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Grimston Park

Country houses in North YorkshireDecimus Burton buildingsGrade II* listed buildings in North YorkshireHouses completed in 1839Selby District
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Grimston Park Gates geograph.org.uk 2714503
Grimston Park Gates geograph.org.uk 2714503

Grimston Park is a grade II* listed Georgian country house in Grimston, North Yorkshire, England, some 1.7 miles (3 km) south of Tadcaster. Since being owned by the Fielden family, it has been converted into a number of luxury homes. The house is built on two storeys of Tadcaster limestone ashlar with a Welsh slate roof. It has a 7-bay frontage with a projecting portico, and a three-storey tower and a single-storey entrance lodge at each end. A limestone tower in the grounds, designed like the house by Decimus Burton, is also grade II listed.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Grimston Park (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Grimston Park
Wharfe Bank Terrace,

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Wikipedia: Grimston ParkContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.8647 ° E -1.2436 °
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Address

Wharfe Bank Terrace
LS24 9DD , Grimston
England, United Kingdom
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Grimston Park Gates geograph.org.uk 2714503
Grimston Park Gates geograph.org.uk 2714503
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Nearby Places

St John the Baptist's Church, Kirkby Wharfe
St John the Baptist's Church, Kirkby Wharfe

St John the Baptist's Church is the parish church of Kirkby Wharfe, a village south-west of Tadcaster, in North Yorkshire, in England. The church was first built in the late 12th century, with the nave and parts of the south door surviving from this period. A vicarage was built in the 1240s. The church was extended and altered in the 13th and 14th centuries. The vicar was granted funds from Queen Anne's Bounty in 1757, and the church was restored in 1819. The church was again restored in 1860, with the exterior extensively rebuilt, under the patronage of Albert Denison, 1st Baron Londesborough. The church roof was replaced in the 1950s, and in 1967, it was Grade II* listed. The church is built of Magnesian Limestone and sandstone, with a Welsh slate roof. There is a west tower with two stages, supported by angle buttresses. It has a staircase turret to the south-west, it has lancet windows and Perpendicular windows above, and the tower is topped by battlements and gargoyles. The nave has three bays, with aisles and a south porch, and there is a two-bay chancel with a north chapel. There are a variety of windows, some original and containing fragments of 15th- and 16th-century glass, and others dating from the 1860 restoration. The priest's door to the chancel has a Tudor arch. Inside, there are round piers supporting pointed arches to the aisles, and the tower and chancel arches are also pointed. The font is Norman, and there is a 16th-century pierced screen in the north chapel. There are parts of three 10th-century crosses, and there is an early-19th century memorial depicting the Adoration of the Magi.