Large house. A mid C16 tower built for Sir William Ingilby, and ranges of 1783-86 for Sir John Ingilby, by William Belwood. Coursed squared gritstone and ashlar with grey slate and stone slate roofs. Plan: the C16 tower of 3 storeys and 1 x 2 bays stands at the south-west corner as a projecting wing to a 2-storey 4 x 3-bay block; the tower is balanced by a 3-storey 3 x 3-bay projecting wing on the south-east corner of this block and an L-shaped kitchen and service wing which projects to the north (2 bays) and east (3 bays, linking to the courtyard ranges, qv). The C16 tower, south front: a horizontal board door, left, in a shallow pointed-arched doorway with moulded surround and spandrels; a mullion and transom window of 3 round- headed lights with a hoodmould to right,restored below transom level; a corbelled chimney stack projects at first floor, right; a narrow stair window to first and second floors, left. Diagonal buttresses; slightly projecting crenellated parapets on each side of the tower, a stair turret rises above parapet level left and has similar crenellations; 4 tall square stacks also crenellated. The rear (north) wall of the tower is incorporated into the C18 structure. Interior: the south-west tower contains much original mid C16 panelling and early C17 plasterwork. The ground-floor library was entered from the south-west corner in the base of the stair turret which contains a stone newel staircase; the first-floor room was originally divided into an antechamber and inner room, both rooms being heated by fine Tudor-arched fireplaces; the walls have square oak panelling, the ceiling has fine plaster decoration: the underside of the beams ornamented in high relief with friezes of maize and pomegranites in foliage, the panels between divided by mouldings into geometric shapes containing coats of arm, crowned heads and lions