1 Site of smithy marked on OS map of 1901.
The site of a blacksmiths workshop where metal would have been worked. It dated to the Imperial period and was situated immediately northeast of Bulls Head Bridge, Polesworth. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1901.
1 ‘Smithy’ marked attached to the Bear Inn.
2 The Bear Inn is now the Bear and Ragged Staff and it is possible the building may now be part of the ...
The site of a forge which was in use during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905 as being attached to the Bear Inn. The building may have been incorporated into the public house which stands on the Warwick Road, Kenilworth.
1 Site of Stag’s Head public house, 49 Rother street, Stratford upon Avon
Site of historic public house recorded on F White and Co.’s database which shows it in existence in ...
Site of historic public house situated on the east side of Rother street.
1 Timber (?) signal box located on the west side of the line, to the north of Staverton Road Bridge.
2 Photograph of the signal box taken in 1948.
The site of a railway signal box which was in use from the Imperial period onwards. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1906. A photograph shows it as being a wooden building. The signal box was situated 1km north east of Newbold Grounds.
1 Site of Stockingford Colliery marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of Stockingford Colliery which was used during the Imperial period for mining coal. It was situated on Nuneaton Common.
1 The village stocks were on the W side of Church Lane at the top of Southam Road. J Hitchcox never saw them, but his father pointed out their position ...
The site of a pillory or stocks, a wooden frame through which criminals would put their hands and heads and be exposed to public ridicule. The pillory was in use during the Imperial period and was situated at the junction of Church Land and Southam Road, Radford Semele.
1 In Dugdale’s time stocks existed at the village of Lower Ettington. These were removed in 1798 when the whole village (PRN 1286) was removed to clear the park.
2 Noted ...
There is documentary evidence that there were village stocks, in which an offender's hands and/or feet were locked as punishment, at Lower Ettington. Their exact location is unknown.
1 The printing office of “The Meteor” is on or near the site of the town prison…whilst a few yards westwards were the stocks…in no infrequent use some 50 years ...
The site of the stocks, a wooden structure in which offenders' hands and feet were locked as a punishment. They date back to at least the Imperial period. The stocks were located on Sheep Street, Rugby.
1 Studley Priory stands in a moated enclosure, the River Arrow forming part of it, and supplying the other portion with water, where not filled in.
2 A dry channel continuing ...
The site of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It was associated with Studley Priory, but has now been filled in. It was located 100m north east of the Police Station at Studley.
1 Sudeley Castle has the remains of a fairly large moat; there is a little water in one corner, but generally it is only a shallow depression. It was the ...
The site of Sudeley Castle Moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The moat dated to the Medieval period and was situated 300m north east of Griff Lane.
1 2 3 Site of the Brown Bear public house, Market Place, Warwick.
Site of historic public house recorded on the Board of Health map, and F. White & Co.’s and ...
Site of historic public house situated on the west side of the Market Place.
1 The Dunchurch Lock-up was a rectangular brick building 9’6″ wide by 14’6″ deep with a tiled roof. It had a solitary 2′ square iron grill on the left ...
The site of Dunchurch lock up which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated on School Street, Dunchurch.
1 Site of the Luke Britain inn, Smith street, Warwick.
Site of historic inn recorded on the Board of Health map 13 which shows it to be in existence in 1851.
Situated ...
Site of historic inn situated on the south east side of Smith street.
1 Site of the Malt Shovel public house, Warwick road, Kenilworth.
Steward gives the site of this historic public house as 198 Warwick road, next to number 200 which was the ...
Site of the historic Malt Shovel public house situated on the west side of Warwick road.
Site of the Volunteer public house, Smith street, Warwick.
1 Historic public house recorded on the F. White and Co.’s database which shows it in existence in 1874.
2 Situated on the ...
Site of historic public house situated on the south side of Smith street.
1 2 3 Site of the Woolpack commercial inn and hotel, Market place, Warwick
Site of historic inn recorded on Board of Health map, F. White & Co.’s and Pigot’s databases. ...
Site of historic inn and hotel, situated on south side of the Market place.
1 Radford was known for miles around for its beer. In 1900 a new brewery was constructed. Owing to a greatly increasing demand the building was extended in 1907. A ...
The site of Thornley's Brewery which was in use towards the end of the Imperial period. The brewery was demolished during the 1970s but it had been situated 100m south of Radford Road, Radford Semele.
1 Site of Three Horseshoes public house, Brook street, Warwick.
Site of historic inn recorded on the Board of Health map which shows it was in existance in 1851.
Situated on the ...
Site of historic public house situated on the east side of Brook street.Name changed to Leycester Arms ca. 1862
1 2 3 Site of Three Horseshoes public house, High Street, Coleshill.
Historic public house recorded on Pigot’s, F.White and Co.’ Directories and also the Victuallers databases. The latter shows it ...
Historic public house, no longer in existence.
1 Site of the turnpike gate. Junction of the Kenilworth Road and the Rugby Road.
2 Photo shows site of the gate.
The site of a toll gate, where travellers paid a toll to use a toll road during the Imperial period. It stood on the junction of Kenilworth Road and Rugby Road.
1 W J Hitchcox says that the tollgate was situated on the turnpike about 25m E of the White Lion. In the 1920s the footings were discovered and again in ...
The site of a toll gate, where travellers would have paid a toll to use the turnpike road. It dated to the Imperial period and was located on the southern side of Southam Road, Radford Semele.
1 Tollhouse marked at the junction of the Fosse and Southam Road.
2 A gentleman wrote in 1913 that he could remember a toll bar on the Fosse.
The site of a toll house, where tolls were collected from travellers using the toll road. The toll house is marked on the Tithe Award Map of 1843. It was situated at the junction of Southam Road and Fosse Way, Radford Semele.
1 Tollbar marked at the V-junction between the road to Leek Wootton and Hill Wootton.
2 The N most roundabout of the Warwick bypass now covers this area.
Documentary evidence indicates that there may have been a toll gate at the junction between the Leek Wootton / Hill Wootton roads. The site is now covered by the northern most roundabout on the Warwick bypass.
1 A tollpoint is marked on the Birmingham Road near its crossing with the Grand Union Canal.
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a toll gate on the Birmingham Road, Warwick during the Imperial period. Travellers would have had to pay a toll at the gate in order to use the toll road.
1 A tollgate appears on the Staunton Estate Map. It is situated on the Stratford Road on the way into Longbridge.
The site of a toll gate which was established in the Imperial period to collect tolls from travellers using the toll road. It stood on the Stratford Road into Longbridge.