Thornton Hough and the villages of
Brimstage and
Raby are in an Area of Special Landscape Value, a protective designation to preserve the character and appearance of the area There are 22
listed buildings in the village which was made a conservation area in 1979. Hirst employed Kirk and Sons of Huddersfield to design
All Saints Church and its vicarage, a school and school master's house and Wilshaw Terrace before 1870.
All Saints, the
parish church, is a grade II listed building built in 1867, it has a
spire and tower displaying five clock faces. The north transept window, designed by
H. Gustave Hiller is a memorial to Joseph Hirt. Lever's architects used a wide variety of building materials including red and buff sandstone, brick, timber framing, render and pebbledash with roofs made of clay tiles or thick stone slates which creates the impression that the village appears to be older than it is. Lever used several architects, including
John Douglas. The firm of
Grayson and Ould designed the Village Club and Post Office, Weald House, several houses in The Folds and rebuilt Thornton House in 1895 and designed its lodges and stables. Jonathon Simpson built the Lever School and his son, James Lomax-Simpson, rebuilt the Smithy, designed D’Arcy Cottages and extensions to Thornton House. He also designed
Saint George's United Reformed Church, a
reproduction Romanesque style church in 1906. William and Segar Owen designed various houses including Thicketford. Thornton Hall, once the home of wealthy shipping merchants, the Bamford Brothers of Liverpool, is believed to have been built in the mid-1800s. It was transformed into a hotel in 1954 and many of its original features remain intact including oak carvings and the ornate mother of pearl embossed ceiling in the Italian Room.
Thornton Manor, built in an
Elizabethan style dates from the 1840s, and was once the home of
Lord Leverhulme. From 2005 the house and gardens underwent extensive renovation. The building is now a wedding venue and provides facilities for corporate functions. Thornton House, a grade II listed building built by
Douglas & Fordham in 1893 is a two-storey timber-framed house in a mock-Tudor style on a stone base. Thicketford built in 1892 is preserved in a largely unaltered condition. Hesketh Grange, a grade II listed building, was built in 1894 for Leverhulme's father. ==Governance==