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Historic England, "Barn to east of Manor House Farmhouse, Hutton Rudby (1150620)", National Heritage List for England Historic England, "3 and 4, East Side, Hutton Rudby (1189305)" , National Heritage List for England , retrieved 28 January 2025
Neighborhoods in Cleveland refer to the 34 neighborhood communities of the city of Cleveland, Ohio, as defined by the Cleveland City Planning Commission. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Based on historical definitions and census data, the neighborhoods serve as the basis for various urban planning initiatives on both the municipal and metropolitan levels. [ 2 ]
Hutton Rudby is a village and civil parish situated 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the market town of Stokesley in North Yorkshire, England. At the 2011 census, the village's parish and built-up area subdivision had a population of 1,572 while its main population (including Rudby ) had a population of 1,968.
The parish has a single Grade II* listed building, Rudby Hall, at Hutton Rudby, formerly called Leven Grove, and then Skutterskelfe Hall. [2] The parish has three Grade II listed buildings, all connected to the hall – the pump house, [3] the terrace walls and balustrade, garden wall and gate piers, [4] and the north lodge to the park. [5]
The river becomes increasingly meandering as it continues south-west past Skutterskelfe to Hutton Rudby and Rudby, where it turns north-west and then west again over the Slape Stones waterfall. At Crathorne it turns north and then north-east as far as Middleton-on-Leven before passing under the A19 in a north-west direction.
Rudby Hall, Hutton Rudby, Skutterskelfe, North Yorkshire is a 17,377 sq ft (1,614.4 m 2) country house dating from 1838. Its origins are older but the present building was built for the 10th Viscount Falkland and his wife by the architect Anthony Salvin .
A station at the intersection of Euclid Street (Euclid Avenue from 1870) and Willson Avenue (East 55th Street from 1906 [7] [8]) first opened in 1856, when Jared V. Willson and his wife executed a quitclaim deed for $1, partitioning their plot of land on the SE corner of the intersection for a small wooden shelter to be built by the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Rail Road. [9]
It is adjoined to another village called Hutton Rudby and it lies on the River Leven. The parishes of Hutton Rudby, Middleton on Leven, Rudby and Skutterskelfe, since 2016, combined are part of the Rudby neighbourhood planning area. [3]