1 Although the watercourses are marked on mid C18 maps, no mill buildings are shown; they were probably remnants of a corn mill which had become disused many years before. ...
King's Coughton Mill, a water-powered mill used during the Imperial period for grinding corn and later as a needle mill. It is situated 500m north east of King's Coughton.
1 Two large reservoirs to the W of and adjacent to the Warwick and Napton canal near Napton Junction. “The company
decided to build a reservoir at Napton instead of buying ...
Napton Reservoirs, constructed in the Imperial period to serve the Warwick and Napton Canal.
1 Tower mill. Derelict stone tower, originally lined and now much patched with brick, in poor condition. Slight barrel shape; metal sheeted dome cap, remains of iron curb and rack; ...
Kineton Windmill, the remains of an 18th century mill. All the machinery has gone but the building has been restored. It stands 1km to the north west of Kineton, near Windmill Farm.
1 ‘Windmill Hill’.
2 No documentary evidence has been found in the sources covered. The field rises to quite a high eminence in the S and would have been a suitable ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this may have been the site of a windmill of unknown date. It was marked on a tithe award map of 1841, but no surface traces survive. It was located 300m north of Johnson Place, Henley in Arden.
1 Austrey (E). Built by early the 1820s. Ceased late 19th century. Demolished c1905-10. Post Mill. SK3006.
2 Windmill shown in a small enclosure.
3 The site is now a cornfield. The ...
The site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It was located approximately 400m east of the church at Austrey.
1 Windmill Field. Possible Medieval (or later) windmill. SK3007. Austrey (NE). Probably built 18th century. Ceased later 19th century. Demolished c1915. SK3007.
2 Windmill (disused) marked.
3 The two windmills in reference ...
The site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1903. The site lies 600m south of Hill Farm.
1 Site of present hospital grounds known as Windmill Hill, but exact location of mill unknown.
2 Exact extent of Windmill Hill not clearly identifiable from 1766 Leigh Estate map.
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It stood to the south east of Weston under Wetherley, but the exact location is unknown.
1 Earth bank acting as possible dam, Wroxall Abbey. Earth bank across low area of valley which opens into bowl shape on the abbey side of the dam. Possibly for ...
Earth bank across a small valley for damming the small stream, possibly for a mill, within Wroxall Abbey Park.
1 A derelict windmill, now a skeleton of close-set timber-framing.
2 Built ‘J.B.1793’, open trestle, four common sails, ladder and tailpole. Ceased work by 1880’s. Cleared away c1969. Main post used ...
The site of Baxterley Mill, a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It was situated on Baxterley Common.
1 Windmill Farm. Built by 1802. Estimate for repairs 1859. Ceased late 19th century. Brick tower mill.
2 The farm is now called Tapster Mill Farm.
The site of a windmill built during the Imperial period. It was a brick tower mill which ceased operating in the late 19th century. It was located 500m north west of Copt Green.
1 Rowington Green (‘Grinning Jenny’ at Windmill Farm). Built by late 18th century. Demolished late 19th century.
2 In front of Windmill House is a mound marking the site of the ...
The site of a windmill known as 'Grinning Jenny'. It was built during the Imperial period. Its associated windmill mound is still visible as an earthwork 500m west of Rowington Green.
1 ‘Pinchem’. Brought to Claverdon 1832. Ceased sailing 1876. Demolished 1941. Post mill, open at base.
The site of a windmill which was built during the Imperial period. It was situated 100m south west of Windmill House, 1km northeast of Shrewley Common.
1 Brick tower mill called ‘Justice’. Built late C18. Cylindrical tower of three storeys and iron-covered cap with tail extension for luffing wheel and chain; four common sails, mostly wooden ...
The site of a windmill which was built during the Imperial period. It was later converted to a steam mill. It was situated at Windmill House, 1km northeast of Shrewley Common.
1 ‘A bedraggled WINDMILL’, a tower mill. Built in 1808.
2 Preserved red brick tower with slight batter in fair condition. Two stocks with fragments of common sails, boat cap with ...
Norton Lindsey Windmill, a tower mill built in the Imperial period. Steam power was added in 1889, and it was last worked in 1906. It stands south of the village playing field.
1 Tower WINDMILL, ‘with a terrible top’.
2 Derelict red brick tower in poor condition, partly cemented, with batter increasing slightly at top; boat cap, two pairs of stones, upright shaft ...
Rowington Green Windmill, the remains of a tower mill built in the Imperial period. It was converted to steam, but ceased operating in 1916. During World War One it was used to house German prisoners. It now forms part of a house complex.
1 Stone tower mill. Built early 19th century. Three storeys, wooden machinery and two pairs of stones. Ceased work by 1870s. Sails off after 1914-18 war. Later, cap blown off. ...
The site of a windmill at Lower Quinton which was built during the Imperial period. Archaeological work on the windmill mound uncovered fragments of machinery and evidence that the foundations are still in place.
1 Anker Mill. Four storey brick structure in traditional textile mill form built 1861 by Nuneaton Cotton Spinning and Weaving Company at a cost of some £70,000. Became a worsted ...
The site of Anker Mill, a textile mill which was built during the Imperial period. It was later used as a worsted mill. It was situated on Attleborough Road, Attleborough.
1 This was opened in 1835, it was the first steam powered ribbon making factory, after other textile uses became a store for British Rail.
Adcocks Mill, a steam mill used for the manufacture of ribbon which was built during the Imperial period. It was located on Regent Street, Nuneaton.
1 ‘Tuttle Hill Mill’, formerly Caldecote. Tower mill. Preserved in fair condition. Red brick tower with batter cemented over, flat roof with weather vane; retains much machinery but used as ...
Tuttle Hill Windmill, a tower mill which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 300m north of Tuttle Hill Industrial Estate.
1 Built 1778. Had four common sails, boat cap and pairs of stones. Driven by steam 1854. Converted to water tower and heightened in 1884 and to a house in ...
A windmill built during the Imperial period. It was converted to a water tower in 1884, and then to a house in 1974/5. It is sited to the west of Tainter's Hill, Ladyes Hills.
1 A good group of 2 and 3 storey late 18th century buildings formerly a gelatine mill. A fine house at the west end of the side is enscripted ...
Emscote Mills, a gelatine mill which was served by a canal wharf, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods. The mill was in use during the Imperial period. It is located to the east of Wharf Street, Warwick.
1 Built by 1787. Ceased by late 19th century. Post mill. At SP4856.
2 Nothing of the mill remains (site visit). This reference gives the above grid reference.
3 Late 18th ...
The site of a post mill, a type of windmill mounted on a post. It was in use during the Imperial period. It stood 1km south west of the church at Priors Marston.
Site of a windmill.
1 Blackhill. Whitewashed brick tower mill. Built late C18. Four common sails. Worked to at least 1880s. Machinery sold c1893; sails still on when demolished shortly after. ...
The site of a windmill which was in use in the Imperial period. It was a brick tower mill and it stood on the north side of Black Hill, Snitterfield.
1 Cotton mill erected at the lower end of Wallace Street by the Parkes Firm et al, circa 1795. Housing for workers led to the rise of Parkes/Crompton/Brookhouse Streets ...
The site of a cotton mill which was built in the Imperial period. The site was just north west of Sainsbury's supermarket, Warwick.