Headlam Hall - geograph.org.uk - 256040.jpg
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Headlam is a village in the borough of Darlington and the ceremonial county of County Durham, England. It lies to the west of Darlington. The population taken at the 2011 Census was less than 100. Details are included in the parish of Ingleton. The hamlet has 14 stone houses plus 17th-century Headlam Hall, now a country house hotel. The village is set around a village green with a medieval cattle-pound and an old stone
packhorse bridge A packhorse bridge is a bridge intended to carry packhorses (horses loaded with sidebags or panniers) across a river or stream. Typically a packhorse bridge consists of one or more narrow (one horse wide) masonry arches, and has low parapets so ...
across the beck. Headlam is classed as Lower Teesdale and has views to the south as far as Richmond and to the
Cleveland Hills The Cleveland Hills are a range of hills on the north-west edge of the North York Moors in North Yorkshire, England, overlooking Cleveland, England, Cleveland and Teesside. They lie entirely within the boundaries of the North York Moors National ...
in the east. In the Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870–72) John Marius Wilson described Headlam:


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Villages in County Durham Places in the Borough of Darlington Places in the Tees Valley {{Durham-geo-stub