1 A three storey brick built coaching inn with central door.
2 One of the inn’s back rooms was used as a theatre during the early 19th century.
3 Photograph published in ...
The White Bear Hotel, a coaching inn dating to the Imperial period. It is located 100m east of the Police Station.
1 A little N of the Parish Church is a paved alleyway leading to the Victorian chapel, built in 1867 to replace the old Calvinist ‘Meeting’ erected on this site ...
A Baptist chapel dating to the Imperial period is situated 200m north east of the Post Office, Shipston on Stour. The building is now in use as a store.
1 Building No 449. A Lock-up House owned by the Dean and Chapter of Worcester.
2 Mawkin End, a short wide area formed by the convergence of Shoemakers Street and the ...
The site of a lock up or prison dating to the Imperial period. It was owned by the Dean and Chapter of Worcester, and is marked on a tithe award map of 1842. It was situated off Church Street, Shipston on Stour.
1 A Wesleyan Methodist chapel, built in 1880.
A Methodist chapel dating to the Imperial period. It is situated on New Street, Shipston on Stour.
1 This George III shilling, found in 1978 in an allotment on Telegraph St, Shipston-on-Stour, has been classified as a contemporary forgery of 1816.
Findspot - a George III coin, dating to the Imperial period, on an allotment in Telegraph Street, Shipston on Stour.
1 Found in garden of a house in Telegraph Street: A brass coin weight (1 ounce avoir dupois) in very fine condition, of George II or George III date. Obverse: ...
Findspot - a coin weight of George II or III found in Telegraph Street, Shipston on Stour.
1 Archaeological observation during the construction of seven new houses recorded a small, stone-lined (limestone), well close to the street frontage. This may have been early 19th century in date ...
A 19th century stone-lined well and 19th/20th century finds recorded during residential redevelopment. The site is located at 39, Station Road, Shipton on Stour.
1 Gothic revival building said to contain the lock-up.
2 One lock-up is marked (PRN 2116) but there is no mention of a second.
Documentary evidence suggests that this may be the site of a lock up which was in use during the Imperial period. It is marked on a tithe award map of 1842. The lock up was situated between Old Road and New Street, Shipston.
1 Mile Post & Guide Post marked.
2 One of a series of cast iron markers placed exactly one mile apart on the Stratford on Avon to Oxford turnpike road, the ...
A cast iron milepost dating to the Imperial period, and marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1924. It is located on Church Street, Shipston on Stour.
1 Shipston – town houses gardens, Shipston on Stour.
Lovie reports that he did not trace specific properties and did not see the gardens. He states that a late C19th photograph ...
Specific properties untraced and gardens unseen.
The length of time involved in an apprenticeship – often seven or even ten years – inevitably meant that there were problems, some more serious than others. The records cared ...
The 1827 ‘Dietary’ for inmates of the workhouse in the Shipston Union survives in the care of Warwickshire County Record Office.1 This was a directive from the Poor Law Commissioners ...
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.