a door with a sandstone surround, and a window with a ledge. Inside the ground floor are pigsties, and the middle floor contains nesting holes.[14] II
Holme Hall Farmhouse
53°26′24″N 1°10′23″W / 53.43991°N 1.17315°W / 53.43991; -1.17315 (Holme Hall Farmhouse)
Early 19th century The farmhouse is
lintels tooled as voussoirs. The windows in the wing are casements.[15]
II
Milestone
53°27′22″N 1°08′49″W / 53.45623°N 1.14694°W / 53.45623; -1.14694 (Milestone)
Early 19th century (probable) The milestone is on the southwest side of the road opposite Home Farm, Wilsic. It consists of a round-headed pillar inscribed with the distance to Wentworth House.[16] II
Pair of silos, Wilsic Lodge Farm
53°27′01″N 1°09′37″W / 53.45022°N 1.16039°W / 53.45022; -1.16039 (Pair of silos, Wilsic Lodge Farm)
1920s The pair of
embattled parapet.[17]
II

References

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