Most of the listed buildings are houses and associated structures, and these include many large houses along and near to the A629 road, which contains New North Road, Edgerton Road, and Halifax Road. In the ward are Greenhead Park and Edgerton Cemetery, and these contain listed buildings. The other listed buildings include churches and items in churchyards, an aqueduct and a lock on the Huddersfield Narrow Canal, a bridge over the River Colne, a viaduct, bridges and chutes associated with the railway, a milestone, a public house, mill buildings, a former tram shelter, a school, war memorials, and a telephone kiosk.
A group of three houses with a timber framed core, restored and partly encased in stone in 1895. They have stone slate roofs, Nos. 23 and 25 have two storeys and No. 27 has one, and there is a lean-to outshut at the rear with a catslide roof. Some windows have single lights, others are mullioned, and there is an oriel window containing a tripartite casement. One gable is jettied and has exposed timber framing and a finial, and another is tile-hung.[2]
A group of three stone houses with stone slate roofs and bargeboardedgables, three gables facing the road, and two storeys. There are some single-light windows, and the other windows are mullioned with simple hood moulds. The doorway of No. 77 has a chamfered surround and a lintel with a four-centred arch and an inscription, and the doorway of No. 79 has a flat lintel with an achievement and initials.[3]
A large house, incorporating some medieval fabric, but dating mainly from later alterations and extensions. It is rendered, with stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, and an L-shaped plan, with two ranges at right angles. At the entrance is a 20th-century porch and a doorway with an initialled and dated four-centred arch. The garden front has a mouldedeavescornice, and contains a doorway with Tuscan half-columns and a segmental pediment. Along the front is a verandah. The windows vary; some are sashes, some are casements, and some are mullioned.[4][5]
A stone house that has a stone slate roof with copedgables, cut kneelers, and ball finials. There are two storeys and an attic, a front of five bays, and a two-storey extension to the left with a loggia. The doorway in the centre of the main block has a moulded surround, an oblong fanlight, a pulvinated frieze, and a cornice. The windows are casements with plain surrounds. In the east gable end is a Venetian window, and the west end contains a Diocletian window.[6][7]
A roughcast house that has a stone slate roof with copedgables on cut kneelers, and two storeys. The doorway has a moulded surround and a fanlight. In both floors is a tripartite sash window, the upper floor contains a four-light mullioned window, and there is a staircase window at the rear.[8]
A roughcast house that has a stone slate roof with copedgables on kneelers, and two storeys. The doorway has Tuscan half-columns, an oblong fanlight and an entablature. Most of the windows are mullioned, including a six-light staircase window, and the others are sashes, one tripartite.[9]
A stone house with a stone slate roof and two storeys. The windows vary, and include casement windows with long lintels, and two two-light mullioned windows.[10]
The coach house is in stone, with a band, and a hipped stone slate roof. There are two storeys and six bays, the fourth bay projecting slightly under a pediment containing an oval oculus. In this bay is a segmental-headed carriage entrance and two more oculi, and to the left is a doorway with a moulded surround and a semicircular fanlight. The other bays contain windows with round-arched heads and impost blocks.[11]
A terrace of five rendered cottages, with a stone slate roof and copedgables on cut kneelers. There are two storeys, a catslide roof at the rear, and a lean-to extension. The windows are mullioned, with some mullions removed.[12]
The building is in stone and has a stone slate roof with copedgables. The main range has three storeys, and the entrance front is gabled with three bays. In the centre is a carriage entrance with a depressed arch, a keystone and impost blocks. The windows are sashes, and in the top floor is a loading door. The sides have four bays and contain mullioned windows. The other offices have two storeys and an L-shaped plan.[13]
A stone house with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof, catslide at the rear. There are two storeys, it contains four-light mullioned windows, and a dated plaque.[14]
A stone house with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and a rear outshut. In the upper floor are two three-light mullioned windows, and the ground floor contains a four-light mullioned window.[15]
This is lock No. 5E on the Huddersfield Narrow Canal. It has stone coped walls, a single wooden head gate, and double tail gates. There is a wooden footbridge, steps at the tail end, and a stone overflow weir with a cascade at the tail.[17]
A stone house at the end of a terrace, it has a stone slate roof and two storeys. There is one single-light window, and the other windows are mullioned.[18]
A stone house in a terrace, it has a stone slate roof and two storeys. The house contains two sash windows in the upper floor, and a tripartite sash window in the ground floor.[20]
A stone house at the end of a terrace, it has a stone slate roof and two storeys. The windows are mullioned, with a two-light window in the ground floor and a three-light window in the upper floor.[22]
A stone house in a terrace, it has a stone slate roof and two storeys. The house contains three-light mullioned windows, and the doorway has a porch with an inscription.[23]
The coach house was extended to the west in the late 19th century, and has been converted for residential use. It is in stone with stone gutter brackets, a stone slate roof, and gables with bargeboards. The older part contains segmental coach house doors, and in the west part are later openings.[27]
A stone house with stone gutter brackets, a stone slate roof, and two storeys. The windows are mullioned, with two two-light windows in the upper floor (one mullion removed), and a three-light window in the ground floor.[29]
A stone house with a stone slate roof and two storeys. In the ground floor is a blocked carriage arch, and the upper floor contains a three-light mullioned window.[32]
A stone house with a stone slate roof and two storeys. The windows are mullioned; in the upper floor is a three-light window, and the ground floor contains a four-light window with two mullions removed.[33]
A stone house with red brick at the rear, modillions to the gutter in the main part, stone gutter brackets at the rear, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, three bays, and a rear wing. In the centre is a gabled porch, the windows are sashes, paired in the outer bays, and at the rear is a staircase window.[35]
The former stables are rendered and have a stone slate roof with copedgables. They have two storeys and an irregular plan. The front facing the road is gabled and has single-storey flanking wings, the left wing with a cantedbay window. In the centre is a doorway with flanking windows under a continuous hood mould. Above are two circular windows with square hood moulds, and in the gable is a clock. Elsewhere, there are mullioned windows.[36]
The church, designed by Thomas Taylor in Gothic style, is in sandstone with a slate roof. It consists of a nave with a clerestory, north and south aisles, a chancel, a north organ chamber, a south vestry, a crypt under the nave, and a west tower. The tower has four stages, angle buttresses, a west doorway, clock faces, and an embattledparapet with corner pinnacles. The body of the church also has embattled parapets, and the east window has five lights.[37][38]
The gate piers are at the entrance to the churchyard from Trinity Street. They are in stone and have chamfered conical caps. The gates are in cast iron.[39]
A shop in stone with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, a shop window in the ground floor, and a three-light mullioned window in the upper floor.[40]
A shop in stone with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, a shop window in the ground floor, and a three-light mullioned window in the upper floor.[41]
A stone house with a stone slate roof and two storeys. In the ground floor is a four-light mullioned and transomed window, and the upper floor contains a four-light mullioned window.[44]
A stone house at the end of a terrace, with stone gutter brackets, a stone slate roof, and two storeys. The windows are mullioned with four lights.[48]
A farmhouse and barn in one range, they are in stone, and have a stone slate roof with copedgables. There are two storeys, and the windows are mullioned.[49]
A pair of stone houses with a sill band, stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof, catslide to the rear, and with copedgables. There are two storeys, one range of casement windows, and the other windows are mullioned, including a twelve-light window in the upper floor.[50]
A pair of shops in stone, with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, and each shop has one bay. In the ground floor are modern shop fronts, and the upper floor contains two three-light mullioned windows.[51]
A stone house with stone gutter brackets, a stone slate roof, and two storeys. In the upper floor are two casement windows, and the ground floor contains a four-light mullioned window with two mullions removed.[52]
A stone house with a stone slate roof and two storeys. There is one casement window, and the other windows are mullioned, with a four-light window in the ground floor and two two-light windows in the upper floor. In each floor is a blocked doorway with a window inserted.[53]
The mill is in stone, with stone gutter brackets, and a slate roof with copedgables. There are four storeys, fronts of eleven bays, and sides of three bays. In the gable ends are Venetian windows.[55]
This was originally All Saints Church, a Commissioners' church designed by John Oates in Gothic style. The chancel was enlarged in 1878–79, and the church is now redundant and largely in ruins. It is built in sandstone, and consists of a nave, a south porch, a chancel with a south chapel, and a west tower. The tower has three stages, buttresses, clock faces, and an embattledparapet with corner pinnacles. The chancel has been converted into a house.[56][57]
The tomb is in the churchyard of All Saints Church, later Kirke House, and is that of John Oates, the architect who designed the church. It is in stone, and has a hipped top, canted sides, and panelled sides.[58]
The building is in stone with a band, a mouldedeavescornice, and a hipped stone slate roof. There are two storeys and seven bays. The doorway has a moulded surround and a segmental pediment, and the windows are sashes.[59]
The building is in stone with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and a basement, and 17 bays. The outer two bays and the middle five bays project, the latter under a pediment with a moulded surround and an oculus in the tympanum. There are three doorways; the outer ones have moulded surrounds, and the central doorway has Tuscanpilasters, a fanlight, a frieze with sculpted wreaths, and a moulded cornice. The windows are sashes.[60]
A terrace of stone houses with a sill band, stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, and the windows are a mix of casement windows and mullioned windows.[61]
The bridge was built by the Huddersfield and Manchester Railway to carry the road over the railway. It is in gritstone, and consists of a single segmental skewed flying arch springing directly from the rock of the cutting. The bridge has an impost band, rusticatedvoussoirs, a carriageway band, and a parapet with rounded coping and steel handrails. The parapet ends in projecting piers.[62]
The portals are at the west entrance to Gledholt Tunnels. The north portal is the older of the two, the portal to the south tunnel being added in 1882–86. They are built in gritstone, and each portal has a semicircular arch with voussoirs, flanked by piers and wing walls. Above the arches is moulding and a parapet.[63]
The viaduct carries the railway over the valley of the River Colne. The central part consists of four wrought ironlattice girder trusses on stone piers with moulded bases and imposts. There are six round stone arches with bands and coping on the north side and five on the south.[64][65]
The house, which was partly remodelled and extended in 1900 by Edgar Wood, is in stone with a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys, four bays on the front with a shallow cantedbay window extending to the left, and the flat-roofed extension on the right. In the third bay, steps with vase-shaped balusters and moulded handrails lead up to a porch with Tuscanpilasters. The extension contains nine small oblong windows on the front and two in the end.[6][67]
A stone house with quoins, and a slate roof with copedgables on kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and a front of three bays. In the left bay is a two-storey cantedbay window with foliate impost bands, carved panels between the storeys, mouldedcornices, and a hipped roof. In the middle bay is a gabled porch with finials and a pointed arch, flanked by pink granite colonnettes, and behind it is a three-storey tower surmounted by a deeply moulded bracketed cornice. In the right bay are two French casement windows, and the other windows are sashes, most with hood moulds.[68]
The gate piers at the Blacker Road entrance to the house are in stone. Each pier is square at the base, rising to become octagonal, with the sides gabled, and with a pyramidal top.[69]
The lodge is in stone and has a slate roof with copedgables. There are two storeys and two bays, the left bay wider and gabled. In the left bay is a cantedbay window with a mouldedcornice and a blocking course, and above is a paired sash window divided by a colonnette with a foliate capital. The right bay contains sash windows, the upper one in a gabled dormer. The porch is gabled and has colonnettes with foliate capitals.[70]
The gate piers at the entrance to the drive are in stone. They have a square plan and panelled sides. On the fronts the panels have sculptures in relief, each pier has a crocketedfrieze and a mouldedcornice, and one pier has the remains of a torchère.[74]
A terrace of stone houses with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a hipped stone slate roof. There are two storeys and seven bays, the middle three bays projecting under a pediment-shaped blocking course containing a sculpted wreath, and a single-storey single-bay extension to the east. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor with moulded surrounds and a pediment-shaped blocking course. There are two porches with Ionic columns and a full entablature.[76]
A stone house with a stone slate roof, two storeys and three bays. The central doorway has a plain surround, an oblong fanlight, and a mouldedcornice, and the windows are sashes.[77]
A pair of stone houses with a string course, stone brackets to the eaves, a tile roof, and two storeys and attics. In the centre is a three-storey tower with a machicolated and modillioned eaves cornice. On the ground floor is a gabled porch flanked by columns with crocketedcapitals. In the middle floor is an oriel window with mullioned and transomed windows, and the top floor contains a three-light window with a hood mould. At the right end is a semi-octagonal projection with a hipped roof containing two-light mullioned windows. In the bays to the left of the projection and of the tower are mullioned windows, and in the attics are dormers with finials.[78]
A stone house with eaves brackets, and a tile roof with crow-stepped gables on moulded kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and a front of three bays, the middle bay projecting under a gable. This bay contains a gabled porch, over which is a mullioned and transomedoriel window, and above that is a sash window with a trefoiled arch. In the left bay over the ground floor windows is a trefoilparapet, and in the upper floor of the right bay is a three-arched arcade. The garden front contains a cantedbay window.[80]
There is a pair of gate piers at the entrance to both gardens, and these are linked by a dwarf stone wall with mouldedcoping. Each pier has a square section, panels decorated with swags of fruit and flowers in relief, at the top is a segmental pediment on each face, with carving in the tympani, and an urn finial.[83]
The gate piers are in stone. The pair flanking the entrance are chamfered, they have panels with carved swags of fruit and flowers in relief, and on the top are ogee caps and urn finials. A dwarf wall joins them to a third pier that has an elaborate torchère.[84]
A stone house with quoins, an embattledparapet, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays, the left bay wider, projecting, and gabled. The left bay contains a two-storey cantedbay window, the lights with pointed heads, and above is a single-light attic window. The doorway has a fanlight with a pointed head, and the windows in the right two bays are mullioned with two lights and hood moulds.[85]
A pair of stone houses with rusticated angle pilasters, a modillionedeavescornice, a blocking course, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys, and the two houses are symmetrical around one central bay. The next two bays each project forward, and the main block of three bays, which is segmentally-bowed, projects further, with the outermost bay recessed. In the central bay is a doorway with a pediment on a moulded cornice, and the middle bay of each bowed section contains a doorway with Tuscan pilasters, a full entablature, and cornices with pendants. The windows are sashes, some tripartite.[86]
There are two piers flanking the entrance to the drive, linked to similar end piers by dwarf stone walls with chamferedcoping. Each pier has a square section, a deeply mouldedcornice, and a cap consisting of a semicircular acroteria each with incised geometric ornament.[87]
A stone house with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a hipped stone slate roof. There are three storeys, and a south front of three bays. On this front is a porch with Ionic columns, a full entablature, and an open pediment, in the sides are round-headed windows with moulded imposts, voussoirs and keystones, and the double doors have a semicircular fanlight. The windows are sash windows, and in the east front is a two-storey semicircular bay window.[91]
A stone house with raised quoins, embattledparapets, and a slate roof with copedgables, cut kneelers, and finials. There are two storeys and attics, and four bays. The windows are mullioned with hood moulds, some with transoms, and the lights have various shaped heads. The ground floor of the first two bay projects, and has a balustrade with pierced quatrefoils, and a gargoyle. In the second bay is a porch with a moulded and cusped arch, and flanked by paired columns. The third bay is gabled and contains an oblong bay window, and in the attic are two gabled dormers. At the west end is a tower, square at the base, octagonal in the upper part, with lancet windows and an embattled parapet.[92]
The gate piers flanking the entrance to the drive are in stone. They have mouldedplinths, and sunk panels with trefoiled heads and trilobe tracery. On one pier is a cast ironfinial decorated with mythological beasts, globes and crowns.[94]
The gate piers at the entrance to the drive are in stone and have a square plan. They are panelled and have pyramidal caps. The gates are in cast iron and have elaborate foliage patterns.[97]
Originally the lodge to Willow Bank, it is in stone, and has a slate roof with copedgables on cut kneelers, and finials. There is one storey and an attic, with a gabled porch on the front facing the drive. On the front facing the road is a cantedbay window, and above it is a two-light mullioned window.[98]
A stone house that has a slate roof with copedgables on kneelers. There are two storeys and attics, and a front of four bays. The left bay is wider, projecting and gabled, and contains a cantedbay window with a hipped roof, and there is a four-light mullioned window above. In the next bay is a gabled porch, and the upper floor of the bay to the right of this is corbelled out and rises to an attic dormer. In the upper floor of the right bay is a canted oriel window with a hipped roof, and there are two small lights in the attic.[99]
The gate piers at the entrance to the drive are in stone and have a square plan. They are chamfered, with sunk roundels on the front, and they have geometrically shaped tops.[104]
The gate piers at the entrance to the drive are in stone and have a square plan. They contain blind traceried panels, and at the top are deep cornices and ball finials.[105]
The lamp post is in the garden of the house and is in cast iron. It has a gadrooned base, a bulbous fluted stem, an elaborate cross bar, and an octagonal lamp with ornamental cresting.[106]
A stone house with rusticatedquoins, a moulded and bracketed eavescornice, a blocking course pedimented in the centre with a wreath, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. In the centre is a porch with Ionic columns, a full entablature and a blocking course, and a doorway with an oblong fanlight. To the left is a cantedbay window, and to the right is a tripartite sash window, both with Tuscanpiers and full entablatures. The upper floor contains sash windows with moulded surrounds.[107]
The lamp post is in the garden of the house and is in cast iron with a moulded stone plinth. It is fluted, and has a moulded base and cross bar, and a globe light.[109]
A stone house with rusticatedquoins, a bracketed and mouldedeavescornice, a blocking course, partly pedimented and containing a sculpted wreath, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and four bays. The porch has Ionic columns, a full entablature and a blocking course, and to the right is a cantedbay window with Tuscanpiers and a full entablature. The windows are sashes with moulded surrounds, those in the ground floor with Tuscan piers and entablatures.[110]
A stone house with string courses, a bracketed eavescornice, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and a main front of four bays, the left two bays projecting. The porch in the angle has nine pink granite columns with an openwork balustrade, mouldedvoussoirs, carved keystones and a dentilled and modillioned cornice. Steps with quadrant walls carrying gadrooned urns lead up to the doorway that has a moulded surround, and colonnettes with foliage capitals. The windows are round-arched sashes, paired in the upper floor with colonnettes, and single in the ground floor with dentilled and modillioned cornices. The north front has three bays, and contains a cantedbay window.[113]
The gate piers at the entrance to the drive are in stone and have a square plan. They are panelled, and have blocking courses, and a band of foliage carving under mouldingcornices. Flanking the gate piers are quadrant walls.[116]
The lamp post by the drive in the garden is in cast iron. It has an elaborate moulded base and capital, a fluted stem, and an octagonal glass lamp.[117]
A stone house with a mouldedstring course, a bracketed eavescornice, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and a front of three bays. The left bay projects, and has a copedgable and a finial. In the ground floor is a cantedbay window with an openwork parapet and a moulded cornice. The upper floor contains a Venetian window with a moulded surround and sculpted cresting. Steps flanked by quadrant walls with gadrooned urns lead up to a porch in the middle bay. This has four columns and a semicircular arch which has a keystone carved with a mask in relief, and foliage sculpting in the spandrels, and a semicircular pediment with foliage in the tympanum. In the upper floor is a round-arched sash window. The right bay contains a Venetian window in the ground floor and a sash window above.[118]
The gate piers at the entrance to the drive are in stone and have a square plan. They have round-headed panels, bracketed cornices, and at the top are semicircular panels.[119]
The gate piers at the entrance to the drive are in stone, they have a square plan and are chamfered. The piers contain panels with pointed heads, and have moulded caps. Flanking the piers are walls, each containing three blind four-centred arches.[121]
A stone cottage that has a slate roof with copedgables and ball finials. There is one storey and a basement, and three bays. Steps lead up to a central porch which has a pointed doorway. In the outer bays are casement windows, and the right return is a cantedbay window.[123]
A stone house with a band, a modillioneavescornice, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and three bays. In the centre is a Tuscan porch with a full entablature and a blocking course, and the round-arched doorway has a moulded surround and a keystone. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor with moulded cornices.[127]
A stone house with a sill band, a modillioneavescornice, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and five bays. Three steps lead up to a central Tuscan porch with a full entablature and a blocking course, and the round-arched doorway has a moulded surround and a keystone. The windows are sashes, in the ground floor they have moulded cornices, and the middle window in the upper floor has a moulded surround.[129]
A stone house with a sill band, bracketed eaves, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and the windows are round-arched or segmental-arched sashes with various surrounds. The west bay projects and is gabled, and in the ground floor is an oblong bay window with Tuscanpiers, a mouldedcornice and blocking course. In the angle between the bays is a three-storey tower with a bracketed eaves cornice and a hipped tile roof with a weathervane.[130]
A stone house with decorative eaves, and a slate roof with gables and ornamental bargeboards. There are two storeys and attics, and the windows are bipartite and tripartite sashes with trefoil heads. On the house are two two-storey cantedbay windows with hipped roofs. There are two gabled porches with ornate bargeboards, trefoiled arches and columns with foliate capitals, and the doors have trefoil fanlights.[131]
A stone house on a corner site that has a slate roof with copedgables on kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic. On the front facing Edgerton Road is a two-storey cantedbay window, the lights with pointed heads, blind traceried panels between the storeys, and a coved cornice. In the attic is a sash window with a hood mould. The doorway is on the Luther Place front, and this also contains a gabled wing and mullioned windows with hood moulds.[132]
A stone house with stone consoles to the eaves, and a stone slate roof with copedgables. There are two storeys, a double-depth plan, and a symmetrical front of three bays. The central doorway has an oblong fanlight, and the windows are sashes.[133]
A pair of semi-detached houses in stone with a slate roof, gables and ornamental bargeboards. There are two storeys, attics and basements, and a front of three bays. In the centre is a porch with gables on three sides and cusped arches, and in the upper floor is a sash window with a cusped arch. The left bay contains a multi-storey cantedbay window, in the attic is a lancet window, and in the right bay are sash windows.[135]
A pair of mirror image houses in stone with a sill band, a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and four bays. The doorways in the central bays each has a semicircular fanlight, three-quarter columns, a moulded cornice on ornamental brackets, and a blocking course. Each house has a cantedbay window in the ground floor and sash windows with moulded surrounds above.[138]
A stone house with a band, stone brackets to the eaves, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and three bays, the outer bays gabled with finials. In the middle bay is a porch with a mouldedcornice, and a doorway with a moulded surround, a fanlight, and an ornamental hood mould, and above it is a single-light window with a moulded surround. The left bay contains paired sash windows, those in the ground floor with round arched heads, moulded voussoirs and imposts, and a pier with a Romanesquecapital. Above are two roundels, a window, and in the gable is an oculus. The right bay projects slightly, and contains a cantedbay window with a moulded cornice, above it is a paired sash window in a segmental-headed frame, and in the attic is a round-arched sash window.[139]
In front of the house are three gate piers linked to the house by dwarf walls. The piers are in stone with a square plan, and have incised panels, friezes with roundels, and pyramidal caps.[140]
A stone house with a modillioneavescornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys, and an entrance front of three bays, with a tower in the middle bay. The tower has three storeys, rusticatedquoins in the lower two storeys and pilasters above, and a pyramidal roof. The ground floor contains a doorway with a semicircular fanlight, foliate impost blocks, and vermiculatedvoussoirs. In the middle floor is a window that has a balcony on gadroonedconsoles, and the top floor contains a window with an apron containing a rosette. and an entablature. The other windows on the front are sashes. The garden front has two bays, the west bay gabled and containing a cantedbay window.[141]
The gate piers flanking the entrance to the drive are in stone. They have a square section, they are chamfered, and each has a geometrically shaped top.[142]
A stone building, partly demolished, with paired stone gutter brackets, a stone slate roof, and two storeys. It contains an entrance that has a depressed carriage arch with mouldedvoussoirs, and imposts, above it is a sash window, and to the right is a blocked doorway with three-quarter Tuscan columns, an entablature, and a blocking course.[143]
A terrace of stone houses with a mouldedeavescornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys, and each house has two bays. The windows are sashes, and each doorway has a moulded surround, an oblong fanlight, and a cornice.[144]
A stone house on a corner site, with a mouldedeavescornice and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and a basement, two bays on each front, and a curved corner between. Steps lead up to the doorway that has Tuscanpilasters and a full entablature, and the windows are sashes. Cast iron railings enclose the basement area, and flank the steps.[145]
A stone house in a row, with a mouldedeavescornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a basement, and two bays. Five steps lead up to the doorway that has Tuscanpilasters and a full entablature, and the windows are sashes. Cast iron railings enclose the basement area, and flank the steps.[146]
A stone house that has a slate roof with copedgables on kneelers, bargeboards, and finials. There are two storeys, and three stepped gabled bays. One of the windows has a single light, and the others are mullioned, some with hood moulds. In the left bay is a cantedbay window, and the middle bay contains a doorway with a hood mould.[148]
Extending along the front of the grounds is a dwarf coped stone wall pierced by circles with plain raised frames. The wall contains two pairs of gate piers and an end pier, each of which is panelled and has a cornice and a pyramidal cap.[150]
A stone house that has a tile roof, and gables with Gothicbargeboards. There are two storeys and an attic, and a gabled front of one bay. In the ground floor is a cantedbay window with a blind traceriedparapet, the upper floor contains a three-light mullioned window with a stepped hood mould, and there is a small attic window. In the right return is an arched porch, with an oriel window above, and a mullioned and transomed window.[151][152]
A stone house with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. Steps lead up to a central doorway that has Tuscan three-quarter columns, a fanlight, a cornice, and a blocking course, and above it is a sash window. To the left is a two-storey oblong bay window with tripartite windows, and to the right is a two-storey canted bay window with Tuscan piers, and both have moulded cornices between the storeys.[154]
A pair of stone houses with a mouldedeavescornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of four bays. In the middle bays are doorways with oblong fanlights, Tuscan half-columns, cornices, and blocking courses, and the windows are sashes.[156]
There is a pair of gate piers at the entrance to both gardens. Each pier has a square plan, sunk panels with round-headed tops, a cornice, and a semicircular cap.[157]
The building is in stone with rusticated corner pilasters, a mouldedsill band, a moulded eavescornice, and a blocking course with carved wreaths. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays, the middle bay projecting slightly. In the centre is an Ionic porch with a full entablature and a blocking course, and the doorway has a fanlight. Flanking the porch are cantedbay windows with Tuscanpiers, cornices and blocking courses, and in the upper floor are sash windows with moulded surrounds and sunk aprons.[158]
Extending along the front of the garden is a dwarf coped stone wall. This contains two cylindrical stone gate piers with cornices and segmental caps. Between the piers is a cast ironoverthrow.[159]
Extending along the front of the garden is a stone coped wall containing sections of balustrade with vase-shaped balusters. There are five octagonal piers with pyramidal caps.[161]
A pair of stone houses that have slate roofs with copedgables on cut kneelers with gablets. There are two storeys and basements, and a symmetrical front of four bays. The middle bays are wider and gabled, and contain cantedbay windows in the ground floor and basements. These have sash windows with shaped heads, decorated imposts, and mouldedcornices. In the upper floor are paired sash windows with pointed heads and colonnettes between, and in the attics are quatrefoils. Steps lead up to porches in the outer bays with chamfered posts, trefoiled arches and gables, and above are trefoil-headed windows.[162]
A pair of mirror image houses in stone, with a mouldedeavescornice and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and four bays. The middle two bays project, and contain four giant pilasters carrying a full entablature and a pediment. In the outer bays, steps with ornate cast ironbalustrades lead up to doorways. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor with moulded surrounds.[164]
Extending along the front of the garden is a dwarf stone coped wall. It contains three pairs of gate piers that are panelled and have pedimented caps.[165]
Extending along the front of the garden is a dwarf stone coped wall. It contains five gate piers that are panelled and have cornices and pyramidal caps.[167]
The end house of a row of three, it is in stone with a parapet and a slate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and two bays. The right bay projects slightly, and is gabled with kneelers and a vase-shaped finial, and it contains a triangular cusped window. Below is a two-storey cantedbay window with decorative panelling between the floors and an embattled parapet. In the left bay is a doorway with a four-centred arch, flanked by buttresses, and with a gable containing a trefoil, and in the upper floor is a mullionedsash window with a hood mould.[151][168]
A stone house in the middle of a row of three, it has an embattledparapet and a slate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and three bays. The outer bays project slightly, and are gabled with kneelers and a vase-shaped finial, and they each contain a triangular cusped window. The windows are mullionedsashes, bipartite in the upper floor and with three lights in the ground floor. They have hood moulds, and between the floors in the outer bays is decorative panelling. In the middle bay is a doorway with a four-centred arch, flanked by buttresses, and with a gable containing a trefoil.[151][169]
A pair of stone houses with slate roofs. There are two storeys and attics, and a symmetrical front of four bays. The outer bays are gabled, containing in the ground floor cantedbay windows with segmental-headed sash windows and parapets with quatrefoils. In the upper floors are paired round-headed sash windows with hood moulds, and in the attics are dormers. The middle bays have doorways with segmental-headed fanlights, half-columns with acanthuscapitals, and parapets with quatrefoils, and above are segmental-headed windows.[170]
Running along the front of the gardens is a dwarf stone wall containing seven stone gate piers. Each pier is chamfered, and has geometrical ornament and a moulded cap.[171]
The end house of a row of three, it is in stone with a parapet and a slate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and two bays. The left bay projects slightly, and is gabled with kneelers and a vase-shaped finial, and it contains a triangular cusped window. Below is a two-storey cantedbay window with decorative panelling between the floors and an embattled parapet. In the right bay is a doorway with a four-centred arch, flanked by buttresses, and with a gable containing a trefoil, and in the upper floor is a mullionedsash window with a hood mould.[151][172]
A stone house with quoins, a cornice over the ground floor, a mouldedeaves cornice on moulded consoles, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys, five bays, and sash windows. The central doorway has a shouldered lintel, vermiculatedvoussoirs, moulded imposts, and panels to the sides. Above it is a window with a moulded cornice on consoles. In the outer bays the windows are paired. In the ground floor they have segmental heads, moulded surrounds, keystones, and cornices on consoles, and the upper floor windows are round-headed with moulded imposts and voussoirs, keystones, moulded cornices, panelled jambs, and plinths.[174]
Extending along the front of the garden is a stone wall with mouldedcoping, and it consists of linked moulded circles. The wall contains five panelled piers with moulded caps.[175]
A pair of stone houses with a slate roof, two storeys and attics, and a symmetrical front of five bays, the outer and middle bays gabled. The windows are sashes, in the attic they have pointed-arched heads, in the upper floor the heads are cusped, and the windows are paired in the gabled bays. In the ground floor are cantedbay windows in the outer bays, with mouldedcornices and parapets. In the middle bay is a three-light window with a hood mould, and flanking it are doorways with moulded pointed aches and hood moulds.[176]
There is a pair of gate piers at the entrance to both gardens. Each pier has a square plan and is chamfered, and has a large cap with semicircular-arched fronts containing sculpted floral ornament. On the top is a cast ironfleur-de-lysfinial.[177]
The gate piers at the entrance to the garden are in stone. They have a square plan, with panelled sides, mouldedcornices, and conical caps with finials.[181]
A rendered stone house in a terrace, with a band, a mouldedeavescornice and a slate roof with a copedgable. There are two storeys and two bays. The round-arched doorway in the left bay has a moulded surround, a keystone and a moulded hood on scrolled ornamental brackets. The windows are sashes with voussoirs and keystones, in the right bay they are paired. In the upper floor they have segmental heads, and in the ground floor they have round heads, and between them is a colonnette with an acanthuscapital.[182]
A stone house in a terrace, with paired stone gutter brackets, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and an attic, and two bays. The doorway in the left bay has a mouldedcornice on ornamental brackets, the windows are sashes with moulded surrounds, and there is a gableddormer.[183]
A terrace of stone houses with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys, and each house has two bays. The windows are sashes, some with moulded surrounds. There are cantedbay windows in some houses, with Tuscanpiers, moulded cornices and acroteria. Some houses have doorways with Tuscan pilasters and entablatures, and the others have plain surrounds and moulded cornices. There are passage entrances, most with moulded voussoirs and imposts.[186]
A stone house on a corner site, with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof with copedgables. There are two storeys, two bays, and a rear extension. The doorway in the left bay has Ionicpilasters, a full entablature, and a blocking course containing a wreath in relief. Above it is a sash window with a moulded surround, and in the right bay is a two-storey cantedbay window with Tuscanpiers, entablatures between the floors, and a blocking course containing a wreath in relief. In the extension is a Venetian window.[187]
A pair of stone houses with quoins, a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys, and four bays. The middle two bays project slightly and at the top the blocking course is pediment-shaped and contains an anthemion in relief. The doorways in the middle bays have Tuscan pilasters, full entablatures, and blocking courses, each with an acroterion in relief. The windows are sashes and in the left bay is a cantedbay window.[188]
A pair of stone houses with quoins, a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys, and four bays. The middle two bays project slightly and at the top the blocking course is pediment-shaped and contains an anthemion in relief. The doorways in the middle bays have Tuscan pilasters, full entablatures, and blocking courses, each with an anthemion in relief. The windows are sashes with moulded surrounds.[189]
A stone house at the end of a terrace, with a parapet containing openwork over the left bay, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and attics, and two bays. In the narrow left bay, steps lead up to a doorway with a pointed fanlight containing tracery. The windows have chamfered surrounds, mullions, and ornamental tracery. In the right bay is a cantedbay window with an openwork parapet and there are two gableddormers.[190]
A stone house at the end of a terrace, with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. The central doorway has Tuscan columns, an entablature and a blocking course. The window are sashes, and there are two cantedbay windows, each with Tuscan piers, a moulded cornice, and a blocking course with acroteria in relief.[192]
A terrace of stone houses with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys, one house has three bays, and the others have two. The windows are sashes, and some houses have cantedbay windows. The doorways vary, some with moulded surrounds and moulded cornices, and others with Tuscanpilasters or half-columns, and an entablature. Most of the houses have round-arched passage entrances with voussoirs and imposts.[193]
A terrace of seven stone houses with a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are two storeys, each house has two bays, and the windows are sashes. The outer two houses have doorways with Tuscan columns and an entablature, and the doorways of the other houses have plain surrounds and segmental pediments. Between Nos. 171 and 173 is a segmental carriage arch with moulded imposts and voussoirs.[194]
A stone house in a terrace, with a mouldedeavescornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The doorway has a fanlight, Tuscanpilasters, an entablature and a blocking course, and to the left is a passage entrance with a blind semicircular fanlight, moulded voussoirs and imposts. To the right is a cantedbay window with segmental-headed sash windows, moulded imposts, a moulded cornice and a blocking course, and in the upper floor are sash windows.[201]
A stone house in a terrace, with a mouldedeavescornice and a slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The doorway has a fanlight, Tuscanpilasters, an entablature and a blocking course, and to the left is a passage entrance with a blind semicircular fanlight, moulded voussoirs and imposts. To the right is a cantedbay window with segmental-headed sash windows, moulded imposts, a moulded cornice and a blocking course, and in the upper floor are sash windows.[202]
The former church hall of Hillhouse United Reformed Church, is in stone and has a slate roof with copedgables on moulded kneelers. There are two storeys, and the gable end faces the street. In the centre is a doorway with a chamfered surround, and the windows have two lights and cusped pointed arches with oculi in the spandrels. In the attic is a quatrefoil oculus, now blocked.[209]
Originally a lodge, the house is in stone, with bands, rusticated angle pilasters, and a stone slate roof with bargeboardedgables. There are two storeys, and the south front has two bays. The left bay projects under a gable, and contains a cantedbay window with a mouldedcornice and a parapet, and in the upper floor are paired round-headed sash windows with a colonnette between. The east front is also gabled, and contains a round-arched window with an elaborate cornice, and above it is a sculpted plaque with a moulded surround and a pedimented cornice. In the angle is a porch that has pilasters with elaborate capitals, a full entablature, and a doorway with a segmental head.[210]
A stone house that has a slate roof with copedgables on kneelers, two storeys and attics. The east front has three bays, the left bay is gabled, and contains a gabled two-storey cantedbay window. Above the ground floor of this is a mouldedcornice, and between the storeys is trefoil decoration. In the right bay is an oblong single-storey bay window, and the middle bay contains a gabled porch with three trefoil-headed arches on columns. In the south front is a verandah of four arched bays with a balustrade of quatrefoils. The left bay of this front contains a canted single-storey bay window with an embattledparapet, and above it is an oriel window. The windows in the house have colonnettes with foliate capitals between the lights.[211]
The lamp posts stand opposite the corners of the east front of the house, and have octagonal stone plinths with chamfered tops. The stands are in cast iron, and have moulded bases, spirally fluted stems, capitals, and globe lights.[212]
The building is in stone with rusticated angle pilasters, a mouldedeavescornice and blocking course, and a hipped stone slate roof. There are two storeys and three bays, the middle bay projecting under a pediment-shaped blocking course containing a sculpted wreath. In the centre is a Tuscan porch with an entablature, and the doorway has an oblong fanlight. Flanking the porch are cantedbay windows with Tuscan piers and an entablature, and in the upper floor are sash windows with moulded surrounds.[213]
A stone house in a terrace, with a sill band, stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, and the doorway has a fanlight with glazing bars.[216]
A stone house in a terrace, with a sill band, stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, and the doorway has a fanlight with glazing bars.[217]
A stone house in a terrace, with a sill band, stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes. The doorway has a moulded surround and a fanlight with glazing bars, and to the left is a carriage entrance with a depressed arch.[218]
A stone house in a terrace, with a sill band, stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes.[219]
Four stone houses in a terrace, with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and each house has two bays. The windows are sashes, and each house has a doorway that has fanlight with glazing bars, plain surrounds, and mouldedcornices. To the left of each doorway is a passage entrance with a semicircular blocked fanlight, some converted into windows, and all with voussoirs and mouldedimposts.[220]
A stone house in a terrace, with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, and the doorway has a fanlight with glazing bars, Tuscanpilasters, and a dentilledentablature. To the left is a passage entrance with a semicircular blocked fanlight, voussoirs and mouldedimposts.[221]
A stone house in a terrace, with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, and the doorway has a fanlight with glazing bars, Tuscanpilasters, and a dentilledentablature.[222]
A stone house in a terrace, with stone gutter brackets and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, and the doorway has a fanlight with glazing bars, Tuscanpilasters, and a dentilledentablature. To the left is a former passage entrance converted into a window, with a semicircular blocked fanlight, voussoirs and mouldedimposts.[223]
A stone house at the end of a terrace, with a mouldedeavescornice and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The windows are sashes, the ground floor window with a moulded surround. The doorway has a moulded surround, and a moulded cornice on consoles.[224]
A stone house with a mouldedeavescornice, a blocking course, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and three bays. The doorway has Tuscan half-columns, a moulded cornice and a blocking course, and the windows are sashes.[225]
The dwarf walls that enclose the grounds of the church and school are in stone with ornamental cast iron railings. They contain three pairs of stone gate piers, with panels, mouldedcornices, and pedimented caps.[226]
The gate piers flanking the entrance to the drive are in rusticated stone, and have foliage carving in roundels and below the cornices. On the sides are buttresses, and on each pier is an elaborate cast irontorchère on grotesque legs. Outside the piers are double quadrant walls with fielded panels.[227]
The church is in stone with rusticatedquoins, a mouldedeavescornice and a blocking course, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and four bays. The windows are sashes with sills on moulded brackets, two pairs have segmental heads and the others have moulded surrounds.[228]
The public house is in stone with a band, stone gutter brackets, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and six bays. The doorway has Tuscanpilasters and an open triangular pediment on fluted brackets, and the windows are sashes.[229]
The bridge carries Birkhouse Lane over the River Colne. It is in stone, and consists of two segmental arches. The bridge has cutwaters, a band, and a parapet, and on it is an inscribed plaque.[233]
The gatehouse at the entrance to the cemetery is in stone with a slate roof, two storeys and three bays. The left bay is gabled, and has a cantedbay window with an embattledparapet in the ground floor. The middle bay contains a four-centred arch, and the right bay consists of a three-storey tower with an embattled parapet. The windows are mullioned, or mullioned and transomed with hood moulds. On each side are gateways, each with three arches, the middle arch larger, with buttresses, and at the ends are octagonal turrets with pyramidal caps.[234][235]
There are two chapels, now derelict, with an archway between them, in stone. The chapels have diagonal buttresses, slate roofs with parapettedgables, openwork parapets along the sides, and crocketedfinials at the corners. The window tracery is Decorated in style. The archway is rib vaulted, and surmounted by an octagonal spire that has openwork with crocketed gables in the lower part.[236][237]
A large house extended in 1889, it is in stone and has a slate roof with copedgables. The centre part has three storeys, the outer parts have two storeys, and there is a single-storey extension to the south. The main front has three gabled bays, and in the centre is a porte-cochère with octagonal buttresses and crocketedogee caps, and a four-centred arch on each side with pierced spandrels. The doorway has a four-centred arch, sidelights and a fanlight set in a larger four-centred arch. The windows vary; some are mullioned, some are mullioned and transomed, and some are sashes with cusped heads, and most have hood moulds.[239][240]
The house has been much altered and extended, including the addition of a billiard room in 1891. The house is in stone and has a tile roof with shaped gables, two storeys and attics. The windows are mullioned and transomed, most with relieving arches. The porch is gabled and has arches on the front and sides on columns with foliate capitals. Behind the porch rises a three-storey tower with a pyramidal roof, and at the rear is a conservatory.[239][241]
The mill is in stone with stone gutter brackets, and a triple-pitched slate roof. There are six storeys, and fronts of 25 and six bays. Two of the bays contain loading doors, in one of which they have round-arched heads and rusticated surrounds, and at the top is a parapet containing a dated panel.[242]
A stone house on a chamferedplinth, with a Welsh slate roof and sash windows. There are two storeys, and attic and cellar, and two bays, the right bay projecting and gabled. In the left bay, steps lead up to a round-arched doorway with a fanlight, an architrave with pilasters, and a cornice, and in the upper floor is a window. The right bay contains paired windows in the ground and upper floors, and a narrow window in the attic. Throughout, the capitals, keystones, consoles, and hood moulds have highly decorative carvings. In front of the house are walls, gate piers with domical finials, and iron railings and gates.[243]
A stone house that has a slate roof with copedgables. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays, the left bay gabled. The middle bay is narrow and recessed, and has a projecting gabled porch, flanked by paired columns with folate capitals, and there are two-arched arcades on the sides. In the right bay is a cantedbay window with a mouldedcornice. Elsewhere, the windows are sashes, tripartite in the ground floor of the left bay, with colonnettes; all the windows have hood moulds.[244]
A stone house in Italianate style, it has mouldedbands, a moulded and bracketed eavescornice, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and three bays, the middle bay rising to form a three-storey tower. The doorway has columns in pink granite with foliate capitals, moulded panels, a semicircular fanlight with a keystone, moulded voussoirs, and foliage carving in the imposts and spandrels. The top floor of the tower has angle pilasters, a full entablature, and round-arched windows with moulded voussoirs, imposts and keystones. The windows are sashes, round-headed in the ground floor, and with segmental heads in the upper floor.[239][245]
A large house in sandstone that has a slate roof with copedgables, kneelers and finials. There are two storeys, attics and a basement, single-storey projections, and an irregular plan. The porch is gabled and arched, the windows are mullioned with hood moulds, and there are gabled dormers with finials. To the north are a stable and a coach house block in similar style.[246]
A stone house that has a slate roof with copedgables on cut kneelers with ball finials. There are two storeys and attics, and a front of three bays, the left bay gabled. The ground floor projects at the north end under a foliate parapet. The porch has a moulded pointed arch and a hood mould. The windows are modillionedsashes with chamfered surrounds and hood moulds. In the garden front are two gables, and it contains a single-storey semicircular bay window, and a two-storey canted bay window with an embattled parapet.[248]
The grounds of the school are enclosed by dwarf stone walls on the northwest side. They contain three pairs of stone gate piers, each square in section at the base, cylindrical in the centre, and with pyramidal caps.[250]
The house is in stone and has hipped tile roofs and two storeys, and the windows are mullioned and transomed. It was partly redecorated in 1909 by Edgar Wood and J. Henry Sellars. The external part of the redecoration is a long canted mullioned and transomed window with a parapet and an idiosyncratic moulded pattern.[6][251]
The school, which was extended in 1881–82, is in Gothic style. It is in stone and has a half-hippedslate roof, and timber framedgables on coved jetties. There is a two-storey main block and single-storey wings. By the main block is a three-storey tower with a machicolatedparapet, above which is open timberwork carrying clock faces an all sides, and an octagonal slated spire. Most of the windows are casements in chamfered surrounds with mullions, some also with transoms, and some with rose windows above. In the extension, most of the windows have pointed heads.[6][252]
The bridge carries the railway over Hillhouse Lane. It is in stone and consists of a high tunnel-like bridge with a segmental arch, a keystone, impost blocks and a parapet. On the bridge is a dated panel.[253]
The bandstand has a stone base, the superstructure is in timber, and the roof is slated. There is an octagonal base with five steps, a chamferedplinth, and a low balustrade. On this are eight columns carrying an octagonal roof with a cupola and an iron weathervane. The columns have Japanese-style openwork lattice and brackets.[4][254]
The lodge at the Trinity Street entrance to Greenhead Park is in stone, with deeply overhanging eaves, and a half-hippedslate roof, with tile cresting, gables with bargeboards, and a cast ironweathervane. There is one storey and an attic. The porch has four bulbous columns and arches, and there is a cantedbay window, over which is a balcony. The other windows include a two-light mullioned window, and an attic dormer with a modillioned eaves cornice. On the chimney breast is an inscribed plaque.[4][258]
The church is in stone with a hippedslate roof and two storeys. On the front are angle pilasters, a full entablature, and a balustrade with vase-shaped balusters and piers with urn finials. The front has five bays, the middle bay with paired Ionic pilasters, and at its top is a triangular pediment. The windows are sashes, in the ground floor with round-arched heads, rusticatedvoussoirs, and mouldedkeystones. To the left is a recessed bay containing a doorway with a depressed arch. On the right is a recessed four-storey tower with a balustrade, and angle turrets with niches and pediments. The top storey is octagonal, and has an octagonal lead cupola with a finial.[6][260]
The structure was built by the London and North Western Railway for the Huddersfield Corporation Tramways and consists of 40 coal chutes. These are in carried in a timber framework, divided by piers of blue engineering brick with stone bands, and the chutes are in iron. The boundary walls are in stone and each has two gateways with square gate piers with pyramidal tops.[261]
A pair of semi-detached houses on a corner site designed by Edgar Wood, with entrances to both roads. They are in stone with slate roofs, gables and overhanging eaves, and have two storeys and attics. The windows are mullioned and transomed, and there are two two-storey cantedbay windows, one with a flat top, and the other rising higher with a parapet. One doorway has a flat top on console-shaped brackets, and the other has attachments in Arts and Crafts style.[239][262]
The war memorial consists of the life-size bronze statue of a soldier in uniform standing and holding a rifle. The statue is on a pedestal of Aberdeengranite with a mouldedcornice and base, on a square plinth, on a base of two steps. On the front of the pedestal and the base are bronze plaques with inscriptions and the names of those lost in the Second Boer War.[4][263]
The former Baptist church is in stone, and has a slate roof with overhanging eaves. It consists of a nave, north and south aisles, north and south transepts, an undercroft, a southwest porch with a hipped roof, and a squat northwest tower. The tower has two stages, a canted chapel on the north side, gargoyles, an embattledparapet, and a pyramidal roof with a wooden finial. Along the sides of the church are dormers, and the window tracery has Art Nouveau features. To the north of the church is a minister's house with canted bay windows and embattled parapets.[6][264]
The grounds of the former church are enclosed by dwarf stone walls and regularly spaced piers with caps. Between the piers are cast iron railings, some with Arts and Crafts-style finials.[265]
The war memorial is in Norman Park. It consists of a tall granitepedestal with panelled sides and a cornice, on a platform of two steps. Standing on the pedestal is the life-size bronze statue of an infantry soldier with a rifle, and on the sides are plaques in black polished granite with inscriptions, and the names of those lost in the two World Wars.[266]
The war memorial stands on a circular platform on The Belvedere, an artificial mound in the park. It is in sandstone, and was designed by Sir Charles Nicholson. The memorial consists of a column with a Tuscan colonnade behind. The column has a complex shaft with pilasters and half-columns, on a cruciformpedestal, on a square base of two steps. At the top is a deep cornice and a gilded cross, and on the front of the pedestal is an inscription. The colonnade is semicircular and two columns deep, with an ambulatory and an entablature, and it ends in paired piers with pilasters.[4][267]
The west end of the church was completed in 1956. It is built in stone with a grey slate roof, and consists of a nave and a chancel under one roof, a lower south aisle, a lobby and entrance at the west end, and a north vestry. At the west end is a niche containing a bell.[6][268]
The telephone kiosk to the south of 80 New North Road is of the K6 type, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott. Constructed in cast iron with a square plan and a dome, it has three unperforated crowns in the top panels.[269]