1 A complex of walls. Much disturbed by ploughing and tree growth, but there appeared to be several buildings covering a long period. The earlier buildings were well-built with mortared ...
The remains of several Roman buildings were found during an excavation. Roman coins and pottery sherds were also found. The site was located in the area of Abbey Fields, Alcester.
1 1963. A large excavation exposed a complex of walls, post holes etc. A stone-lined well was cleared and dated to the late C3/early C4.
2 Site no 27 in list.
3 ...
The remains of a Roman building were found during an excavation. A Roman well was also recorded. The site was located in the area of Chantry Crescent, Alcester.
1 Area excavation examined road and occupation. To the N were seven superimposed gravel surfaces with intervening occupation layers. Cutting through the second from top was a long narrow building ...
The remains of a series of Roman roads as well as the remains of a Roman building were excavated. Roman pottery was found on the site which was located in the area of Chantry Crescent, Alcester.
1 Mahany’s Road C. This runs through her Sites A, H, D and E and appears to cross the S ditch (PRN 449). It was probably in use in the ...
The site of a Roman road which was partially excavated. The site was located in the area of Birch Abbey, Alcester.
1 Mahany’s Road B, known from excavations on her Site C, may also have been visible in Taylor’s 1969 excavation (PRN 500). The alignment of buildings may suggest that it ...
A Roman road running south out of Alcester. The road runs down the High Street and then to the west of Bleachfield Street. It has been partially excavated.
1 Excavation in 1956-8: to the W of Ryknield Street was a cobbled area bounded by shallow ditches and post holes; associated pottery ranged from the late C1 to C3, ...
Post holes, ditches and a cobbled surface all of Roman date suggest that this was the site of a building. Roman pottery was also recovered from the site, which was located to the east of Roman Way.
1 Construction of a flood barrier in 1970 resulted in an area of the Roman town some 150m by 9-25m being stripped. The excavations revealed a Roman road 4.3m in ...
Excavations revealed the remains of a Roman road to the east of Bleachfield Street, Alcester. The road is also visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs.
1 Observation of the foundation trench for a conservatory in 1977 revealed a cobbled surface and pottery finds indicating intensive occupation this far N of the town centre, from ...
The possible remains of a Roman building were found during an excavation. Three Roman ditches and a cremation burial were also found at this site, which is situated east of Priory Road, Alcester.
1 1969: Excavation in gardens revealed traces of a succession of timber buildings, the earliest of which may easily be early Flavian. Use of the site continued until late in ...
The remains of a series of timber buildings of Roman date were found during excavations in Bleachfield Street. Evidence for the construction of two roads was also found.
1 Excavation on a supermarket site cut across a clay and gravel rampart and its ditch, which are taken to be the late 2nd century defences here taking a different ...
The remains of the defensive rampart, a large earthen mound, around the Roman town of Alcester were found during an excavation. The site was situated to the east of Priory Road.
1 Although the watercourses are marked on mid C18 maps, no mill buildings are shown; they were probably remnants of a corn mill which had become disused many years before. ...
King's Coughton Mill, a water-powered mill used during the Imperial period for grinding corn and later as a needle mill. It is situated 500m north east of King's Coughton.
1 1965. Beside Guillaume’s Factory, S of the Stratford Road, some machine cut trenches showed traces of timber buildings in alignment with a N-S V-shaped ditch, the filling of which ...
During an excavation timber buildings and a ditch of Roman date were found. A later Roman stone building and a hypocaust were also found at this site, south of Stratford Road, Alcester.
1 Stratford Road, margin of highway. Herringbone pavement at 0.5m, 2.4m in extent.
2 Noted.
The remains of a Roman building were found during an excavation. The site was located on Stratford Road, Alcester.
1 Gardens of cottages E of Bleachfield Street. Line of gravel road parallel to Bleachfield Street found here. It is possible that at least some of Davis’ excavations given as ...
The site of a Roman road, traces of which were found during an excavation. The site is located on Bleachfield Street, Alcester.
1 Off Henley Street behind the Police Station. Roman pottery and signs of a large building. Also behind police station along path: two Roman coins.
2 Exact site uncertain.
3 “Further ...
The remains of a Roman building was found near Henley Street, Alcester, during an excavation. Roman pottery was also found at this site.
1 Major route and saltway running east via Alcester and Stratford, then south east towards the Foss Way and eventually out of the county. The course to Alcester is very ...
The Saltway, a major Roman road running east and southeast from Droitwich, which can be traced across much of Warwickshire.
1 Fragments of Roman tesserae and plaster with maroon and red paint, some on white surface, and fragments of flanged tile. Also many flanged tiles and building tiles for hypocaust ...
Various finds, including tesserae, painted plaster and tiles, suggest that this was the site of a Roman building. The site was located on the north side of Meeting Lane.
1 In Meeting Lane were recorded a floor of ‘concrete’ at a depth of 1.2m and some slightly decorated plaster. Below this were walls and at a depth of 1.5m ...
Various finds, including painted wall plaster, tesserae and tiles, suggest that this was the site of a Roman building. Roman pottery and coins were also found at this site, located in Meeting Lane, Alcester.
1 Turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775 as part of the Evesham network.
Part of a toll road running from Alcester to Evesham, whose upkeep was paid for by extracting a toll from travellers. It was constructed during the Imperial period.
1 A turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775, part of the Alcester/ Evesham network.
2The road from Alcester to Feckenham was turnpiked in 1753-4.
The site of a toll road dating to the Imperial period and which ran from Stratford to Bradley Brook, via Alcester.
1 2A turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775, part of the Alcester/ Evesham network.
The site of a toll road. During the Imperial period, travellers had to pay to use the road. It ran from Alcester to Lickey and Bromsgrove.
1 Excavations on the site of demolished cottages in Malt Mill Lane revealed a gravel floor laid on red clay with the post holes of a timber building cutting into ...
The remains of a Roman building were excavated to the west of Malt Mill Lane, Alcester.
1 Corner of Malt Mill Lane with Church Street. Roman foundations at 0.9m.
2 Cutting in centre of Church Street and Malt Mill Lane. Pottery, oyster shell, broken tiles, stones, all ...
The remains of a Roman building were found during an excavation on the corner of Malt Mill Lane and Church Street, Alcester. Finds of pottery, tile and oyster shell were also found at the site.
2 Possible linear features show on aerial photographs. In places this boundary is doubled.
3 An old racecourse is recorded in this area.
A racecourse dating to the Imperial period is visible on aerial photographs. It was situated 1km west of Alcester Lodge.