Woodsome Hall
Woodsome Hall est une maison de campagne du XVIe siècle située dans la paroisse d'Almondbury près de Huddersfield, dans le West Yorkshire, en Angleterre. C'est maintenant le pavillon du Woodsome Hall Golf Club et un bâtiment classé Grade I. Construit à l'époque élisabéthaine en tant que manoir, Woodsome évolue par étapes en possession de plusieurs générations de la famille Kaye. Le manoir principal est construit sur deux étages avec des ailes en saillie à pignon vers l'avant et un porche à pignon sur deux étages. À l'arrière de chaque extrémité se trouvent des extensions en forme de L formant une cour avec une fontaine.
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11 m
Woodsome Hall
Woodsome Hall is a 16th-century country house in the parish of Almondbury, near Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England. It is now the clubhouse of Woodsome Hall Golf Club and a Grade I listed building.
Built in the Elizabethan era as a hall house, Woodsome evolved in stages in the possession of several generations of the local Kaye family. The main hall range is built in two storeys with gabled forward projecting wings and a two storey gabled porch. At the rear of each end are L-shaped extensions forming a courtyard with a fountain.
958 m
King James's School, Almondbury
King James's School is a coeducational secondary school located in Almondbury in the English county of West Yorkshire.
971 m
South Pennines
The South Pennines is a region of moorland and hill country in northern England lying towards the southern end of the Pennines. In the west it includes the Rossendale Valley and the West Pennine Moors. It is bounded by the Greater Manchester conurbation in the west and the Bowland Fells and Yorkshire Dales to the north. To the east it is fringed by the towns of West Yorkshire whilst to the south it is bounded by the Peak District. The rural South Pennine Moors constitutes both a Site of Special Scientific Interest and Special Area of Conservation.
1.1 km
Fenay Bridge and Lepton railway station
Fenay Bridge and Lepton railway station served the villages of Lepton and Fenay Bridge, West Riding of Yorkshire, England, from 1867 to 1965 on the Kirkburton Branch.
1.6 km
Almondbury
Almondbury (English: ) is a village 2 miles (3.2 km) south-east of Huddersfield town centre in the Kirklees district, of West Yorkshire, England. The population of Almondbury in 2001 was 7,368 increasing to 18,346 at the 2011 census.
The village is close to Castle Hill, Huddersfield's most prominent landmark. Almondbury has several notable buildings, including the 16th-century Wormald's Hall, now the village Conservative club, and the Grade I listed All Hallows Church. The church is mainly Perpendicular in style but the chancel is earlier. The roofs have a long inscription dated 1522 on the cornice. Other wooden furniture of interest includes a Georgian lectern, a pew of 1605 and a late Perpendicular font cover.
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