Camp Hill House is a historic building in Carthorpe, a village in North Yorkshire, in England.
At the time, the land was owned by James Hoyland, head gardener at Castle Howard, and he may have been responsible for designing the grounds.
In the 1790s, it was renamed "Camp Hill", and in 1799 it was purchased by William Rookes Leeds Serjeantson.
[3] The house is built of stone, with brick at the rear, a sill band, a moulded cornice and a blocking course, and a hipped slate roof.
The middle three bays project, and contain a Doric porch with two columns, two pilasters, dosserets without a frieze, and a cornice, and a double doorway with a moulded architrave, and a fanlight with radial glazing bars.