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Gillingwood Hall is a historic building in Gilling West, a village in North Yorkshire, in England. The first Gillingwood Hall was a country house, built by the Wharton family in the early 17th century. It was partly rebuilt in the mid 18th century, possibly to the designs of Daniel Garrett. The house burned down in 1750, although various ...
15 abd 17 High Street, Gilling West 54°26′19″N 1°43′12″W / 54.43856°N 1.72005°W / 54.43856; -1.72005 ( 15 and 17 High Street, Gilling Mid 19th century
Gilling West is located on the B6274 road that links nearby Richmond with the A66 trunk road and eventually continues on to Staindrop in County Durham. Nearby settlements to Gilling include Hartforth 1.1 miles (1.8 km) north-west, Whashton 2.6 miles (4.2 km) to the west, and the market town of Richmond 3.6 miles (5.8 km) to the south.
Gilling with Hartforth and Sedbury is a civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. It includes the villages of Gilling West and Hartforth . The civil parish population at the 2011 census was 534.
West Middlesex is the location of the northwestern terminus of Interstate 376, which gives West Middlesex a direct highway connection to Pittsburgh as well as its primary airport. West Middlesex also lies directly on the path of Interstate 80 , itself running cross-country between the New York metropolitan area and San Francisco Bay Area , and ...
The building is a two-storey, red brick farmhouse with three gables and centrally placed chimney stacks. [6] It is typical of 17th-century Middlesex vernacular architecture. [7] A blue plaque commemorates Mark Lemon, who lived in the house as a child between 1817 and 1823. [8]
Skeeby Beck is a small river flowing through Gilling West and Skeeby, near to Richmond, in North Yorkshire, England.Skeeby Beck drains the moorland to the north of Richmond and south of the A66 road, and flows in a south-easterly direction until it runs into the River Swale at Brompton-on-Swale.
Little remains of the original building, although parts of it, dating from the early 18th century, have been incorporated into Yews Mill House. The mill race is still visible, and there is a suggestion that it was once a paper mill, which might account for its small scale. [22] It was shown as a corn mill on the map for 1902. [23]