Sedbergh is a civil parish in Westmorland and Furness, Cumbria, England. It contains 165 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, two are listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, 13 are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish is in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. The major settlement is the small town of Sedbergh, and there are smaller settlements including Millthrop, Catholes, Marthwaite, Brigflatts, High Oaks, Howgill, Lowgill and Cautley. The parish contains a large area of countryside, and many of the listed buildings are farmhouses and farm buildings. In the town is Sedbergh School and a number of the school buildings are listed. Elsewhere in the town, most of the listed buildings are houses and associated structures, and shops. Other listed buildings in the parish include churches and associated structures, bridges, milestones, a hotel, a viaduct, a drinking fountain, memorials, and two telephone kiosks.
|The bridge carries a road over Clough River. It is in sandstone and consists of a single low segmental arch springing from natural rock. The bridge has voussoirs, a flat deck, and parapets with flat coping stones. |align="center" | |- |Garden wall with bee-boles,<br/>Draw Well Farm<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The drystone wall encloses the garden and is about high. It contains two rectangular bee boles in the outer face. |align="center" | |- |Garth's Farmhouse<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The farmhouse was extended in the 19th century. It is in stone on a plinth, and has a stone-slate roof with some blue slate. There are two storeys and four bays. On the front is a gabled porch with a square-headed opening and containing side benches. The windows on the front are casements, and at the rear they include a fixed window and a stair window. |align="center" | |- |Green Farmhouse<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The former farmhouse is in stone with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys with an attic, two bays, a lean-to dairy at the rear, and a lean-to peat-house to the right. On the front is a gabled porch with a square-headed doorway and side benches. The windows on the front are sashes, at the rear there are altered windows, a stair window, and two casement windows. In the left gable wall are through-stones and a 20th-century porch. |align="center" | |- |Marshall House and railings<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A roughcast stone house with a slate roof. There are three storeys and five bays. The doorway has a moulded surround and a segmental pediment, and to its left is a two-storey canted bay window. The windows are sash windows. Enclosing the front area are cast iron railings with anthemion heads, and to the right of the doorway is a lantern on a bracket. |align="center" | |- |Millers Cottage<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone cottage with a slate roof, two storeys, and a symmetrical front of two bays. On the front is a shallow gabled porch, and the windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |New Bridge<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The bridge carries the A684 road over the River Rawthey. It is in stone and consists of two segmental arches, and has a central pier with triangular cutwaters surmounted by pediments. The bridge has squinches, and parapets with grooved coping stones, curved outwards at the corners. |align="center" | |- |Barn, Taythes Farm<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The barn has an attached stable and privy, and is in sandstone with quoins, and a roof partly of blue slate and partly of stone-slate. The barn has a square-headed doorway reduced in size, another doorway with a lintel, and a buttress at the rear. The stable has a loading door, a doorway with a massive lintel, and though-stones. |align="center" | |- |High Wardses Bridge<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The bridge carries a road over the River Rawthey. It is in stone, and consists of a single almost semicircular arch. The bridge has voussoirs and parapets with flat sandstone copings. |align="center" | |- |Evans House and railings<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1750âÂÂ59 |A house, later extended and used by Sedbergh School, it is in roughcast stone with rusticated quoins and a slate roof, and is in Georgian style. The main block has three storeys and a symmetrical five-bay front, and there is an extension to the east. In the centre is a doorway with an Ionic architrave with engaged columns, a pulvinated frieze and a modillioned cornice. The windows are sashes, the window above the doorway with a round head, and the others with segmental heads. In the roof is a flat-topped dormer. Enclosing the area at the front are railings on a low stone plinth. |align="center" | |- |Low Birks<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1762 |Originally mill workers' cottages and stables, later converted into a house and a cottage. They are in stone with quoins with a stone-slate roof, and have two storeys and five bays. On the front of the cottage is a gabled porch, there is a re-set datestone, and most of the windows are casements. |align="center" | |- |49 and 51 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |Two shops combined into one with living accommodation above, it is stuccoed with a slate roof. There are three storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. In the ground floor is a shop front, flanked by panelled and fluted pilasters surmounted by fluted consoles with triangular pediments. Between is a sloping frieze with a modillioned cornice, and in the centre is a cast iron column with a composite cap. Behind the column is a pair of recessed doorways with moulded pilaster jambs and fanlights. In the upper floors are sash windows. |align="center" | |- |Blands Gill Farmhouse and barn<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1766 |The farmhouse and bank barn are in stone with quoins and a green slate roof. The house has two storeys and two bays. On the front is a wide gabled porch with a stone-slate roof, a square-headed outer opening, side benches, and above it is a datestone. The windows have large wedge lintels and contain altered glazing, and at the rear is a stair window. The barn to the left has shippon doorways, a hay store, and a lean-to porch. |align="center" | |- |15, 16 and 17 Back Lane<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |Originally a wheelwright's cottage and workshop, later used for other purposes, it is in stone with quoins on the left, and a slate roof. Behind the cottage is a wing, giving the building an L-shaped plan. The cottage has three storeys, a sash window in each floor, and a doorway with a moulded architrave and a cornice on consoles. The workshop to the right is the same height with two storeys. In the ground floor is a segmental-headed doorway with voussoirs, above which is a sash window. |align="center" | |- |20 Back Lane<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone house with quoins, a slate roof, three storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a central doorway that has an architrave with panelled pilasters and a cornice on brackets; this is flanked by sash windows. The middle floor contains two flat-roofed canted oriel windows with panelled aprons, and in the top floor are tall half-dormers. |align="center" | |- |7 Folly Yard<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone cottage with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys, two bays, a doorway, and windows, all with segmental heads and voussoirs. |align="center" | |- |9 and 11 Folly Yard<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A pair of stone cottages with a slate roof, three storeys and three bays. There are two fixed windows, and the other windows are sashes. Most of the openings in No. 11 have massive stone lintels. |align="center" | |- |3 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A sandstone house with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys, four bays, and a rear wing, giving an L-shaped plan. The windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |33 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone house with a slate roof, three low storeys and two bays. The right bay has a double door in the ground floor and above is a tall round-headed window with voussoirs and Y-tracery. In the left bay are mullioned and transomed windows in the lower floors and a casement window in the top floor. |align="center" | |- |Walled garden, Evans House<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The walls are mainly in stone, and partly in brick, with stone coping, and enclose a garden of trapezoid shape. They are between and high. In the centre of the north wall is a segmental-headed doorway. |align="center" | |- |57 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A house, later a shop, in roughcast stone with a slate roof. There are three low storeys with cellars, and a symmetrical front of two bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with pilasters, a frieze, a cornice, and a central recessed doorway. In the upper floors are sash windows, and at the rear is a canted oriel window jettied over the cellar entrance. |align="center" | |- |2 and 3 Weavers Yard<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |Originally a pair of weavers' cottages, later combined into one unit. The building is in stone with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are three storeys and four bays. The doorway is in the upper floor and is approached by a flight of external steps, and there is another doorway in the ground floor. All the openings have sandstone lintels. |align="center" | |- |5 and 7 Weavers Yard<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A pair of stone cottages with quoins and a slate roof. They have two low storeys and each cottage has one bay. The windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |33 Loftus Hill<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone cottage with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys, two bays, and a lean-to extension to the right. The windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |34 and 35 Loftus Hill<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone house with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of two bays. In the centre is a square-headed doorway with a rendered surround, and the windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |1, 2 and 3 Settlebeck<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A row of three stone houses with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are three storeys, and each house has one bay. Nos. 1 and 2 have paired doorways with large stone lintels, and the doorway of No. 3 has a segmental head with voussoirs. Most of the windows are sashes, and there is one top-hung casement window. |align="center" | |- |Hebblethwaite Cottage and barn<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |Originally a pair of back-to-back cottages, later combined into a single cottage, with a barn attached to the west, and partly incorporated into the house. The building is in sandstone with roofs mainly of blue slate and with some stone-slate. The cottage has two storeys and two bays with a plain doorway. In the ground floor are inserted casement windows, and above the windows are sashes. In the barn are square and slit ventilators. |align="center" | |- |Barn, Low Hollins Farm<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A bank barn with a stable or store, it is in stone with a stone-slate roof. The barn has an L-shaped plan, with a main range, and a two-bay two-storey link at right angles to the farmhouse. The link contains a segmental-headed arch with voussoirs and a keystone, and a square-headed doorway with a loading door above. In the north gable a flight of steps leads up to a doorway. |align="center" | |- |Railton Yard<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A row of four cottages, one of which has retained a first-floor spinning gallery, and which have otherwise been restored and altered. They are in brick with quoins and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys and six bays, and most of the windows are renewed sashes. |align="center" | |- |Rawthey Bridge (road)<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1812 |The bridge carries the A683 road over the River Rawthey. It is in sandstone, and consists of a high semicircular arch with voussoirs, a keystone, curved abutments, and straight parapets with sandstone copings. The bridge has a flat deck. |align="center" | |- |36 and 37 Loftus Hill<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A pair of stone cottages, No. 36 is roughcast, with a slate roof. There are two storeys, and each cottage has one bay. Above the doors are fanlights, and the windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |Former smithy, Farfield Mills<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |Originally a smithy, later a private house, it is in stone with quoins and a stone-late roof. There are two storeys, two bays, and a large lean-to at the right. In the centre is a gabled porch, and the windows are casements. |align="center" | |- |Barn and cottage,<br/>High Birks Farmhouse<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The cottage and barn are attached to the left of the farmhouse. They are in stone with quoins and stone-slate roofs, and both have two storeys. The cottage to the right has one bay, a doorway, and one sash window in each floor. The barn is higher, and has four bays. On the front of the barn are doorways, windows and a loading door, and at the rear is a wagon doorway in the upper level. |align="center" | |- |Farm buildings, Ingmire Hall<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The farm buildings are in stone with quoins and slate roofs, and include re-used 17th-century material. They form an irregular plan, and consist of a bank barn, a shippon at right angles, a parallel store, and a curved stable range ending in a barn. |align="center" | |- |Ingmire Gardens and associated walled garden<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |This consists of a gardener's cottage, an attached tower, a screen wall, and a walled garden. The cottage, which is probably later, is in stone with quoins and a slate roof. It has two storeys, three bays, and sash windows. The tower to the north is higher, with two storeys, sash windows, a projecting stepped parapet, and a stair tower. The screen wall is gabled, and the wall surrounding the kitchen garden has a stone-slate coping, and is about high. There is also a range of outbuildings, and a gateway with metal gates. |align="center" | |- |Milestone near Archer's Hall<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is in sandstone, and has a square plinth with chamfered corners and a semicircular shaft. It is inscribed with a letter and a number. |align="center" | |- |Milestone near Sunny Bank<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is in sandstone, and has a square plinth with chamfered corners and a semicircular shaft. It is inscribed with letters and numbers. |align="center" | |- |Barn, Mire House<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A bank barn in stone with quoins, through stones, and a roof of blue slate and stone-slate. It has a rectangular plan, and contains a segmental-headed wagon entrance in the upper level and four lower doorways. |align="center" | |- |Uldale House<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1828 |A farmhouse with a cottage that was extended in 1879. It is in stone with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys, a central block of three bays, a single-bay extension to the left, and a single-bay cottage to the right. In the centre is a square-headed doorway with a datestone above, and the windows in the central block are sashes. The extension contains a casement window, and in the cottage is an altered window in the ground floor and a sash window above. |align="center" | |- |79 and 81 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A pair of stone houses with a hipped slate roof. There are three storeys, three bays, and a central through-passage containing the entrances. The passage has a semi-elliptical head with voussoirs and an arch band. Attached to the jambs of the archway are stone walls about high enclosing service yards. In the upper floors are sash windows. |align="center" | |- |4 and 5 Settlebeck<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |Two stone cottages with quoins at the junction, and roofs of slate at the front and stone-slate at the rear. Each cottage has two storeys and two bays, a central doorway and sash windows. Above the doors, and the windows on the ground floor, are large stone lintels. |align="center" | |- |Milestone near Killington New Bridge<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is on the south side of the B6256 road. It is in sandstone with a square plinth with chamfered corners, and has a semicircular shaft with a rounded top inscribed with initials and numbers. |align="center" | |- |Mill House<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The house is in stone with sandstone quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys, a symmetrical front of three bays, and a rear service wing, giving a T-shaped plan. The house has a central doorway with a plain surround, and the windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |Holy Trinity Church<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1838 |The church, designed by Edmund Sharpe in Early English style, is in stone with sandstone dressings and a slate roof. It consists of a nave and a short chancel, with a bellcote on the west gable. The windows are lancets, with a triple stepped lancets at the east end. Inside the church is a west gallery. |align="center" | |- |Wesleyan Methodist Chapel<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1845 |The chapel is in sandstone, on a plinth, with quoins, a moulded gutter cornice, and a green slate roof. It has a rectangular plan and consists of a single cell with one storey and a symmetrical front of two bays. In the centre is a round-headed window with monolithic pilasters, moulded imposts and a keystone. Above the door is a fanlight, and over the doorway is an inscribed plaque. The windows are round-headed with fanlights. |align="center" | |- |St Mark's Church<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1845âÂÂ47 |The church was designed by William Butterfield in Decorated style, and the vestry was added in 1858âÂÂ60. It is in stone with freestone dressings, and has a green slate roof. The church consists of a nave with a south porch, and a chancel with a north vestry. On the west gable is a double bellcote with ogee-headed openings. |align="center" | |- |Palmers Hill<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1848 |Originally a row of six almshouses, in Jacobean style, later converted into three dwellings. They are in s stone with sandstone quoins and a blue slate roof. The building has a single storey and nine bays. All the openings have lintels and hood moulds, and all the windows are casements. |align="center" | |- |St Gregory's Church<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1850 |The church was built as an Anglican mission chapel for railway workers on the Ingleton branch line, it was enlarged in 1907, and is now redundant. It is in stone with sandstone dressings and quoins, and has a slate roof with a wooden lantern. The church consists of a nave, a south porch, and a chancel as a cross-wing. The doorway is on the right side of the porch and has a gablet containing a cross. On the north gable is a bellcote, and the windows are rectangular. On the roof is a long lantern containing lights with segmental heads, overhanging eaves, and a swept hip roof. |align="center" | |- |37 and 39 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A pair of shops with rendered upper floors and a slate roof. There are three storeys and five bays, channelled pilasters at the corners and a plain frieze and a moulded string course between the top floors. In the ground floor is a wooden shop front with fluted pilasters, diamond capitals, panelled aprons, an entablature with a plain frieze and diamond panels, and a moulded cornice, and containing three doorways with fanlights. In the upper floors are sash windows. |align="center" | |- |95 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A house at the end of a row, in stone with quoins and a slate roof. It has two storeys and two bays. The doorway has a lintel with foliage decoration and a cornice on consoles. To the right is a canted bay window with a panelled frieze and a moulded cornice. The windows are sashes with corniced architraves. |align="center" | |- |Cautley Thwaite Farmhouse<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone farmhouse with a slate roof, two storeys, a range with a symmetrical front of three bays, and a rear service wing. On the front is a porch with a canopy, and a square-headed doorway. The windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |Cross Hall Cottage<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A stone house with quoins and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of two bays. The doorway has a square head and a fanlight, and the windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |Barn north of Cross Keys Hotel<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The barn is in stone with quoins and a stone-slate roof. It has a rectangular plan with lean-to extensions at each end. The barn contains a segmental-headed doorway with voussoirs, and a plain doorway, and to the right is an integral stable with a square-headed doorway and a loading door. |align="center" | |- |Rawthey Bridge (railway)<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1857âÂÂ61 |The bridge was built by the Lancaster and Carlisle Railway Company to carry the railway over the River Rawthey, and is now disused. It consists of a single segmental-arched span in cast iron with arcades in the spandrels. The parapet is in wrought iron. The abutments are in rusticated sandstone with chamfered angles and Doric entablatures. |align="center" | |- |Lune Viaduct<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1857âÂÂ61 |The viaduct was built to carry the Ingleton branch of the London and North Western Railway over the River Lune, and is now disused. The central span is in cast iron and consists of a segmental arch that has spandrels filled with two tiers of round-headed arches, and ornamental parapets. This is flanked by three sandstone round-headed arches. The central piers and the abutment piers taper and have modillioned cornices and parapets with triangular upstands. The intermediate piers are rectangular, with impost bands, plain friezes, cornices, and parapets. |align="center" | |- |80, 82 and 84 Main Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A row of three stone houses with quoins and a slate roof. There are three storeys, and each house has one bay. Every house has a doorway to the left and a sash window in each floor to the right. Above the ground floor openings is a continuous hood mould rising above each opening, and in the middle floor the windows have separate hood moulds. |align="center" | |- |86 Main Street and 1 New Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A shop and a house, the shop on a corner site, they are in stone with quoins, a canted corner, and a slate roof. There are three storeys, two bays on Main Street, a corner bay, and three bays on New Street. In the ground floor of No. 86 Main Street is a shop front including a doorway. No. 1 New Street has a doorway with a cornice and a sash window in the ground floor. The upper floors contain sash windows. |align="center" | |- |3 and 5 New Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A pair of stone houses in a terrace with a slate roof. There are three storeys, No. 3 has three bays, and No. 5 has one. The doorways, in the outer bays, have panelled pilasters, plain friezes, and moulded cornices, and the windows are sashes. |align="center" | |- |7 and 9 New Street<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |A pair of stone houses in a terrace, with quoins on the left, and a slate roof. There are three storeys with cellars, and each house has one bay. The doorways are paired in the centre and have a double architrave, panelled pilasters on the sides, a plain frieze, and a prominent moulded cornice on consoles with a shallow hipped roof. There is one sash window in each floor. |align="center" | |- ||Killington New Bridge<br/><small></small> | |align="center"| |The bridge carries the B6256 road over the River Lune. It is stone and consists of a single segmental arch. The bridge has voussoirs, piers, and plain parapets that project over the piers. |align="center" | |- |Milestone near Low Ridding<br/><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is on the west side of the A683 road. It is in cast iron, and consists of a short triangular shaft with a semicircular head. The head is inscribed with "SEDBERGH & KIRKBY STEPHEN ROAD CAUTLEY", and on the sides of the shaft are the distances in miles to Sedbergh and to Kirkby Stephen. |align="center" | |- |Milestone near Steps End<br/><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is on the west side of the A683 road. It is in cast iron, and consists of a short triangular shaft with a semicircular head. The head is inscribed with "SEDBERGH & KIRKBY STEPHEN ROAD CAUTLEY", and on the sides of the shaft are the distances in miles to Sedbergh and to Kirkby Stephen. |align="center" | |- |Milestone by High Wardses<br/><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is on the west side of the A683 road. It is in cast iron, and consists of a short triangular shaft with a semicircular head. The head is inscribed with "SEDBERGH & KIRKBY STEPHEN ROAD CAUTLEY", and on the sides of the shaft are the distances in miles to Sedbergh and to Kirkby Stephen. |align="center" | |- |Milestone at NGR 7045 9731<br/><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is by a wall on the east side of the A683 road. It is in cast iron, and consists of a short triangular shaft with a semicircular head. The head is inscribed with "SEDBERGH & KIRKBY STEPHEN ROAD CAUTLEY", and on the sides of the shaft are the distances in miles to Sedbergh and to Kirkby Stephen. |align="center" | |- |Milestone near Low Branthwaites<br/><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is on the north side of the A684 road. It is in cast iron, and consists of a short triangular shaft with a semicircular head. The head is inscribed with "SEDBERGH & HAWES ROAD FROSTOW & SOOLBANK", and on the sides of the shaft are the distances in miles to Sedbergh and to Hawes. |align="center" | |- |Milestone near junction with Frostrow Lane <br/><small></small> | |align="center"| |The milestone is on the south side of the A684 road. It is in cast iron, and consists of a short triangular shaft with a semicircular head. The head is inscribed with "SEDBERGH & HAWES ROAD FROSTOW & SOOLBANK", and on the sides of the shaft are the distances in miles to Sedbergh and to Hawes. |align="center" | |- |School House, Sedbergh School<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1878 |Designed by Paley and Austin in Jacobean style, the building is in sandstone with a slate roof. It has an H-shaped plan, with a main range, wings at the ends, and a cross-wing to the west wing. There are two storeys with attics, the main range has six bays, and there are gabled dormers in the roof. The windows are mixed, some are cross-windows, some are mullioned, and others are mullioned and transomed. At the northeast corner is a tower with a coped parapet and a pyramidal roof with a weathervane. |align="center" | |- |Barn, Uldale House<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1879 |A bank barn in stone with quoins, some through-stones, a slate roof, and a shippon under the west end. The barn has a segmental-headed wagon entrance with voussoirs approached by a ramp with side walls, Flanking the ramp are oculi with rusticated surrounds. In the west gable wall are three shippon doors and square windows. |align="center" | |- |Classroom block, Sedbergh School<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1879âÂÂ89 |The block, designed by Austin and Paley in Jacobean style, is in sandstone on a chamfered plinth with a green slate roof. It has an irregular H-shaped plan, with a main range and cross-wings of different lengths. There are two storeys with attics, and a main range of six bays, with a string course and a parapet with ridged coping. In the main range are transomed windows, mullioned windows, and gabled dormers, and elsewhere are cross-windows. |align="center" | |- |Sedbergh School Chapel<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1895âÂÂ97 |The chapel was designed by Austin and Paley in Perpendicular style, and is built in sandstone with stone-slate roofs. The chapel has a cruciform plan, consisting of a nave and chancel in one vessel, low north and south aisles, full-height transepts, and a north porch. At the crossing is an octagonal flèche. |align="center" | |- |Boundary wall,<br/>Sedbergh School Chapel<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The wall runs along the east and south boundaries of the chapel grounds. It is a low sandstone wall with flat coping, stepped up a slope, with low wrought iron railings. At each end are gateways with octagonal piers and ornamental wrought iron gates, and at the south end is a lamp standard with a barley-sugar twisted shaft and a cruciform top. |align="center" | |- |Drinking fountain<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1897 |The drinking fountain is built into the churchyard wall of St Andrew's Church, and was built to commemorate the diamond jubilee of Queen Victoria. It is in sandstone and has a recessed centre flanked by fluted pilasters, above which is an inscribed pulvinated frieze and a semicircular pediment. In the centre of the recess is a convex bowl with a brass cup on a chain, and a black marble inscribed plaque. In the tympanum of the pediment is a relief sculpture, and the fountain is flanked by stone side benches. |align="center" | |- |Queen Victoria Memorial Cross<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1902 |The cross to the memory of Queen Victoria stands in a garden designed by Thomas Mawson. It is in sandstone, and consists of an Anglo-Celtic cross about high. The cross has a tapering rectangular shaft on a shaped plinth. There is decorative carving on the cross-head, and there are inscriptions on both faces. |align="center" | |- |Boer War Memorial, Sedbergh School<br /><small></small> | |align="center"| |The memorial commemorates the former pupils of the school who died in the Second Boer War. It is in sandstone, and consists of a plinth of four steps, a square base, a square tapering shaft with chamfered corners, a chamfered cornice, and a wheel-cross. On the sides of the base are panels inscribed with the names and details of those lost. |align="center" | |- |Powell Hall, Sedbergh School<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1904âÂÂ06 |The school assembly hall was designed by Paley and Austin in Perpendicular style. It is in sandstone with freestone quoins and dressings, and a green slate roof. The hall consists of a tall single-storey hall with three two-storey gabled classroom wings to the west, a narthex at the south, and a canted apse at the north. Some windows are mullioned, one is transomed, and there are three full-height canted oriel windows. There are two doorways on the front, one with a Tudor arched head. |align="center" | |- |Howgill war memorial<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1920 |The war memorial is in the churchyard of Holy Trinity Church. It is in stone, and consists of a wheel-head cross on a plinth on a single-step base. The wheel-head is in the form of a laurel wreath, and in the centre is a carved boss. There is an inscription on the shaft, and on the plinth are the names of those lost in the First World War. |align="center" | |- |Sedbergh war memorial<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1920 |The war memorial, designed by Hubert Worthington, is in sandstone, and a consists of a simple cross. The cross has a tapered shaft with stop-chamfered corners, on a square base and a square plinth. There is an inscription on the east face of the base, and on the other faces are limestone tablets inscribed with the names of those lost in the two world wars. |align="center" | |- |War Memorial Cloister,<br/>Sedbergh School<br /><small></small> | |align="center"|1924 |The war memorial was designed by Hubert Worthington, and was extended in about 1945âÂÂ50. It is in sandstone and has a U-shaped plan, consisting of a five bay arcade flanked by short and wide three-bay arcaded wings. All the arches have round heads. The main arcade has moulded imposts, moulded heads with keystones, a continuous inscribed frieze and a plain parapet. Steps lead down to the memorial, and there are panels inscribed with the names of former pupils. |align="center" | |- ||Telephone kiosk near Holy Trinity Church<br/><small></small> | |align="center"|1935 |A K6 type telephone kiosk, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott. Constructed in cast iron with a square plan and a dome, it has three unperforated crowns in the top panels. |align="center" | |- ||Telephone kiosk near St Andrew's Church<br/><small></small> | |align="center"|1935 |A K6 type telephone kiosk, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott. Constructed in cast iron with a square plan and a dome, it has three unperforated crowns in the top panels. |align="center" | |-