1 Two examples of Bronze Age metalwork found using a metal detector in 1994.
2 Two examples of Bronze Age metalwork were discovered close to a gravel pit near the village ...
Findspot - two pieces of metalwork, a dagger and a blade, dating to the Bronze Age were found 850m east of The Rookery, Salford Priors.
1 An open area excavation, Area E, carried out in advance of the A435 Norton Lenchwick Bypass revealed Neolithic activity. The later Neolithic was represented by at least one ...
Excavation in advance of road development, uncovered signs of Neolithic activity, including pits, cremation pits, worked flint and polished stone axes. The site is to the northwest of Broom.
1 Archaeological evaluation, Area D, of cropmark enclosures (WA5081) identified a field boundary ditch containing pottery from the first two centuries AD. The features in this southern part of area ...
The site of a field system dating to the Iron Age. It is located 450m north west of The Rookery, Salford Priors.
1 During an evaluation a concentration of features from around three trial trenches identifed a late Iron Age/early Romano British settlement which was dated by pottery and which probably fell ...
Archaeological excavation in advance of a road development uncovered a gully and post holes. These features related to at least one dwelling dating to the late Iron Age/early Romano British. The site is situated 450m north west of The Rookery.
1 A complete chipped and polished flint axe discovered during maintenance work at a farmhouse. It is believed to have been found in a nearby field and brought to the ...
Findspot - a flint axe dating to the Neolithic period was found 450m north east of Abbot's Salford.
1 14 sherds of Romano British pottery were recovered from Field 53 during a fieldwalking survey in August 1992.
Findspot - 14 sherds of Roman pottery were found 650m north of Salford Priors during a field walking exercise.
2 Two rectangular enclosures show on aerial photographs.
3 The two rectangular enclosures visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
The site of two enclosures which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are both undated. The enclosures are located 650m south west of Rushford.
2 Linear features show S and SW of an undated settlement enclosure (PRN 1497). These linear features may represent part of a field system. A possible scatter lies alongside one ...
A complex of curvilinear cropmarks, circular enclosures and pits visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. This site is located 300m west of Salford Priors.
3 Traces of three rectilinear cropmark enclosures are visible.
4 Three rectilinear cropmark enclosures and a cluster of pits evident on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage ...
Three undated enclosures and a cluster of pits are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 450m north of Salford Priors.
2 Rectangular enclosures and a linear feature can be identified on aerial photographs.
3 Rectangular enclosures and a linear feature identified on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English ...
An undated rectangular enclosure and a linear feature are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 450m south west of Rushford.
1 22 flints were recovered from field 53 during a fieldwalking survey in August 1992 as part of the evaluation of the route of the A435 Norton-Lenchwick bypass. These ...
Findspot - a flint scatter dating to the Early Neolithic period was found 650m north of Salford Priors. The scatter comprised flint tools such as blades, scrapers and a leaf-shaped arrowhead.
1 Country house, now a hotel. West range is late 15th century and is probably part of a house built for the Abbots of Evesham. North and east ...
Salford Hall, a house which was originally built during the Medieval period. It is situated in Abbott's Salford.
2 Earthworks probably representing shrunken Medieval settlement have been identified on air photographs.
The site of an area of Medieval shrunken village at Abbot's Salford. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs.
1 An 18th century landscaped park c.280 ha, surrounding a 17th – 18th century hall, with late 19th century formal gardens near the Hall. There were formal gardens in ...
A landscape park dating from the Post Medieval period. It includes elements of 17th and 19th century formal gardens. The landscape park surrounds Ragley Hall.
1 An evaluation which included trenching and a geophysical survey was undertaken by the Warwickshire Museum. Trial trenches uncovered a series of Medieval gullies some of which contained pottery. ...
Gullies and pottery dating to the Medieval period were found during an archaeological excavation. They are located 200m north east of Salford Priors.
1 Fieldwalking by WM in January 1993 as part of evaluation for the A435 Norton Lenchwick Bypass (WA 4908) found substantial flint scatters.
2 When part of this area was subject ...
Findspot - a flint scatter, comprising flint artefacts of Neolithic and Bronze Age date. They were found 350m west of Broom.
1 Trench 5 of the evaluation in advance of the building of the A435 Norton-Lenchwick Bypass revealed a pit which contained 499 sherds of Bronze Age pottery. This is an ...
Excavation in advance of road development uncovered Bronze Age pits, pottery, a small ring ditch containing a funeral pyre, and fragments of bronze cauldrons. The site was 300m north west of the weir at Broom.
1 During field evaluation in advance of road-building, Trench 5 cut a large hollow with two postholes along its edge which contained pottery & other finds consistent with the site ...
The site of a Saxon settlement dating to the Migration period. Three possible grubenhauser were discovered during an excavation. Finds from the site included pottery, loom weights and animal bone. The location of the site is 600m northwest of Broom.
12 The Evesham and Redditch Railway was built under powers granted by a Parliamentary Act dating to 13th July 1863. The line was opened between Alcester and Redditch in ...
The site of the Evesham and Redditch Railway which was built during the Imperial period, and in use until the early 1960s.
1 During a survey of the dismantled Evesham and Redditch Railway, it was discovered that the Broom South signal box is now just a pile of brick and rubble. The ...
The site of railway signal box which was in use during the Imperial period. It is no longer standing. It was situated 400m south west of Broom.
1 A former ‘cattle creep’ style railway bridge in engineering brick and ferro-concrete carrying the trackbed of the combined Broom north and south curves over farmland. This bridge was ...
A railway bridge, known as a cattle creep bridge, on the disused line and dating to the Imperial period. It is situated 500m south west of Broom.
1 Railway bridge abutments on both the west and east banks of the river in engineering brick with stone copings. These abutments were observed whilst evaluating the former Evesham ...
The site of a railway bridge on the disused line between Redditch and Evesham, dating to the Imperial period. Only the abutments remain. It is situated 500m south of Broom.
1 Well-preserved junction at Broom West with a complicated history, and in no danger from the new bypass.
The site of a railway junction on a disused line dating to the Imperial period. It is situated 650m south west of Broom.