Coleby Hall
Coleby Hall is a historic building in Low Abbotside, a parish in Wensleydale, in North Yorkshire, in England.
The manor house was built for John Colby, and was originally named "Bowbridge Hall". Its date of construction is written over the doorways and has been interpreted as 1633, or as 1655. The building was grade II* listed in 1986.[1][2] The Yorkshire Dales National Park describes it as "one of the finest houses in Wensleydale [with] a commanding position above the Askrigg road to Bainbridge".[3]
The house is built of roughcast stone with a stone slate roof. It has two storeys and attics, and an E-shaped plan with five bays, the outer bays projecting and gabled. The middle bay has a projecting gabled tower porch. The porch contains a round-arched doorway with moulded capitals, an ogee-chamfered arris, and a hood mould, and above it is a dated plaque. Inside the porch are stone benches, and the inner doorway is square-headed with a moulded arris. The windows are mullioned and transomed, some with hood moulds. Inside, there are some early fireplaces, a stone staircase, and parts of a plaster frieze in a first floor room.[2][4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Page, William (1914). A History of the County of York North Riding: Volume 1. London: Victoria County History. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
- ^ a b Historic England. "Coleby Hall, Low Abbotside (1316922)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 27 April 2025.
- ^ "Coleby Hall, Low Abbotside". Out of Oblivion. Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
- ^ Grenville, Jane; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2023) [1966]. Yorkshire: The North Riding. The Buildings of England. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-25903-2.