Modern infilling along the river behind All Saints Church. Built on the site of the medieval Vicarage and possible Tithe barn (see SMR PIN3814). The first vicarage on this site was ordained in 1284, this building was replaced in 1425 (Atkinson 1993, 1). The vicarage remained until 1809 when it was pulled down although one building remained on the site up to 1855, a new vicarage was built elsewhere in 1825 (Holbrey 1991, 1). A tramway between the collieries at Silkstone Common and the Barnsley Canal was constructed along the western edge of Silkstone Beck in 1809 (Bayliss 1995, 65). This probably led to the destruction of parts of the vicarage. The tramway closed in 1860. The line of the road adjacent to the modern housing corresponds with the route of the tramway. Excavation on this site indicated potential for industrial activity related to the 17th century Glasshouse (HSY6320). There is no legibility for the vicarage in the current housing which overwrites that past landscape features.