Redundant record (previously used to record an event).
1 A watching brief took place at this location during 1998, though foundation trenches for a new house had been filled with concrete before they could be examined. No archaeological ...
Findspot - fragments of pottery were found during archaeological work in Upper Quinton. The pottery dated to the Imperial period.
1 The possible area of settlement that remained after the shrinkage of MWA6452, based on the first edition 6″ map of 1884, 50SW.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting of the ...
The possible area of Medieval settlement at Upper Quinton. This area may have remained after other local settlement shrinkage.
Stone tower mill with batter built at the beginning of the 19th century. It had three storeys, wooden machinery and two pairs of stones. By the 1870s it had ceased working, ...
1 Metal detector finds from Lower Quinton Farm. These consisted of: a Roman copper alloy fibula fragment (later 1st century AD), bronze coin of Constantine I (307-337), bronze coin of ...
Findspot - Roman coins, a brooch and a pendant were found 950m south east of Lower Meon.
1 Shrunken settlement earthworks show on vertical air photographs.
2 Vertical air photograph taken in 1967.
3 Ridge and furrow plot.
The remains of a Medieval shrunken village. Earthworks visible on aerial photographs indicate that the village of Lower Quinton was once larger.
Ridge and furrow cultivation in Quinton Parish.
3 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Earthwork
1 Earthwork remains of shrunken settlement around Upper Quinton show on air photographs. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Quinton Parish (PRN 6451).
2 Air ...
The Medieval shrunken village of Upper Quinton. Earthworks, which are visible on aerial photographs, suggest that the southern part of Upper Quinton village may have been larger once.
1 A turnpike road established by Acts of 1756 and later. The powers for this stretch of road apparently lapsed and it was turnpiked under a separate trust in 1818.
A toll road running from Stratford to Andoversford. Travellers would have had to pay a toll to use the road during the Imperial period.