The barn with a horse engine house at the rear is in a ruinous condition. The building is in sandstone with quoins, and partly in two storeys. The barn has five bays, a two-bay extension on the left, and a partial aisle on the front. The openings include a cart entry, doorways, windows, a hatch, slit vents, and an owl hole.[2]
The dovecote is in sandstone, with quoins, and a stone slate roof with square-cut gablecopings and kneelers. There are two storeys and a single bay. On the front is a large opening, above which is a casement window with a stone ledge and a panel pierced with pigeon holes. At the rear, steps lead up to a doorway, and on the roof is a wooden lantern.[3]
The manor house, which was later extended, is in sandstone, with a plinth band, quoins, lintel bands, and a Welsh slate roof that has gables with moulding surrounds and copings. There are three storeys and a cellar, five bays, and a two-storey single-bay extension on the left. Over the middle three bays, and over each of the outer bays is a gable, each gable containing a near-circular window with a moulded surround. In the centre of the house is a doorway with a moulded surround, the remains of a pulvinated frieze, and a peaked cornice, and in the left bay is a doorway with a chamfered surround. The windows either have a single light, or are mullioned with two lights.[4][5]
A cowhouse and hayloft, now in ruins, the building is in sandstone with quoins and a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys and six bays, and the building contains doorways, one with a quoined surround, windows, hatches, slit vents, and a gableddormer, and external steps lead to an upper floor doorway.[6]
A large house, later offices, in red brick on a plinth, with bands, a modillioneavescornice, and a hipped tile roof, with an open pediment over the central bay. There are three storeys and cellars, and symmetrical fronts of three and five bays. The porch has a doorway with pilasters, a fanlight, and a pediment on two columns. Above is a round-arched panel containing an IonicVenetian window, and the other windows are sashes in architraves, some with cornices. In the left return is a three-storey bay window, and the right return has a square projection with a tripartite window in the ground floor and a Diocletian window in the upper floor.[7]
The mausoleum is in sandstone on a plinth, with quoins, and a mouldedeavescornice, a blocking course carved with a family emblem, and a hippedslate roof with ridge tiles. The building is square with a single storey. The doorway has an architrave, and a shallow pediment on consoles, and in front of it are free-standing urns. Flanking the door are square piers with moulded plinths, and gable-shaped caps. The mausoleum is surrounded by an enclosure with railings, obelisks, and end piers.[8]
The bridge was built by the Sheffield and Rotherham Railway to carry a track over its line, and is in red brick with sandstone dressings. It consists of a single segmental arch with a keystone, springing from a moulded band. Above the arch is a rounded band and a parapet with moulded and chamferedcopings. The bridge is flanked by piers and abutment walls with square end piers.[10]
The public house, on a corner site, is in sandstone on a plinth, with a rusticated ground floor and quoins above, a frieze, an eaves projection and modillioncornice, and a hipped Welsh slate roof. There are three storeys and cellars, fronts of five and three bays, a rear wing on the right, and on the left is a single-storey link to a two-storey three-bay house. On the front is a portico with paired Doric columns and an entablature that continues around the building. The windows are casements, those in the middle floor with architraves and cornices on consoles. The window above the portico has a balustrade, and above it are the Prince of Wales's feathers.[11]