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 1965. Beside Guillaume’s Factory, S of the Stratford Road, some machine cut trenches showed traces of timber buildings in alignment with a N-S V-shaped ditch, the filling of which ...
During an excavation timber buildings and a ditch of Roman date were found. A later Roman stone building and a hypocaust were also found at this site, south of Stratford Road, Alcester.
1 Stratford Road, margin of highway. Herringbone pavement at 0.5m, 2.4m in extent.
2 Noted.
The remains of a Roman building were found during an excavation. The site was located on Stratford Road, Alcester.
1 1970: Four palisade trenches ran N-S at the W end of the excavation. Two of these cut an Anglo Saxon grave and the most W contained early Medieval pottery. ...
The site of an Early Medieval settlement. Archaeological work has identified evidence of a palisade, a burial, and enclosures. Pottery was found in one of the palisade trenches. The location is to the northeast of the Alveston Manor Hotel.
1 Off Henley Street behind the Police Station. Roman pottery and signs of a large building. Also behind police station along path: two Roman coins.
2 Exact site uncertain.
3 “Further ...
The remains of a Roman building was found near Henley Street, Alcester, during an excavation. Roman pottery was also found at this site.
1 Fragments of Roman tesserae and plaster with maroon and red paint, some on white surface, and fragments of flanged tile. Also many flanged tiles and building tiles for hypocaust ...
Various finds, including tesserae, painted plaster and tiles, suggest that this was the site of a Roman building. The site was located on the north side of Meeting Lane.
1 In Meeting Lane were recorded a floor of ‘concrete’ at a depth of 1.2m and some slightly decorated plaster. Below this were walls and at a depth of 1.5m ...
Various finds, including painted wall plaster, tesserae and tiles, suggest that this was the site of a Roman building. Roman pottery and coins were also found at this site, located in Meeting Lane, Alcester.
1 1966: Excavation across Hobditch Causeway produced large quantities of Romano British pottery, particularly from the S ditch. The pottery dates from the early 2nd to 4th century. Building material ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Roman period. The remains of several buildings and a ditch were discovered during an excavation. The site is located 500m north east of Blunt's Green.
1 Excavations on the site of demolished cottages in Malt Mill Lane revealed a gravel floor laid on red clay with the post holes of a timber building cutting into ...
The remains of a Roman building were excavated to the west of Malt Mill Lane, Alcester.
1 Corner of Malt Mill Lane with Church Street. Roman foundations at 0.9m.
2 Cutting in centre of Church Street and Malt Mill Lane. Pottery, oyster shell, broken tiles, stones, all ...
The remains of a Roman building were found during an excavation on the corner of Malt Mill Lane and Church Street, Alcester. Finds of pottery, tile and oyster shell were also found at the site.
1 A trench was dug in Evesham Street about 2.4m to 3m square. This revealed two stone walls running approximately E-W of which the N one was apparently the later ...
The site of a Roman building which was found during an excavation. Roman pottery and a brooch were also found on this site in Evesham Street, Alcester.
1 Remains of building ploughed out here 1967 (Mr H Troon, The Hollies, Copston Magna). A very obvious rectangular building. Much glass, tiled roof and floor. 16th century or 17th ...
The possible site of a Roman building. The building was identified in the results of a geophysical survey. Fragments of Roman pottery and tile were found. Post Medieval tile and glass was also found at the site which is located 100m north east of Copston House.
1 1976: Four trial trenches dug by hand. Trench A produced traces of Post Medieval outbuildings, which were still standing in 1976. Traces of 3 probable floor layers were also ...
During the excavation of trial trenches three Post Medieval buildings were found. One Tudor coin and one Elizabethan coin were also found. The site was located on the High Street, Bidford on Avon.
1 Some finds were made in 1925 and the area was excavated in 1938. It had been badly disturbed, but wall footings were uncovered which measured 2.3m by 0.6m wide. ...
The remains of a Roman building were found during an excavation. Roman pottery and coins were also found on the site which was located on the south side of Priory Road, Alcester.
2 Two sides of a probable rectangular enclosure show on aerial photographs.
3 The enclosure is on a hill, or ridge, top with downhill slopes to W and E. The ground ...
The site of a possible Roman settlement. An enclosure is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. Various finds, including pottery, tile and animal bone, were found during a field walking exercise. The site is located 500m south of Princethorpe.
1 1985: a hole was dug in the back garden of a house on Bleachfield Street to see what could be found. Pottery from this hole was examined and was ...
The remains of a Roman building were found during archaeological work in Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Roman pottery and coins were also found at this site.
1 Back of Bell Inn, Evesham Street. In a trench dug here a rough stone floor about 0.9m deep was seen. Some Samian and black pottery.
2 Noted.
3 Further excavations have ...
The site of Roman buildings and possible market place, found during an excavation. The site is located on Evesham Street, Alcester.
1 1976: An area of 11 x 17m was excavated in advance of redevelopment. 1m of Post Medieval material sealed the site. Medieval buildings (PRN 5490) impinged on the latest ...
The remains of Roman buildings were excavated to the west of Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Roman coins were also found at this site.
1 A cob-walled house on Yarningdale Common was recorded.
2 There are no buildings at this grid reference on the OS 1:10 000.
3 The building was located on a walk-over survey ...
A cob walled house dating to the Post Medieval period. It is located on Yarningale Common.
1 Four Constantinian coins and a coin of Claudius from a field called Bankey Meadow.
2 1950: The site covered a number of fields and pottery, stone and bone were recorded. ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Roman period. It is known from finds of pottery and coins, but also stone which appears to represent former buildings.
1 Two wall footings were recording during evaluation at 24 Main Street, Newbold on Avon. They correspond to walls shown on the 1886 map, potentially a boundary wall. It is ...
Building foundations, dating from the Imperial period, were recorded during evaluation work in Main Street, Newbold on Avon.
1 A small building complex, probably agrilcultural in function, is first shown on 1st Edition Ordnance Survey Mapping. The site is now wooded.
2, 3 The building complex is shown as ...
A building and associated enclosure, probably agrilcultural in function, is first shown on 1st Edition Ordnance Survey Mapping. The site is now wooded.
1 Complex of agricultural buildings and related earthworks to the East of the Chapel of St James, first shown on 1st Edition Ordnance Survey Mapping. They are shown as destroyed ...
Complex of agricultural buildings and related earthworks to the East of the Chapel of St James, first shown on 1st Edition Ordnance Survey Mapping. No earthworks or building remains appear to survive.
1 A possible Roman building, possibly a mansio, was recorded during geophsyical survey to the E of Alcester. Electrical resistance survey identified a well-defined anomaly which could be indicative of ...
A possible Roman building, possibly a mansio, was recorded during geophsyical survey to the E of Alcester.