Barton-le-Willows
Barton-le-Willows est un village et une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.
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3.7 km
Claxton, North Yorkshire
Claxton is a village and part of the Claxton & Sand Hutton civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. It is near the A64 road and 8 miles (13 km) north-east of York.
4.4 km
A64 road
The A64 is a major road in North and West Yorkshire, England. It links Leeds, York and Scarborough. The A64 starts as the A64(M) ring road motorway in Leeds, then towards York it becomes a high-quality dual carriageway until it is east of the city, where it becomes a single carriageway for most of its route to Scarborough.
The road approximates a section of the old Roman road running from Chester to Bridlington, intersecting Ermine Street – the Old North Road – at York.
5.1 km
Aldby Park
Aldby Park is a country estate in the village of Buttercrambe, near the village of Stamford Bridge in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.
The house, replacing the original Tudor one, was built around 1725 by Jane Darley but it occupies an ancient site believed to be where Edwin of Northumbria was crowned King in 625 AD.
Aldby Park is best known as being the ancestral home of the Darley family. This family's best known member is Thomas Darley, brother of Jane Darley, who owned the celebrated Darley Arabian horse which is widely recognised as being the earliest ancestor of most of the world's thoroughbred race horses. Most recently, it has been the home of Mark Winn, grandson of Rowland Winn, 1st Baron St Oswald, and his son, George Winn-Darley.
The three-storey house is built of brick with ashlar dressing and a slate roof, with a nine-bay frontage.
5.1 km
St Leonard's Church, Sand Hutton
St Leonard's Church is a ruined chapel in Sand Hutton, a village in North Yorkshire, in England.
The church was built in the 12th century, as a chapel of ease to St Botolph's Church, Bossall. The chancel was added in the 15th century, but Sand Hutton remained a small settlement, so the church was largely unaltered until it was repaired in the early 19th century. From 1840 to 1842, St Mary's Church, Sand Hutton was constructed in the churchyard, and St Leonard's gradually fell into ruin. The remains of the chapel were grade II listed in 1953. Despite this, the building is in poor condition, with the masonry around the door supported by metal poles.
The chapel is built of stone and pebbles, with dressings in sandstone and limestone. The remains consist of the round-arched Norman south door with wo orders, volute capitals, an incised sundial to the left, and a section of wall to the right containing one two-light square-headed window with Perpendicular tracery. There are vestiges of the east wall, and inside is a cylindrical font.
5.1 km
St Mary's Church, Sand Hutton
St Mary's Church is the parish church of Sand Hutton, a village in North Yorkshire, in England.
St Leonard's Church, Sand Hutton was a chapel of ease in the parish of St Botolph's Church, Bossall. From 1840 to 1842 a new church was constructed in its churchyard, to a design by Anthony Salvin, and dedicated to Mary, mother of Jesus. In 1861, it was given its own parish, which included the village of Claxton. From 1885 to 1886, the church was remodelled by C. Hodgson Fowler, the work including the addition of a choir. The church was grade II listed in 1985.
The church is built of sandstone, incorporating medieval fabric in the tower, and has a Westmorland slate roof. The church consists of a nave, a south steeple, a chancel and a north organ chamber. The steeple has a tower with three stages, containing a porch with a pointed doorway, a lancet window above, paired bell openings and a broach spire. Inside, there is a memorial to Deborah Read, who died in 1794.
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