[1][2][3] Baysgarth House is a Grade II* listed building, believed to date from c. 1731.
The building is built on an L-plan, with 2 storeys and an attic in red brick with a hipped pantiled roof.
Also attached to the property are the grade II* listed gate piers in an 18th-century style, topped by a lion and a unicorn.
After the son, George Robert Marmaduke Stanbury Taylor, died in the Battle of Ypres, their daughter Clare Ermyntrude Magdalen Wight Ramsden subsequently married and left the area leaving the house to the public in 1930.
From 1930, it was in public ownership, until 2004 when the Community Heritage Arts and Media Project (Champ Ltd) took over the management of the house, including its additional buildings, museum, collections, and archives.