1 On the N side of the moat a large pond has been dug into the earthwork of the moat, destroying its symmetry. It appears to be, therefore, of later ...
A possible fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. Alternatively, this may be a mill pond, an area of water retained above a mill dam, dating to the Medieval period onwards. It is visible as an earthwork, and is situated 100m south east of the church at Morton Bagot.
1 Thomas Bullocke was miller here in 1680. It may well have been a needle mill in the early 19th century. By 1854 it had been converted ...
The site of Morton Mill, a watermill. Documentary evidence suggests the mill was in use between the Medieval and the Imperial periods. It may have been used as a needle mill in the early 19th century. Some earthworks survive. It stood 500m south west of Morton Plantation.
1 Former lime kilns noted c1820 to S of Bannams Wood.
2 ‘Limekiln Range’ and ‘Pit disused’ marked in this area. Gravel
The site of lime kilns dating to the Imperial period. They are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. They were located 100m north of Little Brown's Wood.
1 The remains of a pond thought to be a fishpond (see WA1321), now believed to be the remains of a mill pond associated with the earthwork remains of a ...
The remains of a pond, probably a mill pond. The remains are associated with the earthworks of a watermill to the north. Both the mill and mill pond date to the Medieval or Post Medieval periods. The site is at Morton Bagot, 100m south east of the church.