1 Eastwood refers to iron stone smelting with charcoal in Monk’s Park Wood, and ‘slag heaps from these old furnaces may be seen at the site of the old ponds ...
The site of ponds and a dam dating to the Post Medieval period. The features survive as earthworks and are situated 400m west of Outwoods Farm.
1 Eastwood records iron smelting in this area.
2 The stream was followed through the woods but no slag or furnace remains were found. There were, however, a number of dams ...
The site of ponds and a dam dating to the Post Medieval period. The features survive as earthworks and lie 600m south west of Outwoods Farm.
1 Eastwood records iron smelting in this area.
2 The stream was followed through the woods but no signs of furnace remains were found. There were, however, a number of dams ...
A series of ponds and dam which survive as earthworks and date to the Post Medieval period. They are situated 800m south east of Bentley Common.
1 ‘Though I have not met with any direct mention of this place before E I time, yet do I conclude it to have been a village long before… There ...
The possible site of a shrunken village of Post Medieval date. The site is located at Barton.
1 A fishpond which may have been the ‘Newenton Ponde’ recorded in a perambulation of 1608 has been surveyed by a University of Warwick extramural class. The pool lay beside ...
A fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish, which dates to the Medieval/Post Medieval period. An associated dam is also visible as an earthwork. The site has been fully surveyed, and is situated to the south of Hunger Hill, Wootton Wawen.
2 Possible linear crop marks and possible enclosure show on aerial photographs.
3 The small enclosure is marked as a (?) quarry on a map at the Sern corner of a ...
The site of an enclosure and linear features of unknown date. The features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Documentary evidence suggests that the features may be associated with a quarry and field boundaries. The site is located 500m east of Hinckley Road.
1 Aerial photographs.
2 Earthworks of linear features and enclosures show on aerial photographs. The area is one of the few in the parish free of ridge and furrow and is ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval deserted settlement. Enclosures and linear features survive as earthworks at the site, which is located 300m south west of Crimscote.
1 Rectilinear feature to the west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs mapped as part of English Heritage (EH) National Mapping Project (NMP) ...
Rectilinear feature to the south west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs.
1 A network of ditches, 500m to the north west of Cock Bevington Farm, seen on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The ...
A network of ditches, 500m to the north west of Cock Bevington Farm, can be seen on aerial photographs.
1 Post-medieval features were identified by archaeological investigations. They included remains of possible ditches, pits and gullies. Pottery dating from the 17th – 19th centuries was recovered from ...
Several post-medieval features, including the surviving remains of possible ditches and pits may relate to post-medieval property boundaries, gardening or rubbish disposal activities within those properties.
1 Two parallel ditches seen on aerial photographs in fields between the main drive into Combe Abbey and a building
named as the East Lodge were mapped as part of ...
Two parallel ditches can be seen on aerial photographs in fields between the main drive into Combe Abbey and a building named as the East Lodge.
1 Five 1m wide 200m long parallel ditches in a meadow beside the River Avon, 400m east of Brandon, evident on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English ...
A series of 200m long parallel ditches in a meadow beside the River Avon 400m east of Brandon are evident on aerial photographs.
1 A grid of 2m wide ditches seen in a meadow beside the River Avon 150m south east of Sidehill Spinney, Brandon on aerial photographs were mapped as part ...
A grid of 2m wide ditches in a meadow beside the River Avon 150m south east of Sidehill Spinney, Brandon are evident on aerial photographs.
1 A group of ditches and banks on the southern side of the river side were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The ditches appear ...
Ditches up to 5m wide can be seen on aerial photographs in fields between the Coventry -Rugby railway and the River Avon imeadiately to the west of Marston Hall Farm. The ditches have, in most cases, a bank on one edge or other. This may be spoil dug from the ditches as they were re-cut over time.
1 Interconnecting linear Ditches seen on aerial photographs 100m to the east of the bridge at Bretford were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
2 These would ...
Interconnecting linear Ditches can be seen on aerial photographs 100 mto the east of the bridge at Bretford.
1 Banks and ditches seen on aerial photograhs beside the River Avon to the west of Bretford were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. Two ...
Banks and ditches can be seen on aerial photographs beside the River Avon to the west of Bretford.
1 2 Ditch running east-west probably forming the rear boundary of a plot on Main Street. Sherds of post-medieval pottery were recovered from the fill. Not on ...
Probable boundary ditch. Predates 1888 as not shown on First Edition.
1 A stone field drain was initially discovered in an evaluation trench. The stone construction was identified as local quartzite by the excavator, Keith Scott.
2 3 Geophysical survey using ...
A series of linear field drains constructed of local quarzite stone. Running north-south. Possibly 17th century as Dugdale recorded similar in 'The History of Imbanking and Drayning of Diverse Fenns and Marshes' 1662
1 At the foot of Edge Hill the first battle of the Civil War was fought in 1642 (PRN 1198) and a mound on the hillside still marks the common ...
A mound at the foot of Edge Hill, just outside Radway, is reputed to be a cemetery where dead soldiers from the Battle of Edge Hill were buried in the 17th century. The mound survives as an earthwork.
1The southern stone wall of a substantial east-west aligned building, of probable post-medieval date, was recorded during archaeological evaluation off Little Park, Southam. The building measured at least 10m wide ...
The southern wall of a substantial east-west aligned building, of probable post-medieval date, was recorded during archaeological evaluation off Little Park, Southam.
1 A series of rectalinear features showed up as parchmarks in this field, in April 2004, immediately adjacent to the line of the Saltway, the agger of which is visible ...
A series of rectilinear parchmarks were identified in 2004. Subsequent geophysical survey failed to record any features, save a modern drain. The site lies adjacent to the Saltway, the Roman Road running from Droitwich to Finmere.
1 Bricklined soakaway pit and drain, probably 18th-19th century and associated with The Old Vicarage. It possibly coincides with the construction of an additional wing to The Old Vicarage ...
Soakaway and drains at The Old Vicarage, Bidford-on-Avon
1 1927: Excavation of a ‘tumulus’ at Billesley Hall. At the junction of the road to Aston Cantlow and the lane from Wilmcote there is a well-marked tumulus, now ...
A mound thought to be of Post Medieval date. During an excavation the mound was found to contain the burial of a horse. The mound survives as an earthwork and is situated 200m south of Billesley Hall.
1 Dodwell appears to have been wholly enclosed at some time before 1704. Since then the ancient hamlet of Dodwell, which consisted of some half-dozen houses a little to the ...
The site of the deserted settlement of Dodwell dating to the Post Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. The earthworks include house platforms, hollow ways, enclosures and evidence of ridge and furrow. The site is located 850m west of Bordon Hill, Luddington.