1 A mill at Wappenbury is recorded in Domesday. In 1584 two mills are mentioned.
The site of one or two watermills originally dating from the Medieval period. They were located in the area of Wappenbury.
1 The village was formerly well-nigh enclosed by extensive entrenchments enclosing an area of about 6 ha. The earthworks are now much denuded and altered in form and are almost ...
The site of a possible hillfort, possibly dating to the Iron Age. Ditches and ramparts are still visible as earthworks in places. The site is located at Wappenbury.
1 A large deciduous wood of 71ha. Wappenbury’s earthworks appear to be relatively simple. Much of the wood has a woodbank of Medieval type, although there are a number of ...
Wappenbury Wood, a Medieval (and probably earlier) managed woodland. The woodland comprises woodbanks and evidence of ancient coppicing.
1 Bridge marked.
2 The bridge is apparently of two quite distinct styles – the N half is a brick single-arched, humped Victorian-looking structure; while the S half is a very ...
The partial remains of a footbridge from the Imperial period, that crossed the River Leam 200m south west of the church at Wappenbury. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The present bridge is part Victorian brick, part modern concrete.