1 A canal cottage is marked on the OS 25″.
Documentary evidence suggests that a canal cottage stood 600m north of Tuttle Hill, Nuneaton, during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1888.
1 Lockhouses marked on early OS map.
2 Inaccessible.
The site of lock houses which date to the Imperial period and are situated 1km north west of Whittington. They are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 A regular 3 storeyed brick built house, c.1680. It is said to have been the home of Dr. Johnson’s maternal grandparents, Cornelius and Anne Ford. The house ...
Dunton Hall, a three-storeyed house built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated 600m south west of Mullensgrove Farm.
1 Possible icehouse discovered by the owner when digging a trench behind some out-houses. The structure was subterranean, built of brick, with a quite low arched roof. It was undoubtedly ...
The site of a possible icehouse which was discovered during the excavation of a trench. It was built of brick and was used for storing ice in the warmer months. The icehouse dated from the Imperial period onwards. It was situated 200m east of Newbold Comyn park.
1 ‘Icehouse Grove’ marked.
2 Probably the site of an icehouse associated with Ragley Hall.
3 Beamon and Roaf state that the ice house is egg-shaped and was built in the loam ...
The possible site of an icehouse, a structure built partially below ground where ice was stored during the warmer months. It was probably associated with Ragley Hall and was in use during the Imperial period. The site lies in Icehouse Grove, 400m west of Ragley Hall.
1 Excavations were carried out. Rebuilding in the 16th century, after the town fires, had removed any previous evidence.
2 Demolition of a Victorian house allowed examination of an additional ...
The remains of a Post Medieval house were found during an archaeological excavation. It was situated 95m south east of the Civic Hall, Stratford upon Avon.
1 The old house was pulled down six years ago and rebuilt.
2 The first mention of the manor of Ladbroke was in 1316.
3 The old house of Ladbroke Park was ...
The site of a manor house dating to the Post Medieval period. It is situated 400m south east of Ladbrookpark Coppice.
1 Late 18th century, 2 storeys and attic, brick, old tile roof, flanking chimneys, stone coped gable ends. East front has 3 bays, outer 2-light segmental leaded casement windows ...
Ryton Lodge, a farmhouse that was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 500m south west of Ryton on Dunsmore.
1 Late 18th century, two storey, and attic, brick built. The building has a hipped, old tile roof with lead ridges. Square in plan with three bays. ...
The Grange, a house that was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 1km south east of Ryton on Dunsmore.
1 A building called ‘Lock House’ marked on 1926 6″ OS map at this point.
2 It is a modernised 19th century two-storey lock cottage.
A canal lock keepers cottage, dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1926. It is located 600m west of Budbrooke.
1 There is a building marked on the 1926 6″ OS map as ‘Canal Cottage’.
2 Presumably this is a lengthmans cottage. It appears to be oriented towards the line of ...
Canal Cottage, a house that probably dated to the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1926. The house was situated 100m north west of Hopsford Aqueduct.
1 Of c1700. A plain brick house with a gabled crosswing. The barn is of late 17th century brick and is reputed to have been the rectorial tithe barn, but ...
The site of a house and barn that were built during the Post Medieval period on Church Lane, Curdworth. The site is now under a housing estate.
1 Two icehouses at Walton Hall (see also PRN 4903). The second icehouse is situated on the side of the lake. There is a well-defined and regularly-shaped mound covered with ...
The site of an icehouse dating to either the Post Medieval or the Imperial period. It is visible as a mound. It is situated 500m south of Walton.
1 Ice house marked.
2 This is one of two icehouses at Walton Hall (see PRN 4902). The icehouse has now disappeared. There is no depression or mound to show its ...
The site of an icehouse dating to the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The bricks from the domed roof were apparantly removed during the 20th century. It was located 700m south of Walton.
1 Ice house marked on map.
The site of an icehouse, built partly under ground and used for storing ice. It was built during the Imperial period and is situated 125m south of Harper's Lane, Mancetter.
1 The traces of the cellars of a number of houses were visible until the Holloway was filled in during winter 1985-6. A trench excavated in the base of ...
The site of several houses dating to the Imperial period. The cellars were found during an archaeological excavation. The houses were situated around what is now the junction of Theatre Street and Commainge Close, Warwick.
1 A cob-walled house on Yarningdale Common was recorded.
2 There are no buildings at this grid reference on the OS 1:10 000.
3 The building was located on a walk-over survey ...
A cob walled house dating to the Post Medieval period. It is located on Yarningale Common.
1 The manor house at Little Kineton, a fine building of Elizabethan origin with additions made in 1720, was pulled down in 1790 by Richard Hill, who began a new ...
The site of a manor house which was built during the Post Medieval period. It was pulled down in 1790 with the intention of building a new house, but this was never completed. It was situated in Little Kineton.
1 Late 17th century brick and stone dressings of H-shape and two storeys. Tall narrow windows of brick with wooden casement frames. Hipped, old tile roof. The ...
Flander's Hall, a house built of brick with stone dressings which was constructed during the Post Medieval period. It is situated 1km west of Foul End.
1 Shortly before the 8th of February 1645 a force of Parliamentarian troops from Warwick, under Major John Bridges, the governor of the castle attacked the house and stables at ...
The site of Lark Stoke house is presumed to be the site of the current house of Lower Lark Stoke. The house was garissoned during the civil war, and burned down in 1645 by Parliamentarian troops.
1 During a watching brief on groundworks at the Old Forge, some information was recorded as to the pevious building on the site. The original element consists of the two ...
At the front the Old Forge is a four-bay brick building of probably mid 19th-century date, with three two-storey bays and one single-storey. The original element consists of the two central two-storey bays on stone foundations. There is a strong possibility that the stone foundations originally supported an earlier timber-framed building, the superstructure of which was removed and replaced in brick, re-using the original foundations.
12 Cruck framed house forming three bays and an open hall. Dendrochronoligical analysis identified a date of 1475 for some of the timbers although several cruck blades (not dated) were ...
House at Binton 150m north west of St Peter's Church. Listed building with cruck framed timbers dated by dendrochronology to 1475, elements from the 16th century, alterations in the 19th century, restored in 1984.
12 To the north of Ansley Hall, on the opposite side of the B4114, is the site of a walled kitchen garden, now the site of a modern bungalow. The ...
Kitchen garden situated on opposite side of B4114 from Ansley House.
1 Baddesley Old Hall, in the principal village street about one third of a km S of the church, is a small rectangular dwelling of the 16th century facing ...
The site of Baddesley Old Hall, a house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It was situated 100m east of Church Farm.