1 Sheep fold marked on the First Edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map.
The site of a sheep fold which was used during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was located 250m east of Stratford Race Course.
1 Cloptongrove appeared in deeds dated to c.1279-80 as an area which included messuages, land, meadows and pastures but reference in 1604 to a grove called Clopton Grove suggests that ...
Site of a medieval wood called Clopton Grove.
1 Clopton Tower. ?Early 19th century. Ashlar. A substantial octagonal tower of three stages, each lighted by one window, with parapet and finger turret.
2 Polygonal, with Tuscan columns and pediment.
3 ...
Clopton Tower, an architectural folly which dates from the Imperial period. It stands 140m north east of Dugdale Avenue, Stratford on Avon.
2 There was a corn mill here by 1550. In about 1670 it was demolished and an iron forge built by Francis Watts. After about 1730 the mill seems to ...
Clifford Mill, 600m north of the church, for which there is documentary evidence from the late Medieval period. It became a forge in the Post Medieval period, and then reverted to a corn mill. The present building dates from 1853 and a chimney of auxiliary steam power survives.
2 A mill is known to have existed at Alveston since 966 and in the Domesday survey there were three mills. In 1240 there were two mills and a mill ...
Alveston Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the early Medieval period. Derelict by 1886, it was demolished in the 1940s. Only a weir survives. The mill was 400m north east of the church.
1 A possible enclosure, which could date to the Iron Age or later was discovered during the watching brief. There were also linear features relating to the road and other ...
A series of linear features and a possible enclosure were identified through an archaeological watching brief.
1 The springs at Bishopton were first brought to the attention of the public by Dr Charles Perry in 1744. The spring is situated in a field called Shottery. The ...
The site of Bishopton Spa, comprising of baths and a well. The spa was in use during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods and is known from documentary evidence. It was situated 400m west of Mt Pleasant Farm.
1 A magnetometer survey was undertaken in 1979 and produced evidence for a large rectangular enclosure within which was a complex of features.
2 1980. Trial trenching, followed by a major ...
Part excavation in 1980 of a Roman settlement within a large rectangular enclosure. Features and finds date from the first to the fourth century, and include Samian ware pottery. The site is to the west of Tiddington village.
1 1983: Small trench excavated to locate a trackway running E from the Roman settlement. The road line was probably represented by a break in the distribution of features c10m ...
Archaeological work in 1983 uncovered a trackway running east from the Roman settlement. The site is at the northern end of Stratford upon Avon Golf Course.
1 A possible Roman Road or trackway.
2 Marked as ‘saltway’.
3 Probable course of road shown by cropmark.
A road, possibly of Roman origin, parts of which are referred to in Early Medieval charters. Its probable course can be traced on aerial photographs.
1 A drovers road with wide verges for pasturing animals. The road winds its way through farming country, generally avoiding centres of population. Road is mentioned on 18th ...
A trackway or drove road, known as the Welsh Way, which has existed since the Medieval or Post Medieval period. It was used by drovers to move cattle to the markets. The Leamington Road out of Kenilworth now marks the line of the trackway.
2 Probable Roman road on the line of the road located in excavation (WA 4468) shows as a cropmark.
3 During evaluation work on the site in 1998 (WA 8319), some ...
A possible Roman trackway which shows up as a cropmark on aerial photographs. Archaeological work has uncovered ditches, but no material with which to make a positive dating. It is located to the east of New Street, Tiddington.
2 Linear features show on air photographs.
A linear feature which shows up on aerial photographs as a cropmark. The date of this linear feature is unknown. Its location is 1km north east of Clifford Chambers.
1 Two large storage pits were recorded during evaluation at Tiddington Road. One was a classic example of a later prehistoric storage pit, with an undercutting profile. They may represent ...
Two large storage pits were recorded during evaluation at Tiddington Road and a further pit during the subsequent watching brief. They may represent a feature in the agricultural landscape in their own right, or they may be part of a larger nucleus of settlement.
1 Warwick Road Nursery, Stratford.
Lovie reports this nursery was owned by John Butcher in 1884. Walks with mixed planting. Site redeveloped at time of Lovie’s report (1996/7).
Nursery with walks and mixed planting. Site redeveloped.
1 Nursery, Evesham Road, Stratford.
Lovie reports two areas of mixed planting with walks. Site developed at time of his report (1996/7).
Nursery with two areas of mixed planting and walks.
1 A stone well was found during work at 26 Ely Street, Stratford-upon-Avon, by developers. Considered to be medieval in date.
A stone well was found during work at 26 Ely Street, Stratford-upon-Avon, by developers. Considered to be medieval in date.
1 A series of Iron Age storage pits, of similar form, size and function, were recorded during community excavation at New Place, Stratford. Each of the pits was 1.5-1.6m ...
A series of Iron Age storage pits, of similar form, size and function, were recorded during community excavation at New Place, Stratford. In subsequent seasons, a short stretch of Iron Age ditch/gully was located.
1 Earthworks indicative of a moated site appear on air photographs. 1968: The area has been completely flattened and no remains were seen. Examination of aerial photographs suggests this to ...
The site of a moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. Aerial photographs and excavation prior to earth tipping suggested a Medieval date. It was situated at the south east end of the Recreation Ground at Stratford on Avon.
2 Linear features, irregular enclosures and subrectangular enclosures indicate an undated settlement. Morphologically the site is likely to be of Iron Age and Romano British date.
3 The site was shallow ...
Cropmarks on aerial photographs showing linear features, irregular and subrectangular enclosures, suggests that this is the site of an undated settlement. It is situated 250m south east of Waterloo Rise, Alveston.
1 A mill is mentioned in 1086. By the mid 13th century there were three corn mills under one roof and a fulling mill. The fulling mill had gone by ...
Lucy's Mill, a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. During this time it was used as a corn mill and fulling mill. It was derelict by the 1960s, but some features survive under the converted building, 200m south of the church.
2 Linear feature shows on air photograph. At one point this appears to cut a small oval enclosure.
3 Noted.
A linear feature of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated on Alveston Hill.
2 Enclosures, penannular gullies and linear features show on air photographs. This probably indicates the location of a settlement site of unknown date.
4 No surface indications.
5 ...
Enclosures and linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They suggest that this might be a settlement site. Finds collected from the ground surface suggest the site might be of Roman date. It is located 800m west of Alveston.
1 Herepath referred to in a boundary charter of AD 922. Follow boundary between Milcote and Clifford, running NE along the bank of the Avon towards a ford at Clifford, ...
Herepath, an Anglo Saxon trackway dating to the Early Medieval period, known from documentary evidence. It is referred to in a 10th century charter. The route of the trackway runs along the parish boundary between Clifford Chambers and Milcote parishes.