Stubbs Hall (listed late 17th century) and accompanying farm (unknown date but core shown 1851) now make up the entirety of the hamlet of Hampole Stubbs. A settlement is recorded here in Domesday (see SMR 293) and the settlement was also considered to represent a Shrunken Medieval Settlement by Beresford (1953, 239) who noted a reference to a population of 29 in the 14th century. The surrounding countryside (including the area of Hazel Lane Quarry to the north (HSY141) and to the south as far as the Hampole Beck had been enclosed piecemeal by 1838 when they were drawn as "Plan of the Estate called Hamhall Stubbs" on a plan by M. Durham of Thorne.