1 1976: An area of 11 x 17m was excavated in advance of redevelopment. 1m of Post Medieval material sealed the site. Medieval buildings (PRN 5490) impinged on the latest ...
The remains of Roman buildings were excavated to the west of Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Roman coins were also found at this site.
1 A possible Roman building, possibly a mansio, was recorded during geophsyical survey to the E of Alcester. Electrical resistance survey identified a well-defined anomaly which could be indicative of ...
A possible Roman building, possibly a mansio, was recorded during geophsyical survey to the E of Alcester.
1 A pebble surface and a sandstone block were found in a gas pipe trench. They were likely to be Romano-British in date.
A pebble surface and a sandstone block were probable remains of a Romano-British building and yard surface/road.
1 Two lower courses of two substantial limestone walls were found during water main work along Birmingham Road. The E-W running walls were constructed within a foundation ditch and were ...
Llimestone foundations c.2m in width were found in Birmingham Road during water main renewal works. Likely to have been part of a substantial Roman building in the northern extra-mural settlement but no dating evidence was found.
1 Several sandstone wall foundations were noted in narrow gas pipe trenches. The location of the walls would not fit with the known medieval street plan and so it ...
Sandstone wall foundations were found in several trenches excavated along Church Street in Alcester during the laying of new gas pipes. They are probably the remains of at least one Romano-British building. A mortar floor surface was also found.
1 A sandstone wall foundation was found in a gas pipe trench. Historical map evidence shows that it probably corresponds to one of the buildings that stood in Shop Row.
A sandstone foundation from the front of a medieval or post-medieval building that would have stood in Shop Row, Alcester.
1 Two separate wall foundations were recorded during observation of topsoil stripping associated with Alcester Flood Bank. They probably relate to the same building. The walls appeared not to be ...
Two separate wall foundations were recorded during observation of topsoil stripping associated with Alcester Flood Bank.
1 Two sub-oval pits or posthole features were recorded during archaeological work at the former Police Station, Priory Road, Alcester. They were Roman in date. The presence of large stones ...
Two sub-oval pits or postholes were recorded during archaeological work at the former Police Station, Priory Road, Alcester. They were Roman in date, and probably relate to a series of timber buildings previously identified across this area.
1 Archaeological observation of sixteen geological test pits on land to the north of Cold Comfort Lane, Alcester revealed no significant archaeological remains. Two walls were encountered and would ...
Two walls were found during archaeological work in Cold Comfort Lane, Alcester. The walls date to the Imperial period. They are the remains of buildings that are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 The recovery of Roman pottery, ceramic building materials, faced limestone blocks and stone rubble from the base of the foundation trench (c.1.00m deep) may indicate the existence of ...
Roman pottery, ceramic building material and masonry recovered during archaeological work suggest a Roman stone building may have stood in this area. The site was located in the High Street, Alcester.
1 Salvage recording revealed traces of the Roman town, including the foundations of a stone building, a dump of painted wall plaster, a small assemblage of 1st century pottery, and ...
The remains of a Roman building and part of a Roman road were found during archaeological work. The site was located in Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Roman pottery was also found at the site.
12 Stone walled building with an opus signinum floor and a hypocaust. A sequence of deposits from the 2nd century onwards was also present. Secondary source; see below for primary.
3 ...
The remains of a Roman building with a hypocaust was found during archaeological work in Stratford Road, Alcester. The building is thought to be within an area of settlement on the edge of the early Roman town.
1 Archaeological observation of a foundation trench uncovered slight building foundations and a quantitiy of 12th/13th century pottery. The building foundation was probably associated with an outbuilding fronting on ...
The remains of wall foundations and pottery of Medieval date were found during archaeological work in Bleachfield Street, Alcester.
1 Evaluation carried out during Jan-Mar 1988. 5 trenches excavated by hand to a depth of 1.5-2m with trenches 2 & 4 fully emptied of archaeological deposits. In ...
The remains of Roman settlement were found during archaeological work in Gas House Lane, Alcester. Evidence of timber buildings, including pits and post holes, was found. Finds from the site included Roman jewellery and coins.
1 1987. Salvage recording uncovered a stone-filled foundation trench 1.4m wide marking the external walls of a Roman stone building. One side measured 10.7m NW-SE, and two corners of the ...
The remains of a Roman stone building were found during excavations in the High Street, Alcester. Finds from the site included a single tessera and painted wall plaster.
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 Meeting Lane, Baptist Chapel. Tesselated pavement found when chapel was built about 1660. Information from Rev J H Bloom.
2 Chance find c1660. Exact location uncertain.
3 The Rev J H ...
The remains of a Roman tesselated pavement was found in Meeting Lane, Alcester, suggesting that this might be the site of a Roman building.
1 The excavation of three test pits by the owner prior to the construction of a new bedroom and conservatory uncovered three undated stone walls. Museum staff examined the ...
Three undated walls were recorded following the excavation of three test pits. The walls all appeared to join onto each other and may have represented three phases of building. The site was located at 4 Meeting Lane, Alcester.