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  • Probably founded during Henry I’s reign (1100-35), it remained in the patronage of the monarch. The hospital buildings seem still to have been standing in the mid or late 16th century.
  • House, now house and flat. Built in the late 17th century with early 17th century origins; early C19 extension incorporating late C18 outbuilding: refronted c1900; further C20 alterations. Exterior: 2 storeys and attic; 3-window front
  • House, now a school. Built in 1813. For David Russell, solicitor, altered in the 20th century. Stucco with hipped concrete tile roofs. Exterior: main block symmetrical, of 2 storeys and 3 bays. The windows are glazing bar sashes and are taller on the...
  • 19th century former St. Olave's Sunday School building on the corner of Frederic Street and Marygate Lane. Converted in 1999 by York Housing Association; creating first floor living accommodation above parochial hall and practice room. School, house ...
  • Cottage of early-mid 18th with major 20th century renovations. Welsh slate and brick. Direct-entry 2-cell plan with ground floor now knocked through. 2 storeys, 2 first-floor windows.
  • House of mid-18th with 20th century renovations, two storeys. Plan: end-baffle-entry 2-cell plan. Welsh Slate and brick. The house may represent the rebuilding of the south end of an earlier C17 3-cell lobby-entry house of which the north end survive...
  • Following the dissolution of St Mary's Hospital in the Horsefair in 1557, the site was taken over and converted for use as a grammar school. The plan of the buildings was recovered during excavations at Union Terrace in 1972.
  • House, now part of school. Built c1840, altered late 19th century. White brick with painted stone dressings and slate roof. Exterior: symmetrical. 2 storeys and 3 bays.
  • Formerly known as: Church of St Sampson, Girdlergate. Parish church, now Day Centre. Late C15 tower retained in rebuilding of 1845-48; third stage added to tower in 1910. Church made redundant in 1969, converted to day centre 1974. C19 rebuilding...
  • The church was first mentioned in documents in 1093–94 when William II granted it to the Archbishop of York in return for four acres of land in Bootham (Raine 1955, 101) and the graveyard is mentioned in a document of late 13th- or early 14th-century...