Dougill Hall
Dougill Hall is a historic building in Summerbridge, North Yorkshire, a hamlet in England. The house was built in 1722, for John Dougill. Nikolaus Pevsner describes the building as having "a handsome five-bay front, a good example of the local manner". In 1910, a single-storey extension was added to the right of the house, and an old service building behind it was converted into a flat in 1980. The building was grade II* listed in 1952. In 2024, it was described as having a dining room, drawing room, snug, kitchen, utility room, workshop, cloakroom and various storerooms on the ground floor, along with the annexe with a lounge, bedroom, bathroom and kitchen. It had three bedrooms and a bathroom on the first floor; and four bedrooms and a play area on the second floor. It had five-and-a-half acres of grounds, including a paddock, and was offered for sale at £2.3 million. The house is built of gritstone, with a deep moulded eaves cornice and a blocking course with panels, and a stone slate M-shaped roof with stone coping. It has three storeys, a double depth plan, five bays, and a two-storey two-bay rear service wing. The central doorway has an eared and shouldered architrave, a dated and initialled lintel and a cornice. On the front, the lower two storeys contain cross windows, each with a moulded architrave, a pulvinated frieze and a cornice, and in the top floor are two-light mullioned windows with architraves and keystones. At the rear are recessed chamfered mullioned windows, and shaped kneelers. Inside, the front left room has original pine panelling including a cupboard. The rear left room has original plasterwork to the ceiling and a fireplace built in 1970 which incorporates a lintel from an outbuilding, inscribed "R 1612 D". Other original features include the main staircase and many of the doors.
Nearby Places View Menu
Dacre railway station
Summerbridge, North Yorkshire
Holy Trinity Church, Dacre Banks
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