Huntroyde Hall

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Huntroyde_Hall an entity of type: Thing

Huntroyde Hall is a grade II listed, 16th-century house in the civil parish of Simonstone in the Borough of Ribble Valley, Lancashire, England. Its estate, Huntroyde Demesne (known locally as 'Huntroyde'), once extended to over 6,500 acres. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Huntroyde Hall
rdf:langString Huntroyde Hall
rdf:langString Huntroyde Hall
xsd:float 53.81209945678711
xsd:float -2.326299905776978
xsd:integer 26024879
xsd:integer 1002640694
rdf:langString Arbory Lodge
rdf:langString Eye catching feeding shed
rdf:langString Wall Green farm
rdf:langString West Cottages
xsd:date 1985-02-12
rdf:langString Ha-ha circa 100M south of Huntroyde
rdf:langString Viewed from the south lawn
rdf:langString Grade II Listed Building
xsd:date 1953-04-01
rdf:langString Huntroyde
rdf:langString United Kingdom Borough of Ribble Valley
xsd:integer 1237660 1238627 1238986 1274552
xsd:string 53.8121 -2.3263
rdf:langString Huntroyde Hall is a grade II listed, 16th-century house in the civil parish of Simonstone in the Borough of Ribble Valley, Lancashire, England. Its estate, Huntroyde Demesne (known locally as 'Huntroyde'), once extended to over 6,500 acres. Huntroyde Hall is reputed to stand on the site of a hunting lodge once owned by John O' Gaunt. The Huntroyde Hall Estate came to the Starkie family by marriage in circa.1464. The first recorded house was constructed on an H-shaped plan in 1576 for the Starkie family and re-built in the Georgian style in the mid-19th century. Wings added to the west side in 1777 and 1850 have since been demolished. The remaining part of the house was re-faced in ashlar sandstone in 1885. Huntroyde Hall features a Grade II listed Ha-Ha, one of the longest in the North of England.
rdf:langString Huntroyde home farm
xsd:integer 1478865
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 14563
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