Thirsk Road drill hall, Northallerton
The Thirsk Road drill hall is a former Army Reserve installation in Northallerton, North Yorkshire, England.
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259 m
Northallerton School
Northallerton School is a coeducational comprehensive secondary school and sixth form with academy status, located in Northallerton, North Yorkshire, England. The school is located over two sites on Brompton Road and Grammar School Lane.
304 m
Zion United Reformed Church
The Zion United Reformed Church is a historic church in Northallerton, a town in North Yorkshire, in England.
In the early 19th century, Congregationalists preached in Northallerton as part of a North Yorkshire circuit, and then from a base in Thirsk. A Mr Trousdale, a deacon from Whitby, moved to Northallerton and succeeded in building a congregation and raising funds for a church. This was opened on 1 January 1819. In 1852, the church constructed a Sunday school to the rear. In the early or mid 20th century, a vestry range was added to the church. In 1872, the Congregational Union of England and Wales became part of the new United Reformed Church. The church and school were separately grade II listed in 1988. In 2023, the church submitted plans for renovations including a new side entrance, but Historic England argued that the work would harm the building's heritage value.
The church is built of brown brick on a plinth, with a cornice and a blocking course, and a hipped tile roof. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre is a flat-roofed projecting porch containing a round-arched doorway with an impost band and a cornice. Flanking the doorway, and recessed on the upper floor, are round-arched sash windows with impost bands.
The former Sunday School, now a church hall, is built of brown brick with an eaves band and a Welsh slate roof. It has one storey and three bays. On the north front are three round-arched panels, the outer ones containing round-headed sash windows, and the middle panel with a sandstone plaque containing an inscription and the date.
361 m
The Golden Lion Hotel, Northallerton
The Golden Lion Hotel is a historic building in Northallerton, a town in North Yorkshire, in England.
The original Golden Lion was a small coaching inn built in the 18th century, the third to be established in the town after the Black Bull and the King's Head. In 1745, John Wesley preached at the inn. Around this time, it was replaced by a much larger inn of the same inn, which dominated the town's postal service and stabled about 30 horses. It later became a hotel, with guests including the future Nicholas I of Russia, Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn and Andrew Carnegie. In the 1920s, it was taken over by the Trust House group, which owned it until 1998. It appears in the 1945 film The Way to the Stars. The building was grade II listed in 1952.
The hotel has roughcast rendering, a cornice and a pantile roof. It has three storeys and a complex plan, with a main range of ten bays, and rear wings. On the front is a large porch with fluted Doric columns, a canopy with railings and a flat roof. The doorway has panelled pilasters, and an open pediment on beaded consoles. To the left are two large canted bay windows, and in the right bay is a carriage entrance. Elsewhere, there are sash windows.
376 m
HM Prison Northallerton
HM Prison Northallerton was a prison in Northallerton, North Yorkshire, England. It operated from 1788 until December 2013. During that time, it variously housed male and female adult prisoners, women with children, youth offenders, and military prisoners. Latterly Her Majesty's Prison Service struggled to keep the old prison operating to modern standards, and citing the costs of doing so and the relatively small size of the institution, it closed the prison in 2014. The prison was bought by Hambleton District Council, which is currently redeveloping the site.
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