A stone public house with a slate roof, and an adjoining barn with a stone-slate roof. The public house has two storeys; it originated with two bays, an additional bay was added to each end in the late 18th century, and the barn to the left in the 19th century. The original part has a central doorway with a keystonelintel and mullioned windows. The windows in the right end bay are mullioned, and in the left bay they are sashes. The barn to the left has a segmental-headed cart entry, a doorway, and round openings at the top.[2][3]
The church was extended by two bays in 1772, and alterations were made in 1842 and in 1865. It is in stone with quoins, a band, an eavescornice, and a slate roof. The church consists of a nave, a chancel, and a lean-to extension at the west end. On the west gable is an octagonal cupola with Doric columns, a balustrade, urns at the angles, a domed roof and a finial.[4][5]
Originally one house, later divided into two, it is in stone on a projecting plinth, with an eavescornice and a roof partly of slate and partly of stone-slate. There is a double-depth plan, two storeys and five bays. The central doorway has an architrave, a pulvinated frieze, and a pediment, and there is an inserted door to the left. The windows on the front are casements replacing sashes, and at the rear are mullioned windows.[6]
The mill was much extended in about 1830–40. It is in stone, and consists of two four-storey ranges at right angles. The east range has twelve bays and a gable end of four bays at the south, and a south range of eleven bays with a return of four bays, in which are Venetian windows.[2][7]
A Commissioners' church that was designed by E. H. Shellard in Perpendicular style, with the tower added in 1855, and the organ chamber in 1885. It is in stone with a slate roof, and consists of a nave, north and south aisles, a south two-storey porch, a chancel with a vestry and an organ chamber, and a west tower. The tower has four stages, a doorway, a four-light west window, clock faces, diagonal buttresses rising to crocketedpinnacles, gargoyles, and an embattledparapet. Along the sides of the church are buttresses rising to crocketed pinnacles and embattled parapets, and between the nave and the chancel are pinnacled turrets.[9][10]
The war memorial is in Lees Cemetery. It has a tall stone pedestal on which is a bronze statue depicting a soldier holding a rifle. On the pedestal are inscriptions and carved garlands.[2][11]