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 In 1086 there were two mills at Bishops Tachbrook but nothing is known of these after the 16th century. Ford Mill stood some distance downstream from the probable site ...
The site of Ford Mill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period to the early Imperial period. Traces of the head race are still visible. The site is in Warwick Castle Park, on the north side of New Waters.
1 The remains of a pond thought to be a fishpond (see WA1321), now believed to be the remains of a mill pond associated with the earthwork remains of a ...
The remains of a pond, probably a mill pond. The remains are associated with the earthworks of a watermill to the north. Both the mill and mill pond date to the Medieval or Post Medieval periods. The site is at Morton Bagot, 100m south east of the church.
1 The site of Admington mill was to the south of the modern Top Farm, in a field called Mill Windsor. It was not functioning in 1355, and seems to ...
The site of Admington Mill which was in use during the Medieval period. It was used as a corn mill and later became a malt mill. It was situated north west of Lark Stoke.
1 The watermill and the pond called Mylne Pool are referred to in 1554 and 1689.
2 In hearth tax returns of 1662-74 a watermill with two hearths is recorded. Information ...
Chesterton Watermill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Post Medieval to the late Imperial period. The present mill building dates to the early 17th century, and an overshot waterwheel is still in place. It stands 350m south of Chesterton Windmill.
1 At the SW corner of the field with the deserted Medieval village earthworks is a large platform projecting into the river. This may have been a mill site. There ...
The possible site of a Medieval watermill associated with Stoneton deserted settlement. Some earthworks survive at the site which lies 400m south east of Newfield Pool.
1 Between the Priory and the canal, just to the W of the modern Earls Road, there is an earthwork which must have been a dam across the Barpool Brook. ...
The possible site of a Medieval dam which survives as an earthwork. It was probably associated with a mill pond marked on Beighton's map of 1722-5. The site lies on the south side of Vernon's Lane, Nuneaton.
1 A ‘motte’. In 1961 ditch was fairly well preserved in places. The mound is located on Windmill Hill. 1967 the ditch had been ploughed away and ...
The site of a windmill which was in use from the Post Medieval period. The mound on which the windmill stood survives as an earthwork. It was situated 400m north west of Nether Whitacre.
1 Windmill Hill. There is reference to a windmill belonging to the manor in 1557.
2 There is a large mill mound at SP31316172.
3 Field named as ...
The site of a windmill which dated to the Post Medieval period. It was situated 500m south west of Tachbrook Mallory.
1 Victoria County History entry.
2 A mill is recorded at Barford in 1086. It is also recorded in 12th ccentury and 13th century. In the 13th century there appear to ...
The site of Barford Mill, a watermill for which there is intermittent documentary evidence from the Domesday survey through to the end of the Imperial period. The mill was located 500m east of Barford Bridge.
1 The two mills of Admington and Lark Stoke are both mentioned in the court rolls of the Winchcombe Abbey manor of Admington. The Lark Stoke mill was located ...
The site of two watermills dating to the Medieval period. The mills are known from documentary evidence. They are located 500m apart and north west of Ilmington.
1 Handsome stone windmill erected in 1632 on site of earlier mill for Sir Edward Peyto, after a design by Inigo Jones. The roof is of domical shape covered with ...
A 17th century circular stone windmill of unique design, one of the structures forming part of a designed landscape associated with the Peyto mansion at Chesterton. It has been restored, and much of the original machinery is still in place. It stands on Windmill Hill.
1 Derelict truncated red brick tower cemented over, in poor condition, empty. Three storey. Dates from c1800. Rebuilt after fire in 1849. Had four storeys, four patent sails and three ...
Southam 'Old Mill', the derelict remains of a windmill built in the Imperial period. Documentary sources suggest that a windmill may have stood at the site during the Medieval period. The site is located to the north of Mill Road, Southam.
1 In a field known as Mill Pits, the River Itchen makes a sharp loop. The loop has been cut by what appears to be an artificial leet, thus creating ...
This may be the site of the watermill at Southam recorded in the Domesday survey. The mill did not survive the Medieval period, but a possible watercourse is still visible as an earthwork. The site lies 200m north east of Thorpe Bridge.
1 Post mill. Built 17th century. Open trestle, four common sails, roof hipped and extension at tail, two pairs of stones, ladder and tailpole. Worked until dismantled 1910-11.
2 On the ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a windmill of the post mill type. It was built in the Post Medieval period, and dismantled in 1910/11. Its location was 300m west of Church Hill.
1 NW of the beacon stood until 1946 a wooden post windmill complete with sails, perhaps the successor of the ruined windmill called ‘le Stonmilne’ which Sir John, Lord Sudeley, ...
There is documentary evidence for a windmill here from the Post Medieval period and possibly earlier. It was of the post mill type and was restored in the 1930s but blew down in the 1946. It was at Windmill Hill.
1 Site of Forge Mill marked on OS map of 1887.
2 Site of Forge Mills for which the first documentary evidence is in Beighton’s Map of 1725. An archaeological evaluation ...
The site of Forge Mill, a corn mill dating to the Imperial period. It is situated west of Drayton Brick Bridge. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 Immediately E of the church, and 33m above it, a windmill occupies what was no doubt the site of the windmill mentioned in 1655 as attached to the ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of one or possibly two windmills first mentioned in 1655 and shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1834. The site is located on Mill Hill.
1 The mill at Abbots Salford is recorded in 1086 and 1206. The mill was probably situated on the Avon near Cleeve Mill, as appears from an undated lease to ...
The site of a watermill, for which there are documentary records from the Medieval period. Its exact location in Abbots Salford is unknown.
1 Post mill. Windmill Lane (and Windmill Inn). Medieval (or later). At approximately this grid reference. A number of references to a windmill between 1558 and 1562 may refer to ...
The site of a windmill, possibly of Post Medieval date, is suggested by documentary evidence. The site is located east of Coronation Street, Rugby.
1 There was a mill attached to Kenilworth Castle in 1296 (PRN 3205) and in 1291 Kenilworth Priory held two mills in the area. The site of one of these ...
The site of Kenilworth Mill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. The mill, which stood to the west of Forge Road, was demolished in 1964 for redevelopment.
1 A windmill is recorded in 1291.
2 A will of 1719 mentions a parcel of ground containing by estimation about half an acre with a windmill.
3 The mill is marked ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a windmill that was in use from the Medieval to the Imperial period. It stood to the north east of Flax Hill.
1 A mill at Alcester is recorded in 1241, when it was granted to the monks of Alcester, and in 1545. Details of ownership exist from 1872. It was used ...
Ragley Needle Mill, a watermill which was in use from the Medieval period as a corn mill and converted to a needle mill during the Imperial period. It is situated east of Birmingham Road, Alcester.
1 The mill is recorded in 1086 and was conveyed to Kenilworth Priory in 1325. The mill was mentioned again in 1653. On Beighton’s map of 1725 there is a ...
The site of Whitnash/Radford Semele Watermill which was built during the Medieval period. Traces of earthworks remain visible. It was situated 1km west of Radford Semele.