1 ‘Windmill Hill’. Large windmill mound surrounded by ridge and furrow. SP4861.
2 The grid reference given in reference 1 is incorrect. The mound is situated in a field with very ...
A windmill mound marks the site of a former windmill which might date back to the Medieval period. The mound is visible as an earthwork. It is situated 400m south west of Lower Shuckburgh.
1 On the N side of the moat a large pond has been dug into the earthwork of the moat, destroying its symmetry. It appears to be, therefore, of later ...
A possible fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. Alternatively, this may be a mill pond, an area of water retained above a mill dam, dating to the Medieval period onwards. It is visible as an earthwork, and is situated 100m south east of the church at Morton Bagot.
1 In 1086 there was a mill. Two mills are mentioned in 1266. The mill is also recorded in 1538, 1562 and 1649. The mill was used as the manor ...
The remains of a watermill which is documented from the Medieval period. The building was converted into a house in 1972. The mill race survives. The site is located to the south east of Clifford Chambers.
Site of a watermill.
1 A watermill in the manor of Upton is recorded in 1284 and 1394, and a mill is included in the lease of the Manor Place in ...
A watermill at Upton/Haselor for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period. Its exact location is unknown.
1 A mill is recorded in 1086 and 1291. Nothing else is known until it is mentioned in 1576. Information on ownership exists for the C19 and C20. The mill ...
Great Alne Mill, a water mill which was in use during the Medieval period. It continued in use until the 1960s. The surviving buildings largely date to the Imperial period. The mill is situated 800m south east of Great Alne.
1 There was a mill at Preston Bagot in 1086. Two mills are recorded in 1200 and 1291 and the mills are recorded at the beginning of the 17th century. ...
A mill was recorded in the Domesday survey and two mills in later Medieval documents. This watermill fell into disuse in the early 17th century. The mill pond and vestiges of a leat still survive. Its location was 200m north of Warwick Road Bridge, Preston Bagot.
1 There was a mill at Preston Bagot in 1086 valued at 16s. In c1200 Simon Bagot gave two mills (see also PRN 1604), with “the multure of his ...
Preston Bagot Mill, the partial remains of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period to the 20th century. Traces of the mill race survive. The mill is 200m northwest of Warwick Road Bridge.
1 This was probably the mill to which Thomas Hungerford ‘had leave to divert the stream’ in 1430. By 1621 there were two mills attached to the manor. Information exists ...
The site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period. The mill buildings and some of the watercourses are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The site is to the east of Mill House Terrace, is now under housing.
1 A mill is recorded in 1086.
2 A mid 18th century map shows a name ‘Ground Next Mill’, but there is no trace of a mill on the map.
3 The ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this was the site of a watermill from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. No surface evidence remains. The site is to the north of the reservoir in Newbold Comyn Park.
1 In 1086 two mills are recorded at Leamington. The mill is recorded again in 1520, 1635 and 1684. Information on ownership exists for the 19th century. The mill probably ...
The site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period to the Imperial period. The site, to the north west of Mill Road, Leamington Spa, is now built over.
1 There was a mill in 1086. It is also recorded in 1560. The present building dates from 1792 when a cotton spinning mill was built on the site. For ...
Rock Mills, the remains of a watermill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period. The present building is late 18th century when a cotton mill operated. A chimney and some machinery survive. It is 100m west of Highcroft Crescent, Leamington Spa.
1 A mill, probably this site, is recorded in 1086. Later it became the property of Coombe Abbey. Information on ownership exists for the 16th to 20th centuries. The mill ...
Blackdown Mill, a watermill for which there are documentary records from the Medieval period. It was in use until the 1920s and the waterwheel and some of the machinery survive. It is on the south side of Hill Wootton Road.
1 A mill is recorded in 1086 and again in 1315. In 1844 a small needle-pointing mill was built onto the existing corn mill. Both sets of machinery were operated ...
Hoo Mill, a watermill used for grinding corn from the Medieval period onwards. During the Imperial period it was used as a needle mill. Many of the mill buildings are still standing and it is also known from documentary evidence. It is located 500m south east of Kinwarton.
1 There was a mill at Salford Priors in 1086. In 1291 there were two mills. Two mills under one roof are recorded in 1610. The approximate site of these ...
The site of a watermill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period. It was located 200m west of Salford Priors Bridge.
1 There was a mill at Wixford in 1086, which belonged to the Abbey of Evesham in the 12th century. It had certainly fallen out of use by the 18th ...
The site of a watermill at Wixford. The mill was recorded in the Domesday survey but had become disused by the end of the 18th century. It was located 200m south of Wixford Bridge.
1 Robert de Bruyley had a mill in Wike. He is mentioned as holding land in Wike in 1262 and a mill, formerly his possession, is refered to ...
Documentary references in the Medieval period record a watermill at Wike. The exact location of this mill in the parish of Coughton is unknown.
1 There was a mill here in 1086, and mills in about 1155, 2 watermills and a fishery being attached to the manor in 1287. The mill is ...
Oversley Mill, a watermill which was used from the Medieval period onwards to grind corn. It was later used as a needle mill during the Imperial period. The mill is situated 600m east of Arrow.
1 Thomas Bullocke was miller here in 1680. It may well have been a needle mill in the early 19th century. By 1854 it had been converted ...
The site of Morton Mill, a watermill. Documentary evidence suggests the mill was in use between the Medieval and the Imperial periods. It may have been used as a needle mill in the early 19th century. Some earthworks survive. It stood 500m south west of Morton Plantation.
1 Ouston Grange and Mill were once a Grange belonging to Merevale Abbey and in c1650 still ‘reputed a member thereof’.
3 Marked on map.
4 An archaeological evaluation of Ouston Grange, ...
The possible site of a Medieval watermill at Ouston Grange. A mill was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887, but no surface evidence survives. The site was 1km west of Whitacre Station.
1 Three fields centred on the above location are called “Little Mill Field, “Mill Field Mead” and “Great Mill Field”.
2 This field is now under plough and apart from ...
The possible site of a watermill of unknown date. The site is suggested by field names and lies 100m west of Ansty Waste Bridge.
1 A mill and mill pool belonging to Nicholas son of Liulf is recorded between 1188 and 1191. The mill pond is recorded again in 1229 as belonging to Nicholas ...
The site of a Medieval watermill and a dam that held back the water that powered the mill. The site is known from documentary evidence. The dam survives as an earthwork. It was situated east of the church at Withybrook.
1 Mill Field, new Newnham Paddox (Monks Kirby Tithe Map 1842). Medieval (or later). Post mill. SP4783.
2 At SP4783 there is a low mound standing amidst ridge and furrow at ...
The site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. It is marked on a tithe map of 1842 and the windmill mound survives as an earthwork. It may date back to the Medieval period. The mill was situated 200m north of Cabbage Clump.
1 In 1086 a mill was recorded at Brandon. This seems to have been the mill at Stratton, called ‘Perimulne’, which was given to Combe Abbey by Robert de Chetwode ...
The site of a Medieval/Post Medieval watermill which is known from documentary evidence. It was situated to the east of Brandon Castle.
1 ‘Millham Furlong’ and ‘Millham Meadow’ marked.
2 No traces of a mill remain.
Documentary evidence suggests that this might be the site of a watermill dating to the Medieval or Post Medieval periods. The site lies 1km west of Kites Hardwick.