2 Enclosure shows on air photographs.
Enclosure of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 200m south west of Plestowes Spinney.
2 Enclosures and linear features show as cropmarks.
Enclosures and linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 400m south of Lodge Wood.
1 A flint of probable Mesolithic date was found on gravel to the E of Pit 7 (PRN 4687). This was a narrow flake of dark flint with the bulbar ...
Findspot - a flint flake probably dating to the Mesolithic period was found 250m south of Barford Wood.
1 1965: Excavation produced evidence for four ditched enclosures. Phases 1-3 were only partly uncovered. Phase 3 was a subrectangular enclosure with a gully which probably acted as a bedding ...
An excavation at this site uncovered evidence of ditched enclosures that suggested four phases of occupation. The features showed up on aerial photographs. Features and finds were of probable Neolithic date. The site was 300m north east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation produced evidence for the ditch of a ring ditch and the entrance. An irregular avenue of driven stakes approached the entrance at an oblique angle. Stake holes ...
Part of a ring ditch, dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age, was uncovered during and archaeological excavation. Stake holes and fragments of pottery were also found belonging to the same period. The site is located 300m south of Barford Wood.
1 1965: Excavation produced evidence for an Iron Age settlement (PRN 5588) and a Neolithic pit. The pit produced a sherd of Neolithic Fengate Ware.
A Neolithic pit, which contained a sherd of pottery, was found during an excavation. The site was 200m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation of a ‘hair pin’ of pits, 80m long. Excavation was small-scale and revealed a few features, but was inconclusive. Of seven pits only one produced a find ...
During an excavation several pits were found. The dating of these pits was inconclusive. The site is 250m north east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation of a rectangular enclosure of Iron Age date with evidence of four recuts of the same ditch. The enclosure was a rough rectangle 11.6m by 16.4m with ...
A rectangular enclosure, along with hearth stones, charcoal and pottery, was found during an excavation. The enclosure and pottery dated to the Iron Age period and suggest that the site may have been a settlement. It was located 200m north west of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Trench cut across a group of pits. Four small pits with associated stakeholes, but no finds. Also a number of large pits. The excavator considered these pits to ...
An excavation was undertaken where pits were visible on aerial photographs. There were no finds to date these features but they may have been Neolithic. The site was 250m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Mechanical sections were cut across a group of large pits. Before excavation it had been suggested that they were tree pits. The pits actually appeared to be archaeological ...
An excavation was undertaken where pits were visible on aerial photographs. Ditches, post holes and smaller pits were found. There was no firm dating evidence, but the features may have been Neolithic. The site was 400m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation in advance of bypass construction. One ditch proved to be V-shaped and the few scraps of pottery found were Roman. Further ditches also produced Roman pottery. The ...
During an excavation Roman features and finds were uncovered. A number of ditches may represent the remains of a field system. Three pits were also found and at least one of these was probably a well. The site was 800m east of the M40 Avon Bridge at Barford.
1 1965: Dragline during construction of Warwick bypass located a small pit about 1.2m across which was filled with charcoal and pot boilers.
A small undated pit was discovered during an excavation. The site was 300m east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Ditch located during construction of Warwick bypass. This produced pot of Bronze Age ‘domestic’ type.
A ditch and fragments of Bronze Age pottery were found during an excavation. The site was located 250m south east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: During construction of Warwick bypass a ‘bun-shaped’ cropmark produced evidence for a V-shaped ditch. Site ‘O’
A 'V' shaped ditch of unknown date was discovered during an excavation. It was located 400m east of Bushey Hill, Barford. Site 'O'
2 Small irregular enclosure shows on air photographs.
3 Site no 83 in survey.
4 In addition to the double pit alignment (MWA705) there is a five-sided enclosure measuring 27m N-S by ...
A settlement dating to the Iron Age was found during an excavation. Round houses, ditches and a double pit alignment were found within an enclosure. The site is located 300m south east of Barford Wood.
1 Turnpike road, established by Acts of 1779 onwards. Part of a route from Leicester, the original Acts for which were passed in 1753-4, but which proved too unwieldy to ...
A toll road running from Warwick to Paddle Brook. Travellers would have had to pay a toll to use the road during the Imperial period.
1 A large complex of cropmark features including ring ditches, enclosures, pits and linear features. Excavation produced evidence for Neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age and Romano British occupation. ...
During an excavation evidence for a settlement was found. The features included pit clusters, ditches, enclosures and barrows. The settlement existed at the site from the Neolithic to the Roman period. It was situated east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 2 Barford Hill House garden, Barford, Warwick.
House built c. 1802 and said to have had formal gardens with terraces; paddock down to river Avon; boathouse; riverside woodland woalk, lake, ...
Garden developed for housing. Originally had formal gardens, riverside paddock, woodland walk, kitchen garden. Little of original garden remains.
1 2 Barford House, Barford, Warwick.
Lovie reports that the early 19th century house is, at the time of his survey (1996/7) in very poor condition and that this might threaten ...
Pleasure grounds retaining much of their Regency character to the front of the house; condition of rear gardens unknown; kitchen garden; paddocks.
1 2 Possible enlcosure visible on aerial photography.
Possible enclosure of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 200m south of Plestowes Spinney.
01>A gasometer is shown on the 1906 6″ map. Reasearch carried out by Barford Heritage group suggests that the gas was methane derived from animal waste. They further note ...
A gasometer, a storage tank for gas which includes a meter, is shown on the 1906 6" map. Reasearch carried out by Barford Heritage group suggests that the gas was methane derived from animal waste. They further note that, if so, it would appear to be the only recorded methane plant in warwickshire. It is marked as disused on the 1926 6" OS map indicating that it has went out of use at some point prior to the production of this map.
1 A boundary ditch and a post hole of possible medieval date were revealed in an evaluation trench.
A boundary ditch and a post hole of medieval or post-medieval date were found in an evaulation trench in 2010. A sherd of medieval pottery was recovered from the post hole.
1 Three distinct groups of pits and/or postholes were located in Area B dating to the Middle-Late Iron Age.
Area of Middle-Late Iron Age Pits and Postholes from Area 'B' uncovered from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.
1 Two core trimming flakes with a series of narrow blade detachments were discovered in topsoil in area ‘B’ during archaeological excavations in advance of the Barford Bypass.
Unstratified, Late Mesolithic flint discovered from Area 'B' from excavation in advance of the construction of the Barford Bypass.