Basically a timber-framedcountry house, with a two-storey porch added in 1623. Much of it was encased in brick in the 19th century when the house was also extended. It is a two-storey house, consisting of a hall with two cross wings and the porch.[2][3][4]
This is a cottage that has been rendered and altered since it was built. It is in one storey, with attics, and has a thatched roof. The windows are casements with dormers in the attics.[5]
A brown brick house with blue-brick banding, sandstonequoins, and a slate roof. It is in two storeys and has an attic, a two-storey porch, and a lean-to extension. One of the rooms has oak panelling.[6]
A sandstone wall, formerly surrounding the burial ground of a Quaker meeting house. The meeting house was demolished in 1856, and the wall was rebuilt, incorporating some of the fabric of the meeting house and an inscribed stone.[7]
The walls of the moat, and the bridges, are in sandstone with some brick. The bridge on the southwest side dates probably from the 18th century; that on the southeast side has cast iron posts, and is probably from the 19th century. The moated site is a scheduled monument.[8][9]
A brick house with slate roofs in two storeys plus an attic. It has one horizontally sliding sash window in a gable; the other windows are casements.[10]
This is a two-storey house in white-painted brick on a sandstoneplinth with a slate roof. Three steps lead up to a door with a Doricpedimented doorcase.[12]