1 Foxcote House marked on OS Map.
2 Foxcote is an early 18th century mansion of two storeys and attics in stone. It is divided into five bays by Roman Doric ...
Foxcote House is a Post Medieval mansion or country house that it is attributed to Edward Woodward. It is located in Foxcote.
1 There is an icehouse at Newbold Pacey. Captain G J Little of Newbold Pacey House, with which residence the icehouse is connected, is of the opinion that it was ...
The site of an icehouse which was built during the Imperial period of which only the round brick wall remains. It is situated 400m north west of the church, Newbold Pacey.
2 Red brick icehouse of late 19th century or 20th century.
3 It seems unlikely that the icehouse would be 20th century.
4 W of Farnborough Hall are two large ornamental pools. ...
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground. Ice would have been stored inside it during the warmer months. The icehouse dates to the Imperial period. It is situated 200m north west of Farnborough Hall, with which it is associated.
1 This is the possible site of “Swearing Castle”, which appears on Beightons map of 1725, and it is shown in Dugdale’s History of Warwickshire 1730 as a large house. ...
The possible site of Swearing Castle dating from between the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. The castle is known from documentary evidence. Various finds have been recovered from the site, including a buckle. It is located 800m north east of Willington.
1 There was an icehouse at Barford Hill, but unfortunately it was demolished some years ago. This house was used as recently as 1929, when the gardener helped ...
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground. It would have been used during the Post Medieval/Imperial period to store ice during the warmer months. The site lies 400m north of Clock Cottage.
1 2
The icehouse at Watchbury House is not true to type, and there may be some doubt as to its original purpose. It is oblong in plan, measuring ...
An icehouse dating to the Imperial period. Its unusual construction suggests that it may originally have been built for a different purpose, perhaps for curing and salting meat. It is situated 300m north east of the cemetery, Barford.
1 Icehouse marked on OS map.
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground and used for storing ice in the warmer months. It was in use during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The icehouse is situated 400m north west of Studley Thorns.
1 According to Dugdale, the house was built in the first year of Elizabeth I’s reign (1559-60). The house was originally made up of a main block one room ...
Charlecote Hall, a Post Medieval (Tudor) house at the heart of Charlecote Park. The house lies 350m south west of St Leonards Church.
1 Site of ice house marked on OS map of 1887.
2 Domed ice-house with top opening had an entrance within a rusticated porch. It was locally known as Sir Roger’s ...
The site of an icehouse, built partially underground and used for storing ice in warm weather. It dated to the Imperial period and was situated 150m west of Arbury Hall.
1 Ice house, Charlecote Nurseries (formerly Charlecote Park), Charlecote.
Beamon and Roaf report a brick cylinder with domed roof, situated adjacent to a bend 2 yds (1.8 m) from the river ...
Brick cylindrical ice house close to the river Dene. Formerly sited in the kitchen garden of Charlecote Hall, now a private nursery.
1 Ice House noted in Brandon little Wood by the 1605 Living History Society
Ice house noted in Brandon Little Wood.
1 Icehouse Spinney 600m SE of Caldecote Hall and in a bend of the River Anker.
2 The ice house survives and takes the form of a round grass-covered earthwork in ...
An icehouse, a structure built partly underground and used for the storage of ice in warmer weather. It was built during the Imperial period and lies 500m south west of Caldecote Hall, in Ice House Spinney.
1 An extremely early tradition says that ‘a refrigerator’ was built in Icehouse Spinney, near the railway, in Medieval times. It was an underground chamber dug out and lined with ...
The possible site of an Post Medieval icehouse, a structure built partially underground in which ice was kept during warmer months. It is thought to have been situated in Icehouse Spinney.
1 Ice house, Old Hall Farm, Baxterley.
Beamon and Roaf report two bricked archways, side by side, facing NE, are entries to a conjoined complex. Approximately 25 x 20 ft (7.5 ...
A two-roomed ice house constructed of brick and sandstone, under a tree covered mound. It lies 200 yds (180m) from the principal building and is not shown on current OS maps.
1 There is an icehouse at St Lawrence Wood at about this location (information from H.Pearson of County Planning Dept).
2 The ice house is about 1.7m in diameter and about ...
An icehouse, a structure built partially underground, which was used for storing ice in warmer months. It dates from the Imperial period and is situated 300m north east of Oldbury Grange.
1 A house was built in 1618 and had been destroyed by fire in 1706. A new Georgian house (PRN 5354) replaced the earlier one. It was always assumed that ...
The site of Baginton Hall, a country house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It burnt down in 1706 and was rebuilt on a slightly different site. The house was situated 100m north west of the church at Baginton.
1 ‘A large and heavily picturesque mansion was built in 1875 by William Young. Its style is Tudor, from Gothic to Elizabethan. The dominant feature is a tower ...
Haseley Manor, a country house which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 400m east of the church at Haseley.