1 Gardens surrounding Grade II* Listed Post Medieval house. A ‘Chinese Rail’ is shown in a drawing of 1750 by Sanderson Miller, and other garden features include a lodge, walks, ...
The remains of formal gardens dating from the Post Medieval period. The earlier features included a 'Chinese Rail', a ha ha, a kitchen garden, and a pond with a boathouse. They are located to the north of the church at Barton-on-the-Heath.
1 Pleasure grounds of Admington Hall. Topiary garden to north, informal pleasure ground with raised terrace overlooking paddock to south. Water and woodland garden created by the previous owner since ...
Admington Hall gardens, a private park and gardens attached to a property at the southern end of Admington. They incorporate 19th and 20th century design elements.
Recommended for inclusion as key site on Local List by Lovie
1 Baraset House’s gardens consist of pleasure grounds with mixed plantings, walks, paddocks, small park and kitchen garden. The building itself was built for the ex-Governor of the Indian province ...
Baraset House garden, created in the Imperial period as a villa and grounds, and marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The house was demolished in the 1920s. The garden covers a large area 300m south of Alveston.
1 The house itself is Grade II* Listed and was built in 1689. The surrounding pleasure grounds are of early 19th century type and include walks, shrubberies, mixed planting and ...
The grounds of Alveston House, pleasure gardens created in the Imperial period, and surrounding the Post Medieval House. The gardens are marked on maps of 1822 and later, and cover an area to the north of Alveston.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 House, 1876, by Penrose, surrounded by grounds comprising formal gardens with terraces and pleasure grounds with mixed plantings and walks. Features include: a kitchen garden; shrubbery; pond and new ...
Formal gardens and pleasure grounds of Ardencote House which date to the Imperial period. An outstanding parterre survives. They are situated 1km south west of Great Pinley.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List as key site (parterre) by Lovie
1 Photographs show an arts and crafts vernacular style garden around the house with yew hedges, topiary, terraces. Other features included parkland with paddock enclosures, ha-ha, pleasure grounds with walks, ...
Gardens and parkland which surround Ashorne Hill House, and which were created in the Imperial period. The grounds included yew hedges, a topiary, terraces, mixed planting, a ha ha and an orchard.They covered a large area to the north east of Ashorne.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 Bilton Grange now appears on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
2 Mid Victorian gardens and pleasure grounds set in a small park accompanying a country house built by ...
Bilton Grange park, gardens and pleasure grounds that were created during the Imperial period. The park is located to the north east of Dunchurch.
Recommended for inclusion on the Register by Lovie.
1 The Old Park of Tanworth (126 acres), is mentioned in 1630 among the holdings of the Archers. Its position is not certain. An earlier reference to it occurs in ...
The site of a park dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods and known from documentary evidence. It was possibly located north east of Tanworth.
1, 2 Moxhull Park is marked on the OS 6″ 1887 map.
3, 4 Lovie mentions park with lake, plantations, lodge, drive; pleasure grounds with terrace, some documentary evidence of lawns, ...
The site of Moxhull Park which originated during the Medieval period. It is situated to the east of Wishall Hall Farm. The park is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 The earliest garden areas are the east forecourt, the rectangular south garden enclosure, and a small area to the west of the house, with mid-17th century walls and structures. ...
The site of a park and formal garden dating from the Post Medieval period onwards. There are three gazebos and the garden contains a topiary garden said to represent the Sermon on the Mount. It is situated at Packwood House.
1 Warwick Castle Park. An 18th century park and river landscape around the Medieval castle, c.320 ha. The park extends for c75 ha on the N side of ...
Warwick Castle Park. Documentary and evidence from excavation shows that the landscaped park, which surrounds Warwick Castle, dates to the Post Medieval and Imperial periods.Recommended for Review Register entry by Lovie.
1 A deerpark is recorded at Clopton in 1564. Shown on Speed’s map of 1610. Possibly created in c.1540 when common fields at Clopton were enclosed. Traces of ...
Clopton Park, a park which was originally a Post Medieval deer park. The park now incorporates elements of 17th and 19th century landscape design. It is located to the north of Clopton.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 Early 19th century house c.1860 by T.T.Allen on older site. Has associated 20th century gardens. Features include parkland, pond, pleasure grounds, kitchen garden, orchard. Recommended for inclusion on Local ...
Loxley Hall grounds, a park dating from the Imperial period, now incorporating modern gardens. Part of the parkland is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886/7. The grounds are situated to the north of Loxley.