1 Site of a now destroyed sheep wash. Stream which fed the sheep wash is still present.
The site of a Sheepwash (now destroyed). The site lies to the north - west of the Deer Park at Little Compton.
1 Find of a Roman potsherd which was brought in to the Museum for identification. Method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of a Roman potsherd 800m southeast of Barcheston.
1 Manor House, of dressed stone, stands to the west of the Parish Church (WA 3812). The south facing front has 3 storeys and attics. The main plan ...
Little Compton Manor House is situated 20m west of the church. Although it dates from the Post Medieval period, it has undergone much remodelling in subsequent periods and the present house reflects this.
1 A square obelisk of oolitic limestone c.12 feet high. The base has a moulded pedestal with plinth and the obelisk rises to a moulded cornice surmounted by a ...
The Four Shire Stone, a boundary marker, dates from the Post Medieval period. It is located 550m south east of Leamington Heath Coppice.
1 Long Compton. Built by 1679. Recorded as ‘Old Windmill’ 1885. Demolished early 20th century. Post mill.
3 Site is marked by a mound in a derelict area and is approached ...
A windmill that dates back to the Post Medieval period. It continued to be used until the 20th century. It is shown on an Ordnance Survey map of 1885. The windmill mound survives as an earthwork 1.2 km south east of Little Compton.
1 Two stones at SP2628, connected by a low ridge and 26 other stones in the hedge, suggested to be a long barrow or other Megalithic site. Now no trace ...
The possible site of an Early Neolithic long barrow was recorded during archaeological fieldwork. The site lay 1.3 km south of Little Compton. It may have been a natural feature such as a limestone outcrop.
1 A prostrate stone, 2.0m long, 0.7m wide in the middle and 0.6m thick near the base, with many loose stones and nettles growing round it. There appears to be ...
A stone recorded in the 1920s and interpreted as an Early Neolithic long barrow. Alternatively it may have been a Prehistoric standing stone or a natural feature. The site lay 1.4 km south of Little Compton.
1 One sherd of Romano British or Medieval pottery found at Oldbury. This was entered on the Museum accession register but no grid reference was given. It is ...
One sherd of pottery dating to between the Iron Age and Medieval periods has been found. It has also been suggested this is the site of a hillfort, from place name evidence. It is located 750m south east of the church in Little Compton.
Site of a Post Medieval windmill.
1 Windmill shown on Sheldon Tapestry c1580. Not otherwise traced.
2 Letter.
A windmill is shown at Little Compton on the Sheldon Tapestry in Warwick Museum, which dates to about 1580. No other evidence is known.
1 W of the Baptist Chapel and on the N side of the village street is a triangle of land on the E side of which was the ...
Site of a pound dating to the Imperial period, which would have been used for penning livestock. It is located west of the Baptist Chapel, Little Compton.
1 Reference is made to a Prehistoric trackway known as the Jurrassic Way that follows the southern County boundary between Warwickshire and Oxfordshire. The original route stretched from the ...
A Prehistoric trackway known as the Jurrassic Way. It runs through the area of Little Compton. The original route stretched from the Humber to the Mendips.
1 Rectilinear crop marks and pits apparent on aerial photographs 650m south of Langston Farm Little Compton mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The crop ...
Rectilinear crop marks and pits are apparent on aerial photographs 650m south of Langston Farm Little Compton.
Ridge and furrow ploughing 500m to the east of Oak House Farm apparent as earthworks on aerial photographs taken in 1996 was mapped as part of the English Heritage National ...
Ridge and furrow ploughing 500m to east of Oak House Farm is apparent as earthworks on aerial photographs taken in 1996.
1 2 Ridge and furrow ploughing to the north west of Little Compton evident as earthworks on aerial photographs dating from 1947 was mapped as part of the English Heritage ...
Ridge and furrow ploughing to the south- west of Barton on the Heath is apparent as earthworks on aerial photographs taken in 1953 but is now levelled.