1 Site of brick and tile works marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of brick and tile works, where bricks and tiles were manufactured during the Imperial period. They were situated 500m west of Camp Hill, and were marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 Various air photographs.
2 Possible Saxon palace site of 2-3 ha in extent on the S end of a spur overlooking the Avon. Two charters of 781 exist. Information on ...
Linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Subsequent excavation and radiocarbon dating have confirmed that this is an Anglo Saxon settlement, possibly a palace, dating to the Migration period. It is situated 500m north east of Boscobel.
1 Red Horse marked.
2 The figure of the horse was cut, shortly after 1798, on the flat top of Edge Hill, near the Sunrising Inn, Tysoe, by the innkeeper, when ...
The site of a hill figure which was created during the Imperial period. The figure was a horse. It replaced an earlier hill figure known as The Red Horse which was situated near Tysoe. This hill figure was located at Sun Rising Covert.
1 Hillmorton Station (Rugby Central) marked on 1923 map.
2 First plans in the Rugby Advertiser 1st May 1897. Opened in March 1899 with some minor variations from the original ...
The site of Hillmorton Railway Station. It was built during the Imperial period and continued to be used until it was demolished in the 1970s. The railway station was situated off Hillmorton Road, Rugby.
1 Chancel, transepts, and central tower, nave with aisles, and S porch. Consecrated in 1854 as a chapel of ease to the parish church. In the Decorated style from the ...
The site of Holy Trinity Church which was built during the Imperial period. The church was demolished in 1983. It was situated on Church Street, Rugby.
1 Site of an ancient well by the side of Whitnash Brook. The site is now drained, but the little stream of water which flows into the Brook is ...
The site of a holy well of unknown date. It was located 400m east of Whitnash.
1 2 3 Site of the Horse and Jockey public house, Coventry street, Southam.
Site of historic public house recorded on F. White & Co.’s, Pigot’s, and Victuallers’ databases. The latter ...
Site of historic public house situated on the east side of Coventry street. Appears to now be the Old Mint public house.
1 An extremely early tradition says that ‘a refrigerator’ was built in Icehouse Spinney, near the railway, in Medieval times. It was an underground chamber dug out and lined with ...
The possible site of an Post Medieval icehouse, a structure built partially underground in which ice was kept during warmer months. It is thought to have been situated in Icehouse Spinney.
Site of an Iron Age settlement.
1 An enclosure, first recorded by Stukeley in 1743 as an earthwork. It was relocated on a 1961 vertical aerial photograph. A geophysical survey confirmed ...
The excavation of an Iron Age settlement. Features and finds include enclosures, a ditch, pits, cesspits, an infant burial, animal skulls and pottery. The site is immediately to the north east of the Rollright Stones.
1 Aerial photograph.
2 Enclosure and linear features (PRN 6299) show on air photographs. Possibly of Iron Age date.
3 Field work produced one potsherd of possible Iron Age (actually Roman) ...
Cropmarks on aerial photographs and the results of an excavation show that there was an Iron Age settlement west of the Half Moon Plantation, under what is now the M40.
2 Adjacent to the cursus (MWA1921) is an oval or D-shaped enclosure which has a W entrance and appears to enclose two penannular gullies. This may, on morphological grounds, be ...
The site of a possible settlement dating to the Iron Age. Enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. It is located 1km north east of the church, Sherbourne.
1 Of the monastic buildings only a few shapeless blocks of rubble survive above ground level. Traces of the cloisters were uncovered, including a 12th century apsidal chapter house to ...
The Medieval remains of Kenilworth Abbey Chapter House and Cloister. The site is at the tennis courts in Abbey Fields.
1 Of the monastic buildings only a few shapeless blocks of rubble rise above ground level. Excavation enabled the ground plans to be uncovered. The 12th century church had a ...
The remains of Kenilworth Abbey Church which dates from the Medieval period. Excavation has uncovered the ground plan and evidence of burials within the church. The site is at the tennis courts in Abbey Fields.
1 There was a mill attached to Kenilworth Castle in 1296 (PRN 3205) and in 1291 Kenilworth Priory held two mills in the area. The site of one of these ...
The site of Kenilworth Mill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. The mill, which stood to the west of Forge Road, was demolished in 1964 for redevelopment.
1 Kenilworth station marked on 1886 map.
The site of Kenilworth Railway Station which is no longer in use. It was constructed during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is situated 700m south east of Abbey Fields.
1 The modern bridge was reconstructed by the County Council in 1909. On the W bank, N of the bridge, are the stone remains of the previous bridge.
2 1698. This ...
The site of Lea Bridge, which was built during the Post Medieval period. It was situated on the east side of Lea Marston.
1 Single timber-framed bay forming a small dwelling originally dating from c1650.
2 Demolished and rebuilt at Avoncroft Museum of Buildings.
3 Excavation undertaken after the demolition of the building. In places ...
The site of Leaford Cottage, a timber-framed house which was built during the Post Medieval period. It was dismantled and relocated on another site. The original site of the building lies 150m south east of the school at Lea Marston.
1 Brick tower mill. Small, four-storey, four common sails and two pairs of stones. New gearing, sails, steam drive-shaft and engine house noted in 1886 advertisement, but ceased work c1888 ...
The site of Leamington Windmill which was first recorded as being in use during the Imperial period. It was situated in the area of Tatchbrook Road, Whitnash but was demolished in 1968.
1 A lime kiln is marked.
2 The site is a small overgrown area by the canal and is an open space connected with a housing estate. There is a hollow ...
The site of a lime kiln which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated 200m west of Radford Road Bridge.
1 ‘Limekiln Farm’ marked.
2 The site of the works is not known, but was probably at or near the farm.
The site of a lime kiln, used for making lime during the Imperial period. The exact location of the lime kiln is unknown but it was probably situated in the 500m south west of Dunsmore Heath.
1 There were lime kilns in Newnham and near Clay Hill Farm in Shelfield (PRN 1591), but the industry was transformed by the completion of the Birmingham – Stratford canal ...
The site of lime kilns, used for making lime during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. The lime kilns were situated in the area of Newnham.
1 A mill is mentioned in 1086. By the mid 13th century there were three corn mills under one roof and a fulling mill. The fulling mill had gone by ...
Lucy's Mill, a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. During this time it was used as a corn mill and fulling mill. It was derelict by the 1960s, but some features survive under the converted building, 200m south of the church.
1 Lower Skilts is all that remains of the ‘very beautiful house of brick’ with which William Sheldon, c1560-70, replaced the Prior of Studley’s Grange. It is of red ...
Site of a manor house dating to the Post Medieval period. The house is known from documentary evidence and its remains are visible as an earthwork. It was situated 800m north east of Cracknut Hill.
1 The chapel of St Giles, which may have been the original church of the Priory, was granted with others of its lands, to Thomas Broke in 1541 and to ...
The site of a Post Medieval manor house. All that remains is a platform, possibly surrounded by a moat. The site can be identified from aerial photographs, and remains visible as an earthwork. It is situated 350m north west of Morgrove Coppice, Spernall.
1 After the dissolution the site of Polesworth Abbey passed to Francis Goodere, whose son Sir Henry fashioned a manor house out of or on the site of the Abbess’s ...
A manor house that is Post Medieval in date and which incorporated building material from the Abbess's lodgings that had existed on the same site. The site of the manor house lies 200m east of Bridge Street, Polesworth.