1 In 1086 there were two mills at Bishops Tachbrook but nothing is known of these after the 16th century. Ford Mill stood some distance downstream from the probable site ...
The site of Ford Mill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period to the early Imperial period. Traces of the head race are still visible. The site is in Warwick Castle Park, on the north side of New Waters.
1 Windmill marked.
2 The building has been demolished but a windmill mound remains. This is situated in a field of ridge and furrow.
The site of a windmill which dates back to at least the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1834. The windmill mound is still visible as an earthwork. It is situated to the north west of Mill Farm.
1 The remains of a pond thought to be a fishpond (see WA1321), now believed to be the remains of a mill pond associated with the earthwork remains of a ...
The remains of a pond, probably a mill pond. The remains are associated with the earthworks of a watermill to the north. Both the mill and mill pond date to the Medieval or Post Medieval periods. The site is at Morton Bagot, 100m south east of the church.
1 Small mound in Knightcote-Priors Marston road. 30m W of the parish boundary in Bishops Itchington. SP4156.
2 The mound is about 7m in diameter and about 0.5m high. It may ...
The site of a possible round barrow which is visible as an earthwork mound. Alternative interpretations include a windmill mound and boundary marker. It is undated and is located 400m south west of Ascote Hill.
1 The watermill and the pond called Mylne Pool are referred to in 1554 and 1689.
2 In hearth tax returns of 1662-74 a watermill with two hearths is recorded. Information ...
Chesterton Watermill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Post Medieval to the late Imperial period. The present mill building dates to the early 17th century, and an overshot waterwheel is still in place. It stands 350m south of Chesterton Windmill.
1 At the SW corner of the field with the deserted Medieval village earthworks is a large platform projecting into the river. This may have been a mill site. There ...
The possible site of a Medieval watermill associated with Stoneton deserted settlement. Some earthworks survive at the site which lies 400m south east of Newfield Pool.
1 Between the Priory and the canal, just to the W of the modern Earls Road, there is an earthwork which must have been a dam across the Barpool Brook. ...
The possible site of a Medieval dam which survives as an earthwork. It was probably associated with a mill pond marked on Beighton's map of 1722-5. The site lies on the south side of Vernon's Lane, Nuneaton.
1 Water wheel marked on 1886 map.
The site of a water wheel dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The water wheel was situated 200m east of Bretford.
1 Victoria County History entry.
2 A mill is recorded at Barford in 1086. It is also recorded in 12th ccentury and 13th century. In the 13th century there appear to ...
The site of Barford Mill, a watermill for which there is intermittent documentary evidence from the Domesday survey through to the end of the Imperial period. The mill was located 500m east of Barford Bridge.
1 The two mills of Admington and Lark Stoke are both mentioned in the court rolls of the Winchcombe Abbey manor of Admington. The Lark Stoke mill was located ...
The site of two watermills dating to the Medieval period. The mills are known from documentary evidence. They are located 500m apart and north west of Ilmington.
1 In a field known as Mill Pits, the River Itchen makes a sharp loop. The loop has been cut by what appears to be an artificial leet, thus creating ...
This may be the site of the watermill at Southam recorded in the Domesday survey. The mill did not survive the Medieval period, but a possible watercourse is still visible as an earthwork. The site lies 200m north east of Thorpe Bridge.
1 Possible mill site. The river was formerly braided to the S of Washford and part of the narrower W arm, recognizable on the tithe award map of 1848, survives. ...
The possible site of a watermill which would have dated to the Medieval/Post Medieval period. Earthworks may represent the remains of the watermill. The location is 100m north of Washford Bridge.
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 mill at Abbots Salford is recorded in 1086 and 1206. The mill was probably situated on the Avon near Cleeve Mill, as appears from an undated lease to ...
The site of a watermill, for which there are documentary records from the Medieval period. Its exact location in Abbots Salford is unknown.
1 There was a mill at Fulbrook worth 12s in 1086. A mill worth 100s belonged to the manor in 1220 and was leased to Thelsford Priory. By 1285 the ...
The earthwork remains of a Medieval watermill. There is documentary evidence for the mill from the Domesday survey and later. The site is at Fulbrook, 550m south of Sherbourne Hill.
1 There was a mill attached to Kenilworth Castle in 1296 (PRN 3205) and in 1291 Kenilworth Priory held two mills in the area. The site of one of these ...
The site of Kenilworth Mill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. The mill, which stood to the west of Forge Road, was demolished in 1964 for redevelopment.
1 A worsted mill was built here by Sir Robert Newdigate in the 18th century. The mill was converted to silk spinning in the early 19th century, but all the ...
The site of Bedworth Mill, a watermill which was built during the Imperial period. It was later used as a silk mill during the Imperial period. The mill was situated 300m north of Collycroft.
1 This may have been one of six mills in Stoneleigh recorded in the 16th century. It is thought to have ceased working in the mid 19th century. On the ...
Pipes Mill, a watermill which was in use from the Post Medieval period onwards. The mill building has now been converted into a dwelling. The mill is marked on a map of 1725. It is situated 1km north of Stoneleigh.
1 This field contains a mound at its northern end and is entitled “Mill Hill Field” on the 1766 Stoneleigh estate map. It is therefore likely to have been the ...
The site of a possible windmill mound, a mound on which a windmill stood. It is probably of Medieval or Post Medieval date. It lies to the north of Cryfield Village.
1 Arbury Mill. Much of the present mill building appears to date from the construction of the Arbury Park canal system from 1764 onwards but there are vestiges of an ...
Arbury Mill, a watermill which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 100m south of Coventry Wood.
1 A mill is recorded in 1086. The mill is recorded in 1540 and 1606. Details of ownership exist for the latter 19th century and early 20th century. The mill ...
The site of Burmington Mill, a Medieval watermill. The present building on the site dates to the Imperial period. It has recently been converted into dwellings. It is located 350m north west of the church.
1 A mill at Alcester is recorded in 1241, when it was granted to the monks of Alcester, and in 1545. Details of ownership exist from 1872. It was used ...
Ragley Needle Mill, a watermill which was in use from the Medieval period as a corn mill and converted to a needle mill during the Imperial period. It is situated east of Birmingham Road, Alcester.
1 The mill is recorded in 1086 and was conveyed to Kenilworth Priory in 1325. The mill was mentioned again in 1653. On Beighton’s map of 1725 there is a ...
The site of Whitnash/Radford Semele Watermill which was built during the Medieval period. Traces of earthworks remain visible. It was situated 1km west of Radford Semele.
1 The Cesters Over corn mill on the River Swift is doubtless the successor to the mill attached to the manor in 1086. Both a watermill and windmill belonged to ...
The site of Cesters Over Mill, a corn mill that dates back to the Medieval period. It continued in use until the 1930s. The ruins of the building are still visible. The mill was situated 300m west of Ryehill Spinney.