The town is home to an 18th-century folly called
Lowe Stand, built as a lookout and hunting lodge shortly before his death by the first
Marquess of Rockingham, at the highest point in the area some 593 ft above sea level. On the sloping ground below this folly is Upper Hoyland Hall, the former home of a notable family of yeoman farmers, the Townends, who owned extensive land in Hoyland. The
Church of England parish church is St Peter's, a Grade II
listed building dating from 1830. It is in the
Gothic Revival style and is built of sandstone and slate roofed. The
Roman Catholic church (1929) is of brick and tile construction in the Italian
Romanesque style, with a square bell tower. The former Princess Theatre on West Street is a brick building dating from 1893. Among Hoyland's remaining notable older residences and former residences are Hoyland Hall, a late Georgian property, situated in a small park off Market Street and sometime home to
William Vizard, first owner of Hoyland Silkstone Colliery, who was the attorney to Queen Caroline at her celebrated trial in the House of Lords. Also in or off Market Street are Kirk House, Kirk Cottage, Bark House, Thistle House and Riversdale. Netherfield House is situated near the town centre and Hoyland's oldest known surviving residence and at one time the home of a Townend, being in recent years used as a dentist's, is situated in West Street (formerly Finkle Street). Many of Hoyland's fine Georgian properties, consisting of cottages, shops and chapels were demolished in the 1960s and 1970s. File:St Peter's Church, Hoyland 2014.jpg|St Peter's C of E Parish Church File:St Helen's Catholic Church, Hoyland 2014.jpg|Sacred Heart & St Helen's Catholic Church File:Wesleyan Church, Hoyland 2014.jpg|Former Wesleyan Chapel File:Former Princess Theatre, Hoyland 2014.jpg|Former Princess Theatre File:Hare and Hounds, Hoyland 2014.jpg|Hare & Hounds File:Prospect Tavern, Hoyland 2014.jpg|Prospect Tavern ==Education==