1 A Presbyterian meeting which existed from the late 17th century built a meeting house in Long Street in 1725 where by the 19th century. Unitarian preaching prevailed. Demolished c1970 ...
The site of a Post Medieval nonconformist meeting house. It was situated 200m north west of Rawnhill Bridge, Atherstone.
1 The old vicarage was pulled down in 1824.
2 Part of this building is contained in the new one which was built in 1824. This is a regular 3 ...
The site of a vicarage probably dating to the Post Medieval period. It was later pulled down and rebuilt in the Imperial Period. The building is now a private residence at Wootton Paddox, close to All Saint's Church.
1 A rectory is shown in close proximity to the church on an estate map from 1766.
2 According to the Anot. map a stone built rectory was pulled down around ...
The site of a vicarage which probably dates to the Post Medieval period. It is marked on an estate map of 1766. The vicarage was demolished in 1851. It was situated to the north of the church at Ashow.
1 Benedictine nunnery of Wroxall, dedicated to St Leonard, was founded around the end of the reign of Henry I (1100-35). Leland gives 1141 as the actual date. At the ...
The site of Wroxall Abbey, a Medieval Benedictine Nunnery which was founded in the 12th century. The remains of two of the nunnery buildings are still standing, as are the remains of the church. A house was built on the site during the 16th century.
1 Built 1826-7, of brick with a three-bay front with round-arched windows. Parapet inscribed ‘INDEPENDENT CHAPEL 1827’.
2 1986: Awaiting result of planning application for conversion to snooker hall.
A nonconformist chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on North Street, Atherstone.
1 Friends’ Meeting House. Built by Nathaniel Newton the younger c1729. Extended in the early 19th century, closed in 1846 and has since been used as a workshop. Brick with ...
The site of a former Society of Friends' Quaker Meeting House of Post Medieval date which was situated on Long Street, Atherstone.
1 A meeting-house given to the Quakers in 1669 was superceded by one on the present site in 1722. This building, which records suggest may have been rebuilt c1768, stands ...
A Methodist chapel dating to the Post Medieval period stood on this site until it was replaced by a later building during the Imperial period. The site is located on Keys Hill, Baddesley Ensor.
1 Rendered front with tall round-arched windows and pedimental gable. Built in 1840 to replace a chapel of 1807-8.
2 Photographed in the early 1900s. The photograph shows the Chapel ...
A Congregational chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Coleshill Road, Chapel End.
1 Built 1740 to replace a meeting house of 1720 which had been destroyed by rioters; a new meeting house was erected nearby c1972 and the former building has been ...
A Society of Friends' Meeting House, which was originally built in the Post Medieval period. It was later converted into a house. It is situated at Hartshill Green.
1 Meetings commenced in 1801 and in 1806 a large barn was fitted up for use as a meeting house. The present chapel, opened in 1862 and ‘thoroughly renovated’ in ...
A Moravian chapel that was built during the Imperial period. The walls of the chapel are built from rubble but the front of the building were built in brick. It is situated on Keys Lane, Priors Marston.
1 Former Friends’ Meeting House built 1702-3. Meetings ceased in 1851 and a few years later it was sold and converted to a cottage with the addition of a wing ...
A Society of Friends' Quaker Meeting House, built in the Post Medieval period. It ceased being a place of worship in 1851, and was later converted to a house. It was located in the area of The Green at Radway.
1 Methodist Chapel, dated 1831. Red brick with stone plinth. Sunday School room added after 1900.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located to the east of Bottom Street, Northend.
1 Brick Methodist chapel with dressed stone quoins. Built 1888.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located on Queen Street, Cubbington.
1 In the suburb on the W of the town there was a house of Dominican or Black Friars, established towards the end of the reign of Henry III, but ...
The site of a Dominican Friary established in the Medieval period, it stood in the vicinity of Friar Street, Warwick. The friary was demolished after the Dissolution around 1551. Recent archaeological excavation has found several burials possibly from the friary cemetery.
1 Attached to the Order of Fontevrault. Founded between 1155 and 1159. The community consisted of sisters and brothers, living apart, but meeting in the church for common worship. The ...
The site of the Priory of St. Mary which was founded during the Medieval period. The site is located 50m west of Manor Court Road, Nuneaton.
1 Arbury House is on the site of an Augustinian priory of canons which was granted to Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, after the Dissolution (PRN 6258).
2 An Augustinian priory ...
The site of Arbury Priory, an Augustinian monastery governed by a prior of Medieval date. It was situated in Arbury Park, 400m west of Swanland.
1 A hoard of 1121 silver denarii were recovered by a metal detectorist in Warmington in 2008. They were buried in a white ware pot. The hoard consisted of 773 ...
The site of a hoard discovered by a metal detectorist in 2008 of 1,146 denarii in a pot. Subsequent investigation by Warmington Heritage Group has recorded that the hoard was buried in a pit within the walls of a polygonal/circular stone building, with other possible votive deposits recorded in the vicinity. Excavation is ongoing.
1 Quaker meeting house with earliest evidence from Saville recording a meeting house in 1677. The Quarter Sessions record a meeting house in 1701. A deed of 1727 ...
Early 18th century Friends (Quakers) meeting house with graveyard. Located 40m southeast of the High Street in Alcester.
1 Probably founded around 1260. The duration is uncertain but was probably brief as there do not appear to be any later records. No further information.
The site of an Augustinian Friary, a monastery governed by a friar. It was founded in the Medieval period, around 1260. The site is situated half a kilometre south west of Shuttington.
1 A small priory of Cistercian nuns was founded in the reign of Henry I (1100-35). It was dissolved in 1536.
2 Remains consist only of portions of the church (PRN ...
The site of Pinley Priory, a Medieval Cistercian monastery. The site lies 600m south east of Great Pinley.
1 A double-ditched enclosure visible on modern aerial photography, possibly Roman or medieval in date. Its morpohology is similar to known Roman temple sites, such as at Hayling Island, or ...
A double-ditched enclosure visible on modern aerial photography, possibly Roman or medieval date.
1 About 1154-55 monks at Radmore (Staffs) were granted the right to establish a Cistercian foundation at Cryfield within the royal manor of Stoneleigh, on the grounds that the Cannock ...
The possible site of a Cistercian monastery dating to the Medieval period. The site lies to the west of Cryfield Village.
1 A documentary study of Polesworth Vicarage shows the existing house to have been rebuilt in the early 1870s, incorporating some 16th century elements. A description and history of the ...
Polesworth Vicarage, which was built during the Imperial period. The building incorporates some Medieval elements. It is situated 200m east of Bridge Street, Polesworth.
1 A grass covered mound c2.4m to 3m in height lies to the east of the church. It may represent the remains of an eastern chapel associated with the Abbey. ...
The possible site of a chapel associated with Polesworth Abbey, which was founded in the Early Medieval period. The mound is visible as an earthwork and is situated 250m east of Bridge Street, Polesworth.