One of a set of aerial photos supplied to Nuneaton Memories by Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council. The council commissioned these photographs but no information was with these. Why were ...
J C Smiths – or “Smiths On The Bridge” to many Nuneatonians, was located in the town centre (it is now Debenhams). It changed name around 1976.
Entrances were Newdegate Street, ...
1 A small ‘unpretending’ edifice of brick, plastered over, consisting of a nave with four pointed arched windows on each side, a bell turret at the W end, under which ...
A mortuary chapel dating to the Imperial period. It was built on the site of a Medieval chapel, and is situated 300m south east of Little Spring Coppice.
1 2 Site of the Oak inn, Coton End, Warwick.
Site of historic inn (now a public house) recorded on the Board of Health map of Warwick, and F.White & Co.’s ...
Historic inn, now public house, situated on north side of Coton End.
1 An entrenchment in good preservation and of considerable size. It is on fairly level ground. The camp, roughly triangular in form, encloses an area of about 3.75 ha. The ...
Oakley Wood Camp, the possible site of an Iron Age hillfort. Substantial banks are visible as earthworks within the wood. An alternative suggestion is that the banks are connected to the management of the woodland. The site is located 1km north of Ashorne Hill.
1 The obelisk was erected in 1749 by Thomas Archer (1695-1768), the first Lord of Umberslade. No records remain to show why it was built, but it is generally believed ...
The site of an obelisk dating to the Post Medieval period and believed to form a feature of Umberslade Park.