History in Structure

Bilton Hall

A Grade II Listed Building in Knaresborough, North Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 54.0115 / 54°0'41"N

Longitude: -1.491 / 1°29'27"W

OS Eastings: 433454

OS Northings: 457390

OS Grid: SE334573

Mapcode National: GBR LQ11.0R

Mapcode Global: WHD9L.2F8L

Plus Code: 9C6W2G65+HJ

Entry Name: Bilton Hall

Listing Date: 5 February 1952

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1149915

English Heritage Legacy ID: 330699

ID on this website: 101149915

Location: North Yorkshire, HG1

County: North Yorkshire

District: Harrogate

Civil Parish: Knaresborough

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Knaresborough

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: English country house

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Knaresborough

Description


SE 35 NW KNARESBOROUGH BILTON LANE
(north end)

2/36 Bilton Hall
5.2.52
GV II

Country house. 1853 for the Watson family, incorporating part of shell of
mid-late C17 house. Brick, random bond and diaper patterned, stone slate
roof. 2 and 3 storeys with cellar and attics, 5 x 6 bays. Rectangular in
plan, with C17 facades to west and north. South (entrance) and east
(garden) fronts built in mid-C19 Tudor-Jacobean style with diaper brickwork,
mullion and transom windows and ball finials. West front: 3 storeys, 6
bays; the end bays project slightly as shallow gabled wings. Quoins.
Mullion and transom windows with cast-iron glazing bars to ground and first
floors. 3-light windows to wings. Central block, ground floor: 3 closely-
spaced 2-light windows to left, three 3-light windows to right. First
floor: paired 2-light window to left; probably C20 single light flanked by
2-light windows to right. Two 3-light mullioned windows under eaves. C19
Tudor-style brick stacks to left and right. North facade: right - C18 and
C19. Service rooms with C20 glazed doors to centre. Left - gable end of
east (garden) front has wide external stack of C17 brickwork with stone
quoins. Gable rebuilt above eaves line, probably in C18. C19 brick stacks.
Interior: large beams in ground-floor room, north end of west range. Rooms
probably all reordered in C19 and altered again in early C20. Mid C19
entrance hall with wide staircase of 2 straight flights. North end of east
range: possibly C18 fireplace of white marble, with surround and large pier-
glass frame of carved wood and plaster. The centre of the west side has
been rebuilt and may originally have had a storeyed porch of the type at
Goldsborough Hall (q.v.). There was a park and hunting lodge at Bilton in
the C14 and a prominent local family, the Slingsbys, owned the hall in the
C16 and until 1631 when it was bought by Thomas Stockdale. The Stockdales
probably built the earliest surviving house, but the family lost its
fortunes in 1721 (South Sea Bubble) and the house was eventually sold to
John Watson of Malton (1742) who was probably responsible for the C18
repairs, and the stable range to the north (q.v.).
Harrogate Advertiser, May 18 1957.
B Jennings, Harrogate and Knaresborough, 1970, p163.
B Williams, Bilton, 1985.


Listing NGR: SE3345457390

External Links

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