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Listed buildings in Hoyland Milton

Hoyland Milton is a ward in the metropolitan borough of Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England. The ward contains 35 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, eleven are listed at Grade II*, the middle of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The ward contains the villages of Elsecar and Hemingfield and the surrounding area. Elsecar is located beside former industrial enterprises, including collieries and the Elsecar Ironworks.[1] A high proportion of the listed buildings are associated with the ironworks, which have since been used for other purposes, some of the buildings forming the basis for the Elsecar Heritage Centre. The Elsecar branch of the Dearne and Dove Canal, now disused, passes through the ward, and two structures associated with it are listed, a canal basin and a bridge. The other listed buildings in the village include houses and cottages, a church, a school, a market hall later used as an assembly hall, and a former flour mill. Associated with the collieries are a former pumping engine house, and the entrance to a coal mine. Outside the village are listed farmhouses and farm buildings.


Key edit

Grade Criteria[2]
II* Particularly important buildings of more than special interest
II Buildings of national importance and special interest

Buildings edit

Name and location Photograph Date Notes Grade
Barn, Alderthwaite Farm
53°29′30″N 1°26′17″W / 53.49173°N 1.43808°W / 53.49173; -1.43808 (Barn, Alderthwaite Farm)
Late 15th to 16th century The barn is timber framed, an aisle was added later, in the 17th–18th century it was encased in sandstone, and it has an asbestos sheet roof. There is a single storey, 2½ bays, and a single aisle on the east. The barn contains double doors, slit vents, and a casement window.[3] II
Woodhouse Farmhouse
53°30′03″N 1°26′28″W / 53.50090°N 1.44117°W / 53.50090; -1.44117 (Woodhouse Farmhouse)
17th century The farmhouse, which has been altered and used for other purposes, is in sandstone, partly roughcast, and has a Welsh slate roof with chamfered gable copings, kneelers, and finials. There are two storeys, and an L-shaped plan, with a front of two bays, the left bay gabled and projecting to the rear. The doorway has a quoined surround and a deep lintel. Most of the windows are casements.[4] II
Cowhouse and hayloft, Alderthwaite Farm
53°29′30″N 1°26′18″W / 53.49157°N 1.43845°W / 53.49157; -1.43845 (Cowhouse and hayloft, Alderthwaite Farm)
Early 18th century The building is in sandstone with quoins, a Welsh slate roof, and stone slate eaves courses. There are two storeys and three bays. The entrance front is gabled, and contains a ground floor doorway with a deep stone lintel, a doorway in the upper floor with a timber lintel, approached by external stone steps, and there are also casement windows. In the side walls are slit vents, and the left wall contains a pitching hole.[5] II
9 and 10 Market Place, Elscar
53°29′41″N 1°25′17″W / 53.49477°N 1.42147°W / 53.49477; -1.42147 (9 and 10 Market Place, Elscar)
 
Mid 18th century A pair of cottages in sandstone, with quoins, and a Welsh slate roof. There are two storeys, four bays, and each cottage has a rear wing. The doorways are in the centres of the cottages, and all the openings have large plain lintels.[6] II
1–15 Old Row, Elscar, and walls
53°29′46″N 1°25′11″W / 53.49617°N 1.41982°W / 53.49617; -1.41982 (1–15 Old Row, Elscar, and walls)
 
Late 18th century A terrace of sandstone cottages arranged in pairs, with Welsh slate roofs. There are two storeys and each cottage has one bay. The doorways have lintels grooved to imitate voussoirs, and the windows are replacement casements. Attached to the fronts of the cottages are garden walls with domed copings.[7] II
Barn and cowhouse,
Lundhill Farm
53°30′31″N 1°23′59″W / 53.50852°N 1.39986°W / 53.50852; -1.39986 (Barn and cowhouse, Lundhill Farm)
Late 18th century The barn and cowshed are in sandstone, with a Welsh slate roof, and stone slate to the eaves, and they are mainly in two storeys. The barn has quoins and a gable with copings and moulded kneelers. It contains two large arched cart entries with quoined surrounds and keystones, a doorway, and a pitching hole. The cowshed to the right has six doors, two with round-arched lintels, and external steps leading to the hayloft, that has square openings and a circular pitching hole.[8] II
Farm building, Lundhill Farm
53°30′32″N 1°23′58″W / 53.50878°N 1.39956°W / 53.50878; -1.39956 (Farm building, Lundhill Farm)
Late 18th century The farm building contains a cartshed and a dovecote, and later a pigsty. It is in sandstone on a plinth, with quoins, a moulded sill band between the top floors, a moulded eaves cornice, and a stone slate roof with coped gables and kneelers. There are three storeys and three bays. In the ground floor are three archways with piers, impost bands, and keystones. The upper floors contain mullioned windows with lintels grooved to resemble voussoirs.[9] II
Wood Head Hall Farmhouse
53°30′49″N 1°26′26″W / 53.51369°N 1.44043°W / 53.51369; -1.44043 (Wood Head Hall Farmhouse)
Late 18th century The farmhouse is in sandstone on a plinth, with quoins, a sill band, a moulded eaves cornice, and a stone slate roof with moulded gable copings and moulded kneelers. There are two storeys and an attic, and a symmetrical front of five bays. The central doorway is set in a round-arched recess, and has an architrave, a plain frieze, and a pediment on consoles. The windows are sashes, the window above the doorway with an architrave, a pulvinated frieze, and a cornice.[10] II
Elsecar Footrill
53°29′32″N 1°25′16″W / 53.49227°N 1.42116°W / 53.49227; -1.42116 (Elscar Footrill)
 
c. 1795 The footrill, or pedestrian entrance to a mine, has retaining and wing walls in sandstone. The doorway has a quoined surround and a deep lintel, and it contains a square-latticed iron door leading to a vaulted tunnel. Above the entrance is an inscribed iron plaque.[1][11] II
Station Row
53°29′46″N 1°25′08″W / 53.49616°N 1.41888°W / 53.49616; -1.41888 (Station Row)
 
1796 A terrace of ten cottages designed by John Carr, in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs. Each cottage has a single bay, and they form a symmetrical row, the middle two cottages and the two at each end with three storeys and hipped roofs, and the linking cottages between with two storeys.[1][12] II
12–15 Skiers Hall Cottages, Elscar
53°29′32″N 1°25′49″W / 53.49210°N 1.43023°W / 53.49210; -1.43023 (12–15 Skiers Hall Cottages, Elscar)
1797–98 A row of four cottages designed by John Carr, in sandstone, with hipped sandstone slate roofs, and two storeys. The central pair of cottages are semi-detached, and linked to the outer pair by single-storey links, forming a symmetrical row. All the windows have wedge-shaped monolithic lintels grooved as false voussoirs, and each cottage has a modern porch.[13] II
Canal basin and culvert
53°30′14″N 1°24′33″W / 53.50398°N 1.40914°W / 53.50398; -1.40914 (Canal basin and culvert)
 
c. 1798 The basin was built by the Dearne and Dove Canal to serve Hemingfield Colliery. It is lined in stone with round-edged coping stones, and there is some brickwork in the culvert. The basin is rectangular, with an arm extending from each corner. At the entrance and at the exit are segmental archways.[14] II
Smithy Bridge
53°30′23″N 1°23′53″W / 53.50631°N 1.39805°W / 53.50631; -1.39805 (Smithy Bridge)
 
c. 1800 The bridge carries Smithy Bridge Lane (B6907 road) over the bed of the Elsecar branch of the Dearne and Dove Canal. It is in sandstone, and consists of a single elliptical arch. The bridge has voussoirs, a coped parapet, curving abutment walls, and projecting end piers.[15] II
4–8 Distillery Side, Elscar
53°29′42″N 1°25′15″W / 53.49508°N 1.42080°W / 53.49508; -1.42080 (4–8 Distillery Side, Elscar)
Late 18th to early 19th century A row of cottages that has been altered, in sandstone with a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, six bays, and a single-storey rear wing. Some of the lintels are grooved to imitate voussoirs, and others have been altered.[16] II
Cartshed, Beech House Farm
53°30′30″N 1°23′55″W / 53.50832°N 1.39874°W / 53.50832; -1.39874 (Cartshed, Beech House Farm)
Early 19th century The cartshed is in sandstone with an asbestos sheet roof. There are two storeys, five bays, and a lean-to at the end. In the ground floor is an arcade of basket-arched openings, and the upper floor contains a square opening above each arch.[17] II
Buildings 13-14, railway station, offices, housing and gate piers, Elsecar Central Workshops
53°29′41″N 1°25′12″W / 53.49483°N 1.41990°W / 53.49483; -1.41990 (Building 13-14, railway station, offices, housing and gate piers, Elscar Central Workshops)
Early 19th century A row of cottages, later altered and expanded to form a house, a private railway station, and offices. The buildings are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs, they are mainly in two storeys, and have an irregular plan.[1][18] II*
Building 19, former workshop, Elsecar Ironworks
53°29′38″N 1°25′12″W / 53.49392°N 1.42009°W / 53.49392; -1.42009 (Building 19, former workshop, Elscar Ironworks)
c. 1835 (probable) The former workshop is in sandstone, with an inner lining of brick, and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables. There are two storeys and five bays. The windows are small-paned in cast iron frames, and in the upper floor is a taking-in door with a quoined surround. Double doors have been inserted in the northeast gable end.[19] II*
1–3 Distillery Side, Elscar
53°29′41″N 1°25′04″W / 53.49466°N 1.41788°W / 53.49466; -1.41788 (1–3 Distillery Side, Elscar)
1836 A school, later converted for residential use, it is in sandstone with a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and a partial basement, and three bays. The windows and doorways have been altered and replaced.[20] II
Reform Row
53°29′54″N 1°25′00″W / 53.49844°N 1.41658°W / 53.49844; -1.41658 (Reform Row)
 
1837 A terrace of 28 cottages in a long curved row, in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs, coped gables and kneelers. There are two storeys, in the centre is a round-arched passage, above which is an inscribed and dated plaque, and there are two more through-passages. The doorways are arranged in pairs, each cottage has a three-light window in each floor, and there are two-light windows over the passages.[21] II
Holy Trinity Church, Elscar
53°29′50″N 1°25′06″W / 53.49724°N 1.41834°W / 53.49724; -1.41834 (Holy Trinity Church, Elscar)
 
1841–43 The church, designed by J. P. Pritchett in Early English style, is in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof. It consists of a nave, a chancel with a semi-octagonal apse, a vestry and an organ chamber, and a west steeple. The steeple has a tower with two stages, clasping buttresses, rising to octagonal turrets with pinnacles, a clock face on the west side, and a recessed spire with lucarnes and a weathervane.[1][22] II
Elsecar Mill
53°29′50″N 1°25′02″W / 53.49717°N 1.41723°W / 53.49717; -1.41723 (Elsecar Mill)
 
1842 The flour mill, later used for other purposes, is in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof. There are three storeys and a half-basement, six bays, and a single-storey gabled extension projecting on the right. In the third bay is a doorway, above which is a loading door, and over that a gabled wooden gantry, and the windows are small-paned.[23] II
Former pumping engine house,
Hemingfield Colliery
53°30′14″N 1°24′29″W / 53.50380°N 1.40818°W / 53.50380; -1.40818 (Former pumping engine house, Hemingfield Colliery)
 
1843 The former Cornish pumping engine house is in sandstone, with a red brick extension added in 1934, and a flat concrete roof. It has been converted for residential use. There are two storeys and a single bay. The southwest wall is thicker and supports the concrete head beam above the pumping shaft. The northwest wall contains a large arched opening that has been blocked, and domestic windows have been inserted in the northeast wall.[24] II*
Buildings 20a and 21, former rolling mill, Elsecar Ironworks
53°29′39″N 1°25′11″W / 53.49424°N 1.41964°W / 53.49424; -1.41964 (Buildings 20a and 21, former rolling mill, Elscar Ironworks)
1850 The former rolling mill building, which was extended in 1860, has a cast iron frame. The gable ends are in sandstone with quoins, and the infill panels are mainly in sandstone on the east side, and brick on the west side. The roof is in Welsh slate, there is a single storey, and twelve bays, the north bay set at an angle. The iron framework includes round columns with simple capitals and bases, and between them are beams forming basket arches with perforated spandrels. Set into the ground adjacent to the north gable are two halves of a spoked colliery pit wheel.[25] II*
1–9 Cobcar Lane, Elscar
53°29′57″N 1°24′58″W / 53.49907°N 1.41605°W / 53.49907; -1.41605 (1–9 Cobcar Lane, Elscar)
 
Mid 19th century A terrace of five houses in sandstone, with a floor band, an eaves band, stone gutter brackets, and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables and kneelers. There are two storeys, and the middle house projects under a pediment containing an oculus. Each doorway has a fanlight, the windows are sashes, all have segmental-arched lintels grooved to imitate voussoirs, and the ground floor windows have aprons.[26] II
Cobcar Terrace, Elscar
53°29′57″N 1°24′56″W / 53.49922°N 1.41552°W / 53.49922; -1.41552 (Cobcar Terrace, Elscar)
 
Mid 19th century A terrace of ten houses in sandstone, with a sill band, an eaves band, gutter brackets, and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables and kneelers. There are two storeys, each house has two bays, and the third and seventh houses project under a pediment containing an oculus. The doorways have fanlights, those in the middle two houses are round-headed with linked peaked hoods, and the other fanlights have segmental heads. The windows are sashes, and all windows and the doorways with segmental-headed fanlights have lintels grooved to imitate voussoirs.[27] II
Holy Trinity Academy and school house
53°29′50″N 1°25′08″W / 53.49732°N 1.41879°W / 53.49732; -1.41879 (Holy Trinity Academy and school house)
1852 The school and separate master's house were designed by J. P. Pritchett and son. They are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs, and the gables have decorative perforated bargeboards. The school has a single storey and a south front of three gables, each containing a small lozenge-shaped window. Below are larger windows, the central window mullioned and transomed, with a stepped hood mould. Extending from the front is a lower twin-gabled extension. The house has two storeys and three bays, the middle bay projecting under a gable.[1][28] II
56–64 Fitzwilliam Street and garden walls, Elscar
53°29′43″N 1°25′25″W / 53.49521°N 1.42349°W / 53.49521; -1.42349 (56–64 Fitzwilliam Street and garden walls, Elscar)
 
c. 1853 A terrace of five houses in sandstone, with a projecting eaves course, gutter brackets, and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables. There are two storeys and five bays, the middle bay projecting under a gable containing an oculus. The central doorway is flanked by sash windows, all under a hood on brackets, and the other windows are paired sashes. The front gardens are enclosed by walls with triangular copings and simple gate posts.[29] II
Fitzwilliam Lodge
53°29′42″N 1°25′23″W / 53.49500°N 1.42303°W / 53.49500; -1.42303 (Fitzwilliam Lodge)
 
1853 Originally a miners' lodging house, later divided into private dwellings, it is in sandstone, with floor bands, an eaves cornice, and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables. There are three storeys and a basement, a symmetrical front of seven bays, the middle three bays slightly projecting under a pediment containing an oculus, a recessed two-storey single-bay extension on the right, and a two-storey rear wing. The central doorway has a semicircular fanlight, and is set in a surround with moulded imposts, an archivolt, paterae, and a small cornice. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor with sunken aprons.[30] II
Building 1, former casting shed, Elsecar Ironworks
53°29′36″N 1°25′11″W / 53.49334°N 1.41981°W / 53.49334; -1.41981 (Building 1, former casting shed, Elscar Ironworks)
1850s The casting shed, later used for other purposes, is in brick, incorporating some stonework, and has metal sheet roofs. On the west front are three large arched openings, and there is a four bay extension containing segmental-headed iron-framed windows. In the north gable are two locomotive entrances, and there are various other openings, some blocked.[31] II*
Buildings 4-7, former stores, Elsecar Central Workshops
53°29′39″N 1°25′15″W / 53.49409°N 1.42079°W / 53.49409; -1.42079 (Buildings 4-7, former stores, Elscar Central Workshops)
1850s The former stores are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs, and form a long linear range following the curve of the street. They have one storey at the north end of the range and two as it goes down the hill, and at the end is a coped gable. There are varied openings, some of which are blocked.[32] II*
Buildings 8-12, former workshops, offices and warehousing, Elsecar Central Workshops
53°29′41″N 1°25′15″W / 53.49473°N 1.42080°W / 53.49473; -1.42080 (Buildings 8-12, former workshops, offices and warehousing, Elscar Central Workshops)
1850s The former workshops, office and warehousing are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs. In the centre is a two-storey office block forming a cross-wing with a coped gable containing a circular window. This is flanked by long single-storey ranges that were formerly warehouses and workshops.[33] II*
Building 17, former fitting shop, Elsecar Central Workshops
53°29′41″N 1°25′13″W / 53.49460°N 1.42034°W / 53.49460; -1.42034 (Building 17, former fitting shop, Elscar Central Workshops)
 
1850s The workshop is in sandstone with an inner lining of brick, and Welsh slate roofs. It consists of a wide nave, and lean-to aisles, the west aisle with ten bays, and the east with seven. The gable ends are quoined and coped. Each contains a large central round-arched opening, above which is a central ventilation opening and an inscribed datestone.[1][34] II*
Building 22, former joiner's shop, chimney and boiler house, Elsecar Central Workshops
53°29′40″N 1°25′14″W / 53.49439°N 1.42051°W / 53.49439; -1.42051 (Building 22, former joiner's shop, chimney and boiler house, Elscar Central Workshops)
1850s The workshop with an integral engine house is in sandstone, with an inner lining of brick, string courses, and hipped Welsh slate roofs. There are two storeys, it is eight bays long and three wide. In the ground floor are basket-arched openings with voussoirs and keystones, and the upper floor contains a taking-in door with a winch. On the southern end is a cantilevered staircase leading to an upper floor doorway with a round-arched fanlight. At the northern end is the boiler chimney with a square base rising to a cornice, above which it is octagonal and tapering, and has a corniced cap.[35] II*
Former housing,
Elsecar Ironworks
53°29′37″N 1°25′13″W / 53.49367°N 1.42031°W / 53.49367; -1.42031 (Former housing, Elscar Ironworks)
1850s A pair of workers' cottages, they are in sandstone on the west front, mainly in brick elsewhere, and with Welsh slate roofs. There are two storeys, the left cottage has three bays, and the right cottage has two. In the centre of each cottage is a doorway with a fanlight, that in the left cottage set in a round-arched recess. The windows in the right cottage are sashes, and the others have been altered.[36] II*
Buildings 2 and 3, entry range and wall, Elsecar Ironworks
53°29′37″N 1°25′13″W / 53.49349°N 1.42018°W / 53.49349; -1.42018 (Buildings 2 and 3, entry range and wall, Elscar Ironworks)
1860s The entrance building to the ironworks, it is in sandstone on the west front, with brick elsewhere, and Welsh slate roofs. It consists of a linear range with two storeys and six bays. In the ground floor are two wide basket-arched entrances with quoined and chamfered surrounds, and the upper floor contains four round-arched windows. The western face of the boundary wall is in stone, the eastern face in brick, and it contains three blocked round-arched windows.[37] II*
Milton Hall
53°29′41″N 1°25′18″W / 53.49461°N 1.42172°W / 53.49461; -1.42172 (Milton Hall)
 
1870 A market hall, later an assembly hall, it is in sandstone on a plinth, with an eaves band, and a triple-span hipped Welsh slate roof. There is a single storey, with five bays on Wath Road, and nine on Fitzwilliam Street. The middle bay on each front projects slightly and has a pediment with a cornice and an apex block. Both middle bays have a round-arched recess with impost bands, and contain a doorway with a semicircular fanlight. The windows have round-arched heads.[38] II

References edit

Citations edit

Sources edit

  • Historic England, "Barn approximately 10 metres to north-east of Alderthwaite Farmhouse, Hoyland Milton (1151085)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Woodhouse Farmhouse, Hoyland Milton (1191488)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Cowhouse with hayloft approximately 15 metres to north-west of Alderthwaite Farmhouse, Hoyland Milton (1151086)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Nos. 9 and 10 Market Place, Hoyland Milton (1191255)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Nos. 1 to 15, Old Row and attached front garden walls, Hoyland Milton (1151094)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 9 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Barn and attached cowhouse with hayloft approximately 50 metres to west of Lundhill Farmhouse, Hoyland Milton (1151171)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Farmbuilding approximately 20 metres to west of Lundhill Farmhouse, Hoyland Milton (1286996)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Wood Head Hall Farmhouse, Hoyland Milton (1286926)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Elsecar Footrill, Hoyland Milton (1315026)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Station Row, Hoyland Milton (1191290)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Nos. 12 to 15 Skiers Hall Cottages, Hoyland Milton (1465747)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Canal basin with its associated culvert and canal lining at SE3930 0095, Hoyland Milton (1151022)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Smithy Bridge, Hoyland Milton (1151175)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Nos. 4–8 Distillery Side, Hoyland Milton (1151090)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Cartshed at Beech House farm approximately 50 metres to east of farmhouse, Hoyland Milton (1287001)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Buildings 13-14, former railway station, offices, housing and gate piers at Elsecar Central Workshops, Hoyland Milton (1191337)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Building 19, former workshop at Elsecar Ironworks, Hoyland Milton (1191442)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Nos. 1–3 Distillery Side, Hoyland Milton (1151089)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 9 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Reform Row, Hoyland Milton (1315024)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Church of the Holy Trinity, Hoyland Milton (1151087)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Elsecar Mill, Hoyland Milton (1151095)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Former Cornish pumping engine house at Hemingfield Colliery, Hoyland Milton (1470733)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Buildings 20a and 21, former rolling mill at Elsecar Ironworks, including two halved colliery pit wheels, Hoyland Milton (1151097)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Nos. 1–9 Cobcar Lane, Hoyland Milton (1151088)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 9 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Elsecar Holy Trinity CE Primary Academy and School Master's House, Hoyland Milton (1465637)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Cobcar Terrace, Hoyland Milton (1191318)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Nos. 56–64 Fitzwilliam Street and attached front garden walls, Hoyland Milton (1151091)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Fitzwilliam Lodge, Hoyland Milton (1151092)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Building 1, former Elsecar Ironworks casting shed, Hoyland Milton (1465684)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Buildings 4-7, stores at former Elsecar Central Workshops, Hoyland Milton (1465836)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Buildings 8-12, former workshops, offices and warehousing at the former Elsecar Central Workshops, Hoyland Milton (1465837)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Building 17, former fitting shop at Elsecar Central Workshops, Hoyland Milton (1287085)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Building 22, former Joiner's Shop, including chimney and rebuilt boiler house (building 16), Hoyland Milton (1315025)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Housing at the former Elsecar Ironworks, 2 and 4 Forge Lane, Hoyland Milton (1151096)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Buildings 2 and 3 and boundary wall, former Elsecar Ironworks entry range, Hoyland Milton (1465834)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 10 October 2021
  • Historic England, "Milton Hall, Hoyland Milton (1293411)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 October 2021
  • Historic England, Listed Buildings, retrieved 9 October 2021
  • Harman, Ruth; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2017), Yorkshire West Riding: Sheffield and the South, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-22468-9

listed, buildings, hoyland, milton, hoyland, milton, ward, metropolitan, borough, barnsley, south, yorkshire, england, ward, contains, listed, buildings, that, recorded, national, heritage, list, england, these, eleven, listed, grade, middle, three, grades, ot. Hoyland Milton is a ward in the metropolitan borough of Barnsley South Yorkshire England The ward contains 35 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England Of these eleven are listed at Grade II the middle of the three grades and the others are at Grade II the lowest grade The ward contains the villages of Elsecar and Hemingfield and the surrounding area Elsecar is located beside former industrial enterprises including collieries and the Elsecar Ironworks 1 A high proportion of the listed buildings are associated with the ironworks which have since been used for other purposes some of the buildings forming the basis for the Elsecar Heritage Centre The Elsecar branch of the Dearne and Dove Canal now disused passes through the ward and two structures associated with it are listed a canal basin and a bridge The other listed buildings in the village include houses and cottages a church a school a market hall later used as an assembly hall and a former flour mill Associated with the collieries are a former pumping engine house and the entrance to a coal mine Outside the village are listed farmhouses and farm buildings Key editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Grade Criteria 2 II Particularly important buildings of more than special interestII Buildings of national importance and special interestBuildings editName and location Photograph Date Notes GradeBarn Alderthwaite Farm53 29 30 N 1 26 17 W 53 49173 N 1 43808 W 53 49173 1 43808 Barn Alderthwaite Farm Late 15th to 16th century The barn is timber framed an aisle was added later in the 17th 18th century it was encased in sandstone and it has an asbestos sheet roof There is a single storey 2 bays and a single aisle on the east The barn contains double doors slit vents and a casement window 3 IIWoodhouse Farmhouse53 30 03 N 1 26 28 W 53 50090 N 1 44117 W 53 50090 1 44117 Woodhouse Farmhouse 17th century The farmhouse which has been altered and used for other purposes is in sandstone partly roughcast and has a Welsh slate roof with chamfered gable copings kneelers and finials There are two storeys and an L shaped plan with a front of two bays the left bay gabled and projecting to the rear The doorway has a quoined surround and a deep lintel Most of the windows are casements 4 IICowhouse and hayloft Alderthwaite Farm53 29 30 N 1 26 18 W 53 49157 N 1 43845 W 53 49157 1 43845 Cowhouse and hayloft Alderthwaite Farm Early 18th century The building is in sandstone with quoins a Welsh slate roof and stone slate eaves courses There are two storeys and three bays The entrance front is gabled and contains a ground floor doorway with a deep stone lintel a doorway in the upper floor with a timber lintel approached by external stone steps and there are also casement windows In the side walls are slit vents and the left wall contains a pitching hole 5 II9 and 10 Market Place Elscar53 29 41 N 1 25 17 W 53 49477 N 1 42147 W 53 49477 1 42147 9 and 10 Market Place Elscar nbsp Mid 18th century A pair of cottages in sandstone with quoins and a Welsh slate roof There are two storeys four bays and each cottage has a rear wing The doorways are in the centres of the cottages and all the openings have large plain lintels 6 II1 15 Old Row Elscar and walls53 29 46 N 1 25 11 W 53 49617 N 1 41982 W 53 49617 1 41982 1 15 Old Row Elscar and walls nbsp Late 18th century A terrace of sandstone cottages arranged in pairs with Welsh slate roofs There are two storeys and each cottage has one bay The doorways have lintels grooved to imitate voussoirs and the windows are replacement casements Attached to the fronts of the cottages are garden walls with domed copings 7 IIBarn and cowhouse Lundhill Farm53 30 31 N 1 23 59 W 53 50852 N 1 39986 W 53 50852 1 39986 Barn and cowhouse Lundhill Farm Late 18th century The barn and cowshed are in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof and stone slate to the eaves and they are mainly in two storeys The barn has quoins and a gable with copings and moulded kneelers It contains two large arched cart entries with quoined surrounds and keystones a doorway and a pitching hole The cowshed to the right has six doors two with round arched lintels and external steps leading to the hayloft that has square openings and a circular pitching hole 8 IIFarm building Lundhill Farm53 30 32 N 1 23 58 W 53 50878 N 1 39956 W 53 50878 1 39956 Farm building Lundhill Farm Late 18th century The farm building contains a cartshed and a dovecote and later a pigsty It is in sandstone on a plinth with quoins a moulded sill band between the top floors a moulded eaves cornice and a stone slate roof with coped gables and kneelers There are three storeys and three bays In the ground floor are three archways with piers impost bands and keystones The upper floors contain mullioned windows with lintels grooved to resemble voussoirs 9 IIWood Head Hall Farmhouse53 30 49 N 1 26 26 W 53 51369 N 1 44043 W 53 51369 1 44043 Wood Head Hall Farmhouse Late 18th century The farmhouse is in sandstone on a plinth with quoins a sill band a moulded eaves cornice and a stone slate roof with moulded gable copings and moulded kneelers There are two storeys and an attic and a symmetrical front of five bays The central doorway is set in a round arched recess and has an architrave a plain frieze and a pediment on consoles The windows are sashes the window above the doorway with an architrave a pulvinated frieze and a cornice 10 IIElsecar Footrill53 29 32 N 1 25 16 W 53 49227 N 1 42116 W 53 49227 1 42116 Elscar Footrill nbsp c 1795 The footrill or pedestrian entrance to a mine has retaining and wing walls in sandstone The doorway has a quoined surround and a deep lintel and it contains a square latticed iron door leading to a vaulted tunnel Above the entrance is an inscribed iron plaque 1 11 IIStation Row53 29 46 N 1 25 08 W 53 49616 N 1 41888 W 53 49616 1 41888 Station Row nbsp 1796 A terrace of ten cottages designed by John Carr in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs Each cottage has a single bay and they form a symmetrical row the middle two cottages and the two at each end with three storeys and hipped roofs and the linking cottages between with two storeys 1 12 II12 15 Skiers Hall Cottages Elscar53 29 32 N 1 25 49 W 53 49210 N 1 43023 W 53 49210 1 43023 12 15 Skiers Hall Cottages Elscar 1797 98 A row of four cottages designed by John Carr in sandstone with hipped sandstone slate roofs and two storeys The central pair of cottages are semi detached and linked to the outer pair by single storey links forming a symmetrical row All the windows have wedge shaped monolithic lintels grooved as false voussoirs and each cottage has a modern porch 13 IICanal basin and culvert53 30 14 N 1 24 33 W 53 50398 N 1 40914 W 53 50398 1 40914 Canal basin and culvert nbsp c 1798 The basin was built by the Dearne and Dove Canal to serve Hemingfield Colliery It is lined in stone with round edged coping stones and there is some brickwork in the culvert The basin is rectangular with an arm extending from each corner At the entrance and at the exit are segmental archways 14 IISmithy Bridge53 30 23 N 1 23 53 W 53 50631 N 1 39805 W 53 50631 1 39805 Smithy Bridge nbsp c 1800 The bridge carries Smithy Bridge Lane B6907 road over the bed of the Elsecar branch of the Dearne and Dove Canal It is in sandstone and consists of a single elliptical arch The bridge has voussoirs a coped parapet curving abutment walls and projecting end piers 15 II4 8 Distillery Side Elscar53 29 42 N 1 25 15 W 53 49508 N 1 42080 W 53 49508 1 42080 4 8 Distillery Side Elscar Late 18th to early 19th century A row of cottages that has been altered in sandstone with a stone slate roof There are two storeys six bays and a single storey rear wing Some of the lintels are grooved to imitate voussoirs and others have been altered 16 IICartshed Beech House Farm53 30 30 N 1 23 55 W 53 50832 N 1 39874 W 53 50832 1 39874 Cartshed Beech House Farm Early 19th century The cartshed is in sandstone with an asbestos sheet roof There are two storeys five bays and a lean to at the end In the ground floor is an arcade of basket arched openings and the upper floor contains a square opening above each arch 17 IIBuildings 13 14 railway station offices housing and gate piers Elsecar Central Workshops53 29 41 N 1 25 12 W 53 49483 N 1 41990 W 53 49483 1 41990 Building 13 14 railway station offices housing and gate piers Elscar Central Workshops Early 19th century A row of cottages later altered and expanded to form a house a private railway station and offices The buildings are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs they are mainly in two storeys and have an irregular plan 1 18 II Building 19 former workshop Elsecar Ironworks53 29 38 N 1 25 12 W 53 49392 N 1 42009 W 53 49392 1 42009 Building 19 former workshop Elscar Ironworks c 1835 probable The former workshop is in sandstone with an inner lining of brick and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables There are two storeys and five bays The windows are small paned in cast iron frames and in the upper floor is a taking in door with a quoined surround Double doors have been inserted in the northeast gable end 19 II 1 3 Distillery Side Elscar53 29 41 N 1 25 04 W 53 49466 N 1 41788 W 53 49466 1 41788 1 3 Distillery Side Elscar 1836 A school later converted for residential use it is in sandstone with a stone slate roof There are two storeys and a partial basement and three bays The windows and doorways have been altered and replaced 20 IIReform Row53 29 54 N 1 25 00 W 53 49844 N 1 41658 W 53 49844 1 41658 Reform Row nbsp 1837 A terrace of 28 cottages in a long curved row in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs coped gables and kneelers There are two storeys in the centre is a round arched passage above which is an inscribed and dated plaque and there are two more through passages The doorways are arranged in pairs each cottage has a three light window in each floor and there are two light windows over the passages 21 IIHoly Trinity Church Elscar53 29 50 N 1 25 06 W 53 49724 N 1 41834 W 53 49724 1 41834 Holy Trinity Church Elscar nbsp 1841 43 The church designed by J P Pritchett in Early English style is in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof It consists of a nave a chancel with a semi octagonal apse a vestry and an organ chamber and a west steeple The steeple has a tower with two stages clasping buttresses rising to octagonal turrets with pinnacles a clock face on the west side and a recessed spire with lucarnes and a weathervane 1 22 IIElsecar Mill53 29 50 N 1 25 02 W 53 49717 N 1 41723 W 53 49717 1 41723 Elsecar Mill nbsp 1842 The flour mill later used for other purposes is in sandstone with a Welsh slate roof There are three storeys and a half basement six bays and a single storey gabled extension projecting on the right In the third bay is a doorway above which is a loading door and over that a gabled wooden gantry and the windows are small paned 23 IIFormer pumping engine house Hemingfield Colliery53 30 14 N 1 24 29 W 53 50380 N 1 40818 W 53 50380 1 40818 Former pumping engine house Hemingfield Colliery nbsp 1843 The former Cornish pumping engine house is in sandstone with a red brick extension added in 1934 and a flat concrete roof It has been converted for residential use There are two storeys and a single bay The southwest wall is thicker and supports the concrete head beam above the pumping shaft The northwest wall contains a large arched opening that has been blocked and domestic windows have been inserted in the northeast wall 24 II Buildings 20a and 21 former rolling mill Elsecar Ironworks53 29 39 N 1 25 11 W 53 49424 N 1 41964 W 53 49424 1 41964 Buildings 20a and 21 former rolling mill Elscar Ironworks 1850 The former rolling mill building which was extended in 1860 has a cast iron frame The gable ends are in sandstone with quoins and the infill panels are mainly in sandstone on the east side and brick on the west side The roof is in Welsh slate there is a single storey and twelve bays the north bay set at an angle The iron framework includes round columns with simple capitals and bases and between them are beams forming basket arches with perforated spandrels Set into the ground adjacent to the north gable are two halves of a spoked colliery pit wheel 25 II 1 9 Cobcar Lane Elscar53 29 57 N 1 24 58 W 53 49907 N 1 41605 W 53 49907 1 41605 1 9 Cobcar Lane Elscar nbsp Mid 19th century A terrace of five houses in sandstone with a floor band an eaves band stone gutter brackets and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables and kneelers There are two storeys and the middle house projects under a pediment containing an oculus Each doorway has a fanlight the windows are sashes all have segmental arched lintels grooved to imitate voussoirs and the ground floor windows have aprons 26 IICobcar Terrace Elscar53 29 57 N 1 24 56 W 53 49922 N 1 41552 W 53 49922 1 41552 Cobcar Terrace Elscar nbsp Mid 19th century A terrace of ten houses in sandstone with a sill band an eaves band gutter brackets and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables and kneelers There are two storeys each house has two bays and the third and seventh houses project under a pediment containing an oculus The doorways have fanlights those in the middle two houses are round headed with linked peaked hoods and the other fanlights have segmental heads The windows are sashes and all windows and the doorways with segmental headed fanlights have lintels grooved to imitate voussoirs 27 IIHoly Trinity Academy and school house53 29 50 N 1 25 08 W 53 49732 N 1 41879 W 53 49732 1 41879 Holy Trinity Academy and school house 1852 The school and separate master s house were designed by J P Pritchett and son They are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs and the gables have decorative perforated bargeboards The school has a single storey and a south front of three gables each containing a small lozenge shaped window Below are larger windows the central window mullioned and transomed with a stepped hood mould Extending from the front is a lower twin gabled extension The house has two storeys and three bays the middle bay projecting under a gable 1 28 II56 64 Fitzwilliam Street and garden walls Elscar53 29 43 N 1 25 25 W 53 49521 N 1 42349 W 53 49521 1 42349 56 64 Fitzwilliam Street and garden walls Elscar nbsp c 1853 A terrace of five houses in sandstone with a projecting eaves course gutter brackets and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables There are two storeys and five bays the middle bay projecting under a gable containing an oculus The central doorway is flanked by sash windows all under a hood on brackets and the other windows are paired sashes The front gardens are enclosed by walls with triangular copings and simple gate posts 29 IIFitzwilliam Lodge53 29 42 N 1 25 23 W 53 49500 N 1 42303 W 53 49500 1 42303 Fitzwilliam Lodge nbsp 1853 Originally a miners lodging house later divided into private dwellings it is in sandstone with floor bands an eaves cornice and a Welsh slate roof with coped gables There are three storeys and a basement a symmetrical front of seven bays the middle three bays slightly projecting under a pediment containing an oculus a recessed two storey single bay extension on the right and a two storey rear wing The central doorway has a semicircular fanlight and is set in a surround with moulded imposts an archivolt paterae and a small cornice The windows are sashes those in the ground floor with sunken aprons 30 IIBuilding 1 former casting shed Elsecar Ironworks53 29 36 N 1 25 11 W 53 49334 N 1 41981 W 53 49334 1 41981 Building 1 former casting shed Elscar Ironworks 1850s The casting shed later used for other purposes is in brick incorporating some stonework and has metal sheet roofs On the west front are three large arched openings and there is a four bay extension containing segmental headed iron framed windows In the north gable are two locomotive entrances and there are various other openings some blocked 31 II Buildings 4 7 former stores Elsecar Central Workshops53 29 39 N 1 25 15 W 53 49409 N 1 42079 W 53 49409 1 42079 Buildings 4 7 former stores Elscar Central Workshops 1850s The former stores are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs and form a long linear range following the curve of the street They have one storey at the north end of the range and two as it goes down the hill and at the end is a coped gable There are varied openings some of which are blocked 32 II Buildings 8 12 former workshops offices and warehousing Elsecar Central Workshops53 29 41 N 1 25 15 W 53 49473 N 1 42080 W 53 49473 1 42080 Buildings 8 12 former workshops offices and warehousing Elscar Central Workshops 1850s The former workshops office and warehousing are in sandstone with Welsh slate roofs In the centre is a two storey office block forming a cross wing with a coped gable containing a circular window This is flanked by long single storey ranges that were formerly warehouses and workshops 33 II Building 17 former fitting shop Elsecar Central Workshops53 29 41 N 1 25 13 W 53 49460 N 1 42034 W 53 49460 1 42034 Building 17 former fitting shop Elscar Central Workshops nbsp 1850s The workshop is in sandstone with an inner lining of brick and Welsh slate roofs It consists of a wide nave and lean to aisles the west aisle with ten bays and the east with seven The gable ends are quoined and coped Each contains a large central round arched opening above which is a central ventilation opening and an inscribed datestone 1 34 II Building 22 former joiner s shop chimney and boiler house Elsecar Central Workshops53 29 40 N 1 25 14 W 53 49439 N 1 42051 W 53 49439 1 42051 Building 22 former joiner s shop chimney and boiler house Elscar Central Workshops 1850s The workshop with an integral engine house is in sandstone with an inner lining of brick string courses and hipped Welsh slate roofs There are two storeys it is eight bays long and three wide In the ground floor are basket arched openings with voussoirs and keystones and the upper floor contains a taking in door with a winch On the southern end is a cantilevered staircase leading to an upper floor doorway with a round arched fanlight At the northern end is the boiler chimney with a square base rising to a cornice above which it is octagonal and tapering and has a corniced cap 35 II Former housing Elsecar Ironworks53 29 37 N 1 25 13 W 53 49367 N 1 42031 W 53 49367 1 42031 Former housing Elscar Ironworks 1850s A pair of workers cottages they are in sandstone on the west front mainly in brick elsewhere and with Welsh slate roofs There are two storeys the left cottage has three bays and the right cottage has two In the centre of each cottage is a doorway with a fanlight that in the left cottage set in a round arched recess The windows in the right cottage are sashes and the others have been altered 36 II Buildings 2 and 3 entry range and wall Elsecar Ironworks53 29 37 N 1 25 13 W 53 49349 N 1 42018 W 53 49349 1 42018 Buildings 2 and 3 entry range and wall Elscar Ironworks 1860s The entrance building to the ironworks it is in sandstone on the west front with brick elsewhere and Welsh slate roofs It consists of a linear range with two storeys and six bays In the ground floor are two wide basket arched entrances with quoined and chamfered surrounds and the upper floor contains four round arched windows The western face of the boundary wall is in stone the eastern face in brick and it contains three blocked round arched windows 37 II Milton Hall53 29 41 N 1 25 18 W 53 49461 N 1 42172 W 53 49461 1 42172 Milton Hall nbsp 1870 A market hall later an assembly hall it is in sandstone on a plinth with an eaves band and a triple span hipped Welsh slate roof There is a single storey with five bays on Wath Road and nine on Fitzwilliam Street The middle bay on each front projects slightly and has a pediment with a cornice and an apex block Both middle bays have a round arched recess with impost bands and contain a doorway with a semicircular fanlight The windows have round arched heads 38 IIReferences edit nbsp Yorkshire portalCitations edit a b c d e f g Harman amp Pevsner 2017 p 242 Historic England Historic England amp 1151085 Historic England amp 1191488 Historic England amp 1151086 Historic England amp 1191255 Historic England amp 1151094 Historic England amp 1151171 Historic England amp 1286996 Historic England amp 1286926 Historic England amp 1315026 Historic England amp 1191290 Historic England amp 1465747 Historic England amp 1151022 Historic England amp 1151175 Historic England amp 1151090 Historic England amp 1287001 Historic England amp 1191337 Historic England amp 1191442 Historic England amp 1151089 Historic England amp 1315024 Historic England amp 1151087 Historic England amp 1151095 Historic England amp 1470733 Historic England amp 1151097 Historic England amp 1151088 Historic England amp 1191318 Historic England amp 1465637 Historic England amp 1151091 Historic England amp 1151092 Historic England amp 1465684 Historic England amp 1465836 Historic England amp 1465837 Historic England amp 1287085 Historic England amp 1315025 Historic England amp 1151096 Historic England amp 1465834 Historic England amp 1293411 Sources edit Historic England Barn approximately 10 metres to north east of Alderthwaite Farmhouse Hoyland Milton 1151085 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Woodhouse Farmhouse Hoyland Milton 1191488 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Cowhouse with hayloft approximately 15 metres to north west of Alderthwaite Farmhouse Hoyland Milton 1151086 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Nos 9 and 10 Market Place Hoyland Milton 1191255 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Nos 1 to 15 Old Row and attached front garden walls Hoyland Milton 1151094 National Heritage List for England retrieved 9 October 2021 Historic England Barn and attached cowhouse with hayloft approximately 50 metres to west of Lundhill Farmhouse Hoyland Milton 1151171 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Farmbuilding approximately 20 metres to west of Lundhill Farmhouse Hoyland Milton 1286996 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Wood Head Hall Farmhouse Hoyland Milton 1286926 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Elsecar Footrill Hoyland Milton 1315026 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Station Row Hoyland Milton 1191290 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Nos 12 to 15 Skiers Hall Cottages Hoyland Milton 1465747 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Canal basin with its associated culvert and canal lining at SE3930 0095 Hoyland Milton 1151022 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Smithy Bridge Hoyland Milton 1151175 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Nos 4 8 Distillery Side Hoyland Milton 1151090 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Cartshed at Beech House farm approximately 50 metres to east of farmhouse Hoyland Milton 1287001 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Buildings 13 14 former railway station offices housing and gate piers at Elsecar Central Workshops Hoyland Milton 1191337 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Building 19 former workshop at Elsecar Ironworks Hoyland Milton 1191442 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Nos 1 3 Distillery Side Hoyland Milton 1151089 National Heritage List for England retrieved 9 October 2021 Historic England Reform Row Hoyland Milton 1315024 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Church of the Holy Trinity Hoyland Milton 1151087 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Elsecar Mill Hoyland Milton 1151095 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Former Cornish pumping engine house at Hemingfield Colliery Hoyland Milton 1470733 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Buildings 20a and 21 former rolling mill at Elsecar Ironworks including two halved colliery pit wheels Hoyland Milton 1151097 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Nos 1 9 Cobcar Lane Hoyland Milton 1151088 National Heritage List for England retrieved 9 October 2021 Historic England Elsecar Holy Trinity CE Primary Academy and School Master s House Hoyland Milton 1465637 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Cobcar Terrace Hoyland Milton 1191318 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Nos 56 64 Fitzwilliam Street and attached front garden walls Hoyland Milton 1151091 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Fitzwilliam Lodge Hoyland Milton 1151092 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Building 1 former Elsecar Ironworks casting shed Hoyland Milton 1465684 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Buildings 4 7 stores at former Elsecar Central Workshops Hoyland Milton 1465836 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Buildings 8 12 former workshops offices and warehousing at the former Elsecar Central Workshops Hoyland Milton 1465837 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Building 17 former fitting shop at Elsecar Central Workshops Hoyland Milton 1287085 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Building 22 former Joiner s Shop including chimney and rebuilt boiler house building 16 Hoyland Milton 1315025 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Housing at the former Elsecar Ironworks 2 and 4 Forge Lane Hoyland Milton 1151096 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Buildings 2 and 3 and boundary wall former Elsecar Ironworks entry range Hoyland Milton 1465834 National Heritage List for England retrieved 10 October 2021 Historic England Milton Hall Hoyland Milton 1293411 National Heritage List for England retrieved 11 October 2021 Historic England Listed Buildings retrieved 9 October 2021 Harman Ruth Pevsner Nikolaus 2017 Yorkshire West Riding Sheffield and the South The Buildings of England New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22468 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Listed buildings in Hoyland Milton amp oldid 1109413688, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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