Ingleby Arncliffe Water Tower is a historic structure in Ingleby Arncliffe, a village in North Yorkshire, in England.
The tower was commissioned by Sir Hugh Bell, chair of the Tees Valley Water Board.
Inside the base of the tower are stored a fire engine dating from about 1870, and an earlier funeral bier.
[1] The water tower is built of sandstone on a stepped and chamfered plinth, with quoins, a double corbel table, gargoyles, an embattled parapet, and a stone-flagged saddleback roof.
There are three storeys, and the tower contains a doorway with a chamfered moulded surround, and an inscribed and dated lintel.