Ingthorpe Grange
Ingthorpe Grange is a historic stone house near West Marton in North Yorkshire, England. In the late Middle Ages the site was a grange of Bolton Abbey. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the land was given to Henry Clifford, 1st Earl of Cumberland. The present house was built in 1672. In the 1800s it was extended to the rear, many windows were changed, and the left gable was rebuilt. It was designated a Grade II* listed building in 1954. Since 2009 it has operated as a bed and breakfast.
The house has two main floors and an attic, with a stone-slate roof. The front features three gabled bays with ball finials and a full-height gabled porch also with a ball finial. The doorway is round-arched with a chamfered surround, above which is a string course, an initials datestone, and a three-light chamfered window with a pediment-like panel containing an inscription, plus a small round-headed window. Other windows are mullioned, the attic windows are stepped, and all have hood moulds.
This page was last edited on 2 February 2026, at 04:18 (CET).