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The Maltings, Malton

The Maltings is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. The Old Brewery was established in Malton in 1767, becoming known as Rose's Brewery in the 20th century. In the mid to late 19th century, it constructed a substantial brewery building on Castlegate. In 1965, the brewery was taken over by Tetley's Brewery, and it closed in 1969. The building was grade II listed in 1991, and around that time, it was converted into a business centre. The building is built of pink and cream mottled brick, with dressings in cream brick, an eaves course of orange-red moulded brick, a moulded eaves cornice, and a half-hipped slate roof with wrought iron corner scrolls. There are three storeys, a front of nine bays, four bays on the left return, and three on the right return. On each front, every bay contains a blind recessed full-height arch. The middle bay on the main front has a quoined surround, and contains a segmental-arched doorway. Elsewhere, every arch contains a segmental-arched window on each floor. In the top storey of the right return is a cast iron lifting platform with iron railings on scrolled iron brackets, in gabled timber housing.

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81 m

Malton Baptist Church

Malton Baptist Church is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. In 1821, the Baptist Itinerant Society started preaching in Malton, and before the end of the year, six worshippers were baptised in the River Derwent. Regular services began in 1822, and funds were raised to construct a church on Wells Lane, with the foundation stone laid in 1823, and the building completed in 1824. By 1857, the church had 42 members, although its evening services attracted up to 80 worshippers. The chapel was extended to the rear in 1863. The building was grade II listed in 1974. The church closed in 2022, due to a declining congregation. The church is in painted brick on the front, with pink and cream mottled brick on the right and at the rear, paired modillion eaves, and a hipped slate roof with wrought iron corner scrolls. There are two storeys and a front of three bays. In the centre is a doorway with a tall radial-glazed fanlight. The windows are sashes also with radial-glazed round heads. To the right of the doorway is an iron boot scraper.
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85 m

St Leonard & Mary, Malton

St Leonard & Mary Catholic Church is a medieval church situated in Malton, North Yorkshire, England, now serving a parish in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Middlesbrough. It is a Grade II* listed building in the National Heritage List for England, and retains at least 24 pieces of medieval figurative carving. A notice outside of the church reads: "St Leonard's with St Mary's. Founded in the 12th century as a Chapel of Ease to the Gilbertine Priory at Old Malton. This Church was transferred by way of gift as an ecumenical gesture of goodwill from the Church of England to the Roman Catholic Church in 1971." Dating as it does from the mid- to late-1100s, this church is the oldest currently held by Catholics in England, a distinction formerly belonging to St Etheldreda's, London, which was built some time between 1250 and 1290. St Leonard's is the first English parish church to be returned to Roman Catholic use following the Reformation.
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134 m

The Cornmill

The Cornmill is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. A large corn mill lay on the River Derwent in Malton, but its power relied on a weir which impeded shipping. As a result, it was removed in 1845, and the mill was demolished. The owner, Hurtley and Sons, adapted the early 18th century Derwent Navigation building into a new mill. The company later moved to Kingston upon Hull, and in 1887 the building was adapted for use by the newly-founded Malton Biscuit Company. This was not a success, and closed in 1894. The building next served as the offices and warehouse of the Brandsby Agricultural Trading Association, before being converted into flats. In 2018, the flats were purchased by Impact Living, restored, and let to people with physical and mental health conditions. The building has been grade II listed since 1992. The building is constructed of pink and cream mottled brick on a sandstone plinth, with dressings in orange-red brick, a sill band, a moulded eaves cornice, and a slate roof. The main block has four storeys and eight bays and a central five-storey gabled bay. To the left is a cross-wing with four storeys and three bays, under a pediment containing an oculus, and there is a single-storey three-bay boiler house. The ground floor of the wing has three recessed arched openings, the middle one with a doorway, and the outer ones with windows. Most of the windows in the building are cross windows.
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172 m

Wesley Centre

The Wesley Centre is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. John Wesley preached in Malton in the 1770s, and in 1811 the Wesleyan Methodist Church built a church on Saville Street in the town. The building was grade II listed in 1974, and was upgraded to grade II* in 1995. In 2015, structural issues were discovered with the roof, and the Methodist Church twice attempted to sell the building, without success. Instead, £2 million was raised to restore the building, so that the main hall would become a 600-seat concert venue. The building will also host Sunday religious services, a community cafe, and a food bank. The church is built of pink and cream mottled brick on a stone plinth, with dressings of stone and orange-red brick, a floor band, a sill band, an eaves band, and a hipped pantile roof. There are two storeys and a front of five bays, the middle three bays projecting under a pediment containing a scrolled datestone. Steps lead up to the central doorway that has engaged Tuscan columns, a semicircular traceried fanlight, a plain frieze and a moulded dentilled cornice. This is flanked by doors with similar fanlights, and the outer bays and the upper floor contain round-headed windows with Y-tracery. All the openings are in round-headed recesses. Over the outer bays is a plain coped parapet.