1 A Medieval deserted settlement was surveyed after having been ploughed for the second time. A measured but tentative plan was produced. Pottery, much of it 12th and 13th century, ...
The site of an area of Medieval shrunken village at Longdon. It is known from documentary evidence, earthworks of house platforms and trackways revealed on aerial photographs, and from finds of pottery. It is located 600m north west of Longdon Poplars.
1 The Shipston section of the turnpike was constructed in 1729-30. A turnpike cottage was built at the Honington turn.
2 It is a two-storeyed brick building with stone facing in ...
A toll house, where travellers would have paid a toll to use a toll road during the Post Medieval period. It is located 300m north west of Roundham Spinney.
1 A very attractive stone bridge with five arches having a total span of 23.6m.
2 ‘Of a pleasing design’ with a parapet wall having piers between the arches surmounted by ...
Honington Bridge, a Post Medieval stone bridge probably associated with the building of Honnington Hall. It has five segmental arched bays, moulded parapets, and ornamental balls. It crosses the Stour 500m south east of the Hall.
1 Find of a pipe bowl, 1640-1660, in November 1997. No grid reference given and method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of a post medieval pipe bowl in Tredington. The exact location is unknown.
1 Find of Romano British mortarium rim sherd. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of SP25804285.
Findspot of Romano British rim sherd 700m south of Tredington.
1 The possible extent of the medieval settlement based on the OS map of 1886, 50SE.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting for the parish of Tredington shows survival that abuts ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Newbold on Stour based on the Ordnance Survey map of1886, and on aerial photographs.
1 Archaeological observation at Tredington House, which incorporates part of a late 15th century rectory, recorded an undated stone wall. The wall cut a medieval ground surface, which contained ...
An undated stone wall was recorded during archaeological observation. The wall may have belonged to a later medieval or post-medieval building on the site, perhaps the rectory. The site is located at Tredington House, Tredington.
1 Archaeological observation of the excavation of foundation trenches recorded a large ditch sealed by a medieval ground surface containing 12th/13th century pottery. No dating evidence was found within ...
A large undated ditch, sealed by a medieval ground surface containing 12th/13th century pottery, was recorded during the excavation of foundation trenches at Tredington House, Tredington.
1 Outbuilding, one wheelwright’s shop. C18th. Cob on a base of squared, coursed limestone. Thatch roof. 5 bays. To left and centre double plank doors rising ...
A wheelwright's outbuilding dating from the post medieval period. The original structure survives of limestone base beneath cob walls and thatched roof. It is soom west of the church in Tredington.
1 Romano British site and burial, the latter shown on MWA2745.
2 This was an excavation conducted by Stratford schoolboys which recovered Romano British pot and a burial thought to be ...
Findspot - pottery dating to the Roman period was found 600m north west of the allotment gardens.
1 One of a series of cast iron mile markers placed exactly one mile apart on the Stratford on Avon to Oxford turnpike road, the first being one mile from ...
The site of a cast iron milepost dating to the Imperial period. It was located 200m north west of the Methodist Chapel at Newbold on Stour.
1 Roman pottery found on line of the Severn-Trent pipeline.
2 Twelve sherds, also one possible Medieval sherd and one piece of tile.
Findspot - pottery sherds dating to the Roman period were found 400m north west of the allotment gardens.
1 Roman pottery found on line of the Severn-Trent pipeline.
2 Fourteen sherds including three sherds of Samian, two ‘early’ (1st century AD) grey coarse wares and a fragment of ‘fabric ...
Findspot - pottery sherds dating to the Roman period were found 200m north west of the allotment gardens.
1 Roman pottery found by Tim Yarnell on line of the Severn-Trent pipeline.
2 Four sherds include joining sherds from a coarse (?Prehistoric) vessel, two possible 1st century sherds, two worn ...
Findspot - pottery sherds dating to the Roman period and the fragment of a quern stone were found 500m south of the allotment gardens.
1 There was probably a Medieval settlement at Talton.
Site of the deserted medieval settlement at Talton.
1 The mill probably stands on the site of one of the Tredington mills recorded in 1086. Nothing is known of its early history. Details of ownership exist from 1820 ...
The site of Holtom's Mill, a Medieval mill, known from documentary evidence. A watermill was built on this site during the Imperial period. It is located 300m north west of the church, Tredington.
1 A turnpike road constructed between 1729-50. The first Act was 1729.
2 The Act for repairing the Road leading from a Gate called Shipston Toll Gate, at Bridge Town, in ...
A toll road which ran from Stratford to Long Compton Hill. It was built during the Post Medieval period and continued in use into the Imperial period.
1 Turnpike road, established by Acts of 1779 onwards. Part of a route from Leicester, the original Acts for which were passed in 1753-4, but which proved too unwieldy to ...
A toll road running from Warwick to Paddle Brook. Travellers would have had to pay a toll to use the road during the Imperial period.
1 This milestone of Forest of Dean stone was erected in 1869 when the lodge to the Shirley estate at Ettington Park was built. It took the place of one ...
A milestone from the Imperial period. It is located at Newbold on Stour, 200m north of the Methodist Church.
1 Cob walled building recorded in 1978 by Stephen Ball prior to destruction.
Noted as a 3 bay barn with open end gable at the east end. The north and west ...
The site of a cob-walled building probably dating to the early 20th Century. It was located 150m north east of the chapel in Blackwell.
1, 2 The western part of the building known as Old Chapel Cottage was a 19th-century chapel provided by the Quakers for use by any denomination. It was used on ...
The western part of the building known as Old Chapel Cottage was a 19th-century chapel provided by the Quakers for use by any denomination. It was used on alternate Sundays by Methodists and Anglicans until the mid-late 20th century.
1 2The remains of wall foundations pre-dating the standing buildings were recorded during excavation at Manor Farm Barns, Blackwell, Tredington. They could possibly be part of a monastic cell ...
The remains of wall foundations pre-dating the standing buildings were recorded during excavation at Manor Farm Barns, Blackwell, Tredington. They could possibly be part of a monastic cell associated with the nearby chapel.
1 A deerpark is mentioned in Ettington in a lease of 1653, the park is also marked on a map of 1738. It was restocked with deer in 1762 and ...
Ettington Park, a deer park dating from the Post Medieval period to the Imperial period. The deer park appears on a number of historic maps. It was situated to the south west of Ettington.
1 Telephone Repeater Station at Newbold-on-Stour at the juntion of Mill Lane and A3400. The Warwickshire Industrial Archaeology Society conducted a site visit of the telephone repeater station in ...
A post World War two telephone repeater station; possibly part of the Secure Communications Network.