1 There were three mills at Tredington in 1086 and at least one of them probably stood on this site. By 1649 only two mills are mentioned. Details of ownership ...
The site of Tredington Mill, a Medieval mill, known from documentary evidence. A later watermill was built on the site during the Imperial period. The site is located 100m south east of the church at Tredington.
1 A mill at Talton is mentioned in 1308. Later in the same century it passed to the Abbey of Evesham. Various owners are known from the 16th to 19th ...
Talton Mill, the remains of a watermill. There is documentary evidence for a mill at this site from the Medieval through to the 20th century. Only a wheel pit, the slots of the angled sluices and a brick plinth survive. It is 400m north east of Crimscote Coppice.
1 A mill at Armscote is mentioned in 1328-9, when Simon de Croome exempted it from a grant of the manor to his son.
2 It may have been situated at ...
The site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period and known from documentary evidence. It was located 600m south of Armscote.
1 In 1240 the Prior of Worcester had a mill at Tredington belonging to the manor of Blackwell. It is mentioned again in 1291 and in 1654 a watermill at ...
The site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period which is known from documentary evidence. It was located near Blackwell.
1 Mentioned in 1299, but nothing else is known of its early history. Details of ownership exist for the mid 19th century onwards. It is not certain when the mill ...
Newbold Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence in the Medieval period, but not again until the Imperial period. The present 19th century building has been converted into housing by 1947. It is 500m east of the church, Newbold on Stour.
1 In 1086 there were two mills at Burton Hastings. Details of ownership exist for Burton Mill for the 19th century and 20th century. The mill still operates, though probably ...
Burton Mill, a watermill which dates back to the Medieval period. It remained in use until the 20th century. The mill is situated on Mill Lane, Burton Hastings.
1 In 1327 John de Shirford granted to his son John property in Sherford, including a mill.
2 No mill survives in the hamlet of Shelford today.
The site of a Medieval watermill is suggested by documentary evidence. It was situated in the area of Shelford.
Site of a Medieval watermill.
1 The mill mentioned in the Domesday Survey was no doubt on the Swift. A mill was attached to the manor of Churchover in 1600 but ...
The Domesday survey records a watermill at Churchover. There are no records after the Post
1 In 1086 the mill at Coleshill was valued at 40d. Nothing else is known of its history until the 19th century. Information on ownership exists for ...
The site of a watermill, which was built during the Medieval period. It was situated 100m south east of Coleshill Bridge.
1 In 1086 the mill on this site was worth 4s. Later it was given to the monks of Kenilworth Priory and they retained in until the Dissolution. ...
The site of Bubbenhall Mill, a watermill that dates back to the Medieval period. It continued to be used until the 1850s. The watermill was situated 500m west of Bubbenhall.
1 Mill meadow marked.
2 There was a mill at Bubbenhall in 1086 and the mill is recorded also in 1528, 1547 and 1698. Three mills are recorded in 1717.
3 Mill ...
The site of a watermill which was in use from the Post Medieval period onwards. The watermill is known from documentary evidence. It was situated 800m west of Bubbenhall.
1 Three water mills are mentioned in deeds relating to water mills in the village; one of which was originally a fulling mill. There is no documentary evidence of the ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval watermill or fulling mill where cloth was beaten and cleaned. The mill may have existed in the area of Bubbenhall but its exact location is unknown.
1 There are mill dams at SP2974 and SP3074. The N dam is 1m high with modern mutilation. The S dam is also mutilated. There are no traces of a ...
There is documentary evidence for a watermill at Cryfield Grange from the Medieval to the late Post Medieval period. It was recorded as a fulling mill in 1535. The dam banks remain visible as earthworks, 700m north east of Crackley Wood.
2 The Abbey of Polesworth held two mills at Polesworth in 1291. They are also recorded in 1538 and 1545. In 1828 Samuel Mallaby was the miller. From 1864 ...
The site of a watermill that was first built in the Medieval period and used for milling corn. It continued in use until the 20th century. The site is 150m northwest of Abbey Green Park, Polesworth.
1 A mill is recorded in 1086 and 1240. Information on ownership exists for the 19th century and early 20th century. The mill closed c1930. Since closure the mill buildings ...
The site of Shipston Mill, a Medieval watermill. The existing building dates to the Imperial period and has been converted to a hotel. It is located 100m south east of the library.
1 There was a mill on the site by 1725, for it is marked on Henry Beighton’s map. Nothing is known of its history and it was disused by 1886. ...
Fell Mill, a watermill which was in use between the Post Medieval and the Imperial periods. It is known from documentary evidence. The remains of the mill are visible as earthworks. The mill was located 600m south east of Roundham Spinney.
1 Estimated grid reference SP2865. This mill stood to the N of the Priory Ponds and may have been near Priory Cottage marked on the 1886 OS 1:10560 map. In ...
The site of Priory Mill, a watermill dating from the Post Medieval period. It was still in use in the early 1850s. It was located west of the Lyttelton Road, Warwick.
1 Built on the N bank of the canal in 1806. It was operated by the firm of Kench and Sons, in conjunction with Rock Mills, until 1961. Excess water ...
Emscote Mill, the site of a watermill built in the Imperial period. After 1850 it was driven by steam, and then by electricity. The site is now under housing.
1 The mill existed in the early 18th century when there were two mills under one roof. One was known as Frog Mill and one as Priory Mill. The mill ...
The site of Old Waterhouse Mill, a watermill which was in use from the Post Medieval to the Imperial period. On the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 it was marked as a saw mill. Its location was 50m south west of Warwick Station.
1 The earliest reference to mills attached to the castle is in 1150. These stood about 100m downstream from the present site and were totally destroyed by floods in the ...
Castle Mill, the site of several watermills dating from the Medieval to the Imperial period. The present building dates from the 18th century. The main waterwheel survives at the southern end of Mill Street, Warwick, but no machinery is left.
1 The Bank, Butlers Marston, is circular and rises somewhat abruptly from the surrounding ground. It is suggested that this is an early windmill mound. It does not give the ...
The Bank is the probable site of a Medieval windmill. Its location, small size and flat top suggest that it was a windmill mound. It is on the north west edge of the village of Butlers Marston.
1 A watermill was attached to Brookhampton in 1677. It is marked on Yates’ map of 1787-9 and is shown on the OS 1″ map of the 1830s. On maps ...
The site of Brockhampton Mill, a Post Medieval watermill shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1830. The location was 500m north west of the church at Butlers Marston.
1 The mill at Oxhill is recorded in 1086 and 1241. Nothing now remains to suggest the exact location of the mill.
2 There is a mill stone in the garden ...
A watermill at Oxhill was recorded in the Domesday survey and later in the Medieval period, but its exact location is now unknown.
1 There was a mill in 1086.
2 No visible remains. Likely spot at confluence of two streams close to present manor house.
The possible site of a watermill which was recorded in the manor in the Domesday survey, but its exact location is uncertain.