1 Large metal wheel found in a back garden. Thought to be associated with Bedworth Charity Colliery. From the description it looks like a component part of a ...
Cog Wheel made of solid metal. 3ft in diameter and 1ft deep with a central hole. Found on the site of the former Bedworth Charity Colliery and is presumably related. Description matches part of a coal tippler.
1 Stone quarry to the north of Broomhill Farm which was disused by 1904….as shown on second edition OS maps, it is not marked on first edition OS maps.
The site of a quarry which was probably in use during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1906 and was situated 1km south east of Compton Wynyates.
1 That part of Windmill Hill which overlooks Compton House in the extreme north of the parish has been extensively quarried in the past – it is marked on current ...
The site of a quarry which probably dates to the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1906. It was situated on the south side of Windmill Hill.
1 Pit Close is marked on a map of 1766.
2 A large pit was observed at this location in 1983.
The site of a quarry which was in use during the Imperial period and is visible as an earthwork. A map of 1766 marks the site as 'Pit Close'. It is located 700m south west of the church, Hunningham.
1 Quarry Close is recorded on the Annotated Map, and a note says this information came from a Tithe Apportioment from the CRO from 1748. No trace of this document ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there may once have been a quarry at this location. The site is located at Middle Woodloes Cott, just north east of Warwick.
1 A horse engine was in use at Kingley Farm until the present century. No remains survive.
The site of Kingsley Horse Engine, a wheel turned by a horse in order to provide power. It dated to the Imperial period and was situated 600m north west of Wixford.
12 A small rectalinear earthwork feature was identified by the AOC Assessment of Local Services Villages for Stratford-on-Avon District Council in 2012 from a series of satellite imagery on Google ...
An earthwork feature was identified from aerial photography, to the north of Welford-on-Avon. It is also visible on LiDAR imagery as a slight earthwork of fairly rough form, suggesting an infilled quarry.
1 Two public stone and gravel pits were nominated. One was on Stone Pit Furlong in High Clays Field. This is marked on the Leigh Estate Map of 1783 and ...
The site of a quarry dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on an estate map of 1783 on Stone Pit Furlong in High Clays Field. It was located 600m east of Long Itchington.
1 In the 1776 Enclosure Award for Long Itchington, two public stone pits and gravel pits were nominated. 1 was on Bascote Heath and the site is still traceable as ...
The site of a quarry dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on the 1776 Enclosure Map. Earthworks are still visible as rough ground 700m north east of Bascote Bridge.
1 A field on the John Daniels Estate plan of c1830 is named as Stonepit Close. It is at the above grid reference, but shows little sign of quarrying.
2 1830 ...
The site of a quarry dating to the Imperial period. It is known from the name of a field, Stonepit Close, which is marked on an 1830 Estate Map. It is located 900m south west of Bascote.
1 There are possible stone pits in The Park at Stoneythorpe, just south of the Deserted Medieval Village (WA 1620). This is a likely site as stone was quarried ...
The site of possible quarries dating to the Imperial period which are visible as earthworks. They are located 700m north west of Brooklands, Southam.
1 Stone pit marked on a map of 1776.
2 The stone pit is 226 yards long and 34 yards wide.
The site of a quarry dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on a map from 1776. It is located 800 north of Bascote Bridge.
1 A map of 1834 shows the High Clays Lime Works at Barley Furlong. On the 1899 edition of the OS map, quarries are marked adjacent to High Clays Farm ...
The site of lime works and quarries which were in use during the Imperial period. They are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1899. They are situated 1km east of Long Itchington.
1 In 1834 lime works existed between the canal near Bascote Toll House and Snowford Hill Farm. By 1899 the limeworks had disappeared, but a tramroad is marked (PRN 5233).
The site of Bascote Lime Works, a quarry which was in use during the Imperial period. The quarry had ceased by 1899 but the line of a tramway is still visible. It is located 500m north west of Bascote Bridge.
1 Limeworks are shown opposite the Cuttle on the 1834 map. These were no longer shown in 1899, but the tramroad is shown (PRN 5234). White’s Directory of 1874 refers ...
Cuttle Lime Works, where lime was made in the Imperial period, and which are shown on a map of 1834. An associated tramway is shown on a later map of 1899. The limeworks were located south of Cuttle Bridge.
1 Limeworks started by Mr Oldham in 1854, taken over by Tatham, Kay and Co in 1868 and by the Rugby Portland Cement Co in 1934. Commencing initially in Long ...
Southam Cement Works and quarry, described as 'Long Itchington Cement and Lime Works' in the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. From the middle of the 19th century production expanded and came under different owners. The site is now a concrete waste.
1 Stone pit marked on the Ordnanace Survey 1st edition.
2 Evident on LiDAR data.
Site of a quarry, or stone pit marked on the OS 1st edition 1880s map.
1 1st edition map location of quarry. Also shows limekiln adjacent therefore quarrying limestone?
A quarry is shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was situated 1km north west of Compton Verney House.
2Possible, but dubious, linear features show as crop marks or earthworks. It appears more likely that these are the result of cultivation than that they are archaeological.
3Evaluation demonstrated the ...
Several linear features that are visible as earthworks or cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date. They are likely to be associated with quarrying. They are situated to the west of Knights Lane, Tiddington.
1 Three small pits for road repairs laid out at the time of the Enclosure Awards (1779). One was located at Myer Bridge.
The site of three quarries, or stone pits, which were in use during the Imperial period for road repairs. They are marked on the Enclosure map of 1779 and are situated 800m north west of Napton Fields.
1 Three small stone pits for road repairs were laid out at the time of the Enclosure Award (1779). One was located near New Zealand Farm.
The site of three quarries, or stone pits, which were used for road repairs during the Imperial period. They are marked on the Enclosure map of 1779 and are situated 900m south east of Stockton.
1 Part of a mineral railway built by Edge Hill Light Railway Co. 1919-1922 with cable-operated incline (at Knowle End). Connected ironstone workings at Edge Hill and Burton Dasset ...
A length of disused mineral railway that used to serve the ironstone quarries at Edge Hill and Burton Dasset in the 1920s. It is situated 700m west of Arlescote, running northwards.
1 Three small stone pits for road repairs were laid out at the time of the Enclosure Award (1779). One of these is Stone Hole on the lane leading ...
The site of a quarry dating to the Imperial period. It is situated to the north of School Hill, Napton on the Hill.
1 Manganese workings with underground access, building foundations, disturbed ground and possible shafts within dense woodland. Features survived in 1980s but could not be located in 1996 due to dense ...
The site of Hartshill Green manganese mine dating from the Post Medieval period. It was situated east side of Hartshill Hayes Country Park.