1 An observation of building work carried out at Bedworth Library in 1995 revealed evidence for a 18th/19th century well.
A 18th/19th century well found at the Library, High Street, Bedworth
12 Bedworth Rectory, Bedworth
Lovie reports that it stood 3/4 mile W of church, and was a mid-C18th villa with extensive grounds including lawns, pleasure grounds and paddocks. Lovie comments that ...
Extensive grounds with lawns, pleasure grounds, stream and paddocks. No longer in existence.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie
1 Large metal wheel found in a back garden. Thought to be associated with Bedworth Charity Colliery. From the description it looks like a component part of a ...
Cog Wheel made of solid metal. 3ft in diameter and 1ft deep with a central hole. Found on the site of the former Bedworth Charity Colliery and is presumably related. Description matches part of a coal tippler.
12 Caldwell Hall, Attleborough, Nuneaton
Lovie states that this was perhaps the most significant 20th centruy designed landscape in the District. It had extensive pleausre grounds with lawns, shrubberies, paddock with ...
Park with lake and boundary planting; pleasure grounds with walks.
House demolished c.1950. Site of house partly remains as public open space.
1 Chanberliane Almshouses, Bedworth.
Gardens part of design concept. Simple lawned area with well and pump. Modern rock/water garden at west end of the court.
Simple lawned area with well and pump.
Recommended for inclusion in the Local List by Lovie
Note: On HBSMR as New Almshouses MWA 7420
1 Coton Lawn, Chilvers Coton, Nuneaton.
Lovie gives little information other than this is a small villa-type site with pleasure grounds.
Small site with pleasure grounds
12 Miners’ Welfare Park, Bedworth.
Public park to south of town on reclaimed colliery land, opened c. 1925. Park extended at later date. Formal area at North end: lawns, ...
Public park with northern formal area and playing fields and sports facilities to south.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1Moat House garden, Moat House, Bedworth, Nuneaton and Bedworth.
Pleasure ground within moat and planting to N and E of moat.
Pleasure grounds within moat and planting to N and E of moat.
1 Built for a Presbyterian, later Congregational church (now United Reformed Church) formed in 1686, for which the first known meeting house was registered in 1705. The present building was ...
The Old Meeting House, a meeting house which was originally built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated off Chapel Street, Bedworth.
1 2 Platform adjacent to the church of St James, Weddington is visible on aerial photographs and LiDAR imagery, as is the platform on which the church sits.
3 Ridge and ...
A possible rectangular platform can be seen on aerial photographs and LiDAR imagery. The adjacent church is known to be on raised ground and there is a possibility that the two earthworks could be joined.
1 The remains of a small homestead moat in poor condition.
2 The N and E sides remain. The moat is rectilinear and waterfilled. It appears to be in a good ...
A moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. The moat is medieval in date and is visible as an earthwork. It is situated north of McDonnell Drive, Bedworth.
1 Sudeley Castle has the remains of a fairly large moat; there is a little water in one corner, but generally it is only a shallow depression. It was the ...
The site of Sudeley Castle Moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The moat dated to the Medieval period and was situated 300m north east of Griff Lane.
1 A hoard of 29 denarii was found recently in the Griff granite quarry. It is improbable that the whole of the hoard has been recovered. Coins of the late ...
Findspot - a hoard of Roman coins was found 150m north of The Beresteads.
1 In 1607 a hoard of 250 silver coins of Henry III was found, together with three finger rings (one gold with ruby, one gold with agate and one silver ...
Findspot - a coin hoard comprising Roman and Medieval coins was found 800m south west of Harper's Hill.
1 Some years ago (ie prior to 1881), whilst digging a railway cutting near Nuneaton, a small urn containing a considerable number of Roman silver coins ranging from Vespasian to ...
Findspot - a coin hoard dating to the Roman period, its exact find location is unknown.
1 This hamlet, now in Nuneaton, was destroyed when the first Marquis of Dorset enclosed the whole manor, turning it to pasture in 1491. Ten houses are reported pulled down ...
The site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Weddington. It was situated 400m west of The Oaks.
1 Weddington Castle (apparently standing in 1947) was probably on the site of the capital mansion-house mentioned in a suit of 1566. It may have been built by Thomas, Marquis ...
The site of Weddington Castle which was built during the Post Medieval period. It was situated west of Castle Road, Weddington, but is now destroyed.
1 Located during ploughing in 1964. Subsequent magnetometer survey produced a kiln. The site is in an elevated and well-drained location with clay and a water source close by. The ...
The site of several Roman tile kilns which were excavated. They were situated 400m south east of Dennis Farm.
1 A gas main trench produced tile wasters. A small compact tile kiln was revealed. The kiln is constructed on a deposit of sand and gravel and consisted of a ...
A Roman tile kiln, used for firing tiles, was found during an excavation. The kiln was situated 800m north east of Collycroft.
1 Five artefacts were found. These consisted of two scrapers, a burin, a laurel leaf and a bifacially pressure-flaked leaf-shaped arrowhead that is worked to an even flatness only 2.8 ...
Findspot - flint objects dating to the Neolithic period were found but their exact location is unknown.
1 Flint chipping floor.
2 Dating given as Mesolithic to Bronze Age.
Findspot - flint of Prehistoric date were found 300m north west of Paul's Ford.
1 The rock forming Group XIV is Camptonite and the parent source is to be found in the sills which penetrate the Cambrian rocks near Nuneaton. Most of the rock ...
The site of a possible stone axe factory dating to the Bronze Age. The site is located 900m north east of Collycroft.
1 A quarter of a mile N of Moat House a by-road runs W past a field on the N side which contains a conspicuously large ash tree raised on ...
The site of a mound of unknown date which lay 500m north east of Exhall Hall. The area has now been built over.
1 A mill at Bedworth is mentioned in 1331.
2 No mill site is apparent on the estate maps in the County Record Office.
The possible site of a Medieval watermill at Bedworth, suggested by documentary evidence. Its exact location is unknown.