1 A small square stone pigeon-house with gabled tile roof and lantern.
2 Outside dimensions 18ft, with a wall thickness of 2ft. 600 nest holes with a square ...
Barton Pigeon House, a Post Medieval dovecote which was used for housing doves and pigeons. It is situated north of Welford Road, Barton.
Bascote Heath Church still stands on the corner of Featherbed Lane, but has fallen into disuse since the lovely photo of the roof being thatched was taken. Today (2019) it ...
1 Shown on the 1886 OS map at the above grid reference on the Warwick and Napton (Grand Union) canal.
2 The wharf is derelict and apparently long since disused. ...
The site of Bascote Wharf, a canal wharf, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods during the Imperial period. It was located 350m north of Bascote, and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 This small hexagonal, brick built structure was described as a toll booth (?) in the CBA Industrial Survey 1980, but the building was never intended to be and never ...
Basket Hall, a building dating to the Imperial period. It is located 650m north east of the library at Shipston on Stour.
Radway Church is now the site of a splendid new exhibition about the first pitched battle of the English Civil War. This was the nearest village to the battle of ...
‘Battle-scarred’ is a temporary exhibition at the National Civil War Centre in Newark, running from March to September, 2016. The Centre opened in the Museum of the historic town of ...
1 Probable site of one of the two manor houses of Baxterley. Information on the history of the house exists for the 16th century, 18th century and 19th century. The ...
A moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, probably the site of one of the two manor houses of Baxterley. The moat is Medieval in origin, visible as an earthwork, and is situated at Baxterley Old Hall.