1 Site of signal box marked on OS map of 1902.
The site of a signal box which dates from the Imperial period. It was situated 500m north west of Stockingford, and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1902.
1 Site of railway sidings marked on OS map of 1913.
The site of railway sidings dating from the Imperial period. They were situated 600m north west of Stockingford, and were marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1913.
1 The modern bridge was reconstructed by the County Council in 1909. On the W bank, N of the bridge, are the stone remains of the previous bridge.
2 1698. This ...
The site of Lea Bridge, which was built during the Post Medieval period. It was situated on the east side of Lea Marston.
1 Priest’s Bridge marked.
2 The present bridge is a fairly modern concrete structure and there are no traces of an earlier structure.
Priest's Bridge, the site of a Post Medieval bridge. The bridge is marked on a map of 1725 but no traces of it are visible on the ground. It was situated 500m north of High Wood.
1 Bridge marked.
2 The bridge still exists and appears to be an early one. It has two spans, hump-backed, of sandstone and brick and is reinforced with concrete. The upstream ...
Pedlar's Bridge, a bridge dating to the Post Medieval period. It is marked on an estate map of 1778. The bridge is situated on Smearton Lane.
1 An excavation, 6m by 6m in area, in advance of a new house, found Romano British occupation of the C1 to the end of the C2, the earliest phase ...
The remains of Roman buildings, a road and ditches were found during an excavation on Bleachfield Street, Alcester.
1 A possible trackway shows on aerial photographs as a parch mark forming ditch.
2 The track fades out to the N and its relationship to ridge and furrow in the ...
A Roman Road is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It's existance was proved during excavations. It is situated 50m south of Witherley Road.
1 Newton Bridge marked on a map of Clifton upon Dunsmore in the early 17th century.
2 An earlier (?early) two-span bridge, originally brick, but heavily restored, widened and reinforced on ...
Newton Bridge, a road bridge that was built during the Post Medieval or Imperial periods. The bridge is marked on a 17th century map. It is situated on Newton Road, 1km south of Newton.
1 The early Watling Street, at Mancetter, appears to have been about ten feet wide and south of the present line.
2 In 1975 a proton magnetometer survey was carried out. ...
Watling Street, a Roman road running from London to Wroxeter which passes through Warwickshire.
The Kingsbury/Water Orton Branch of Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway.
1 The direct line from Kingsbury to Water Orton was opened for goods in March 1909, and for passengers in May ...
The Kingsbury/Water Orton Branch of Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway which was constructed during the Imperial period.
1 Formal opening on the 5th of August 1839. Intermediate stations in Warwickshire at Kingsbury, Forge Mills, Coleshill and Water Orton. At this time a junction was brought ...
The Birmingham Branch of the Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway which was built during the Imperial period.
1 A bridge is mentioned in 1279, and in 1653 when it was in great decay and was repaired at the cost of the county.
2 The existing bridge is 18th ...
The site of Bretford Bridge which was built in the Medieval period. It is known from documentary evidence. It was situated to the south of Bretford.
1 Opened on 1st November 1864. The present Whitacre Station dates from this opening.
The Nuneaton Branch of the Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway which was built during the Imperial period.
1 Dow Bridge, as it now exists, was built by the Road Commissioners about 1776. It consists of five brick arches, with stone quoins. Over the central arch is a ...
Dow Bridge, a road bridge that was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 1km east of Newton.
1 ‘Paved road and bridge over which road continues. Ruts in surface 15.4m apart (noted and examined by R J Hetherington, 1949)’.
2 The area has now been ...
The site of a bridge of unknown date. It is situated 200m east of Oversley Mill.
120 Ryknild Street which runs north from the Fosse Way at Bourton on the Water may have been an advanced section of the frontier line supposedly represented by the Fosse ...
Roman Road.
1 A magnetometer survey was undertaken in 1979 and produced evidence for a large rectangular enclosure within which was a complex of features.
2 1980. Trial trenching, followed by a major ...
Part excavation in 1980 of a Roman settlement within a large rectangular enclosure. Features and finds date from the first to the fourth century, and include Samian ware pottery. The site is to the west of Tiddington village.
1 1982-3: Excavation in advance of redevelopment. Earliest occupation was in the form of ditches defining enclosures of various sizes, also concentrations of post holes and hearths indicating houses. The ...
The site of a Roman settlement excavated in 1982/3 in advance of development. Evidence of domestic activity was found from the 1st century to the mid 3rd. The site lies to the north of the Tiddington Road.
1 Mahany’s Site F. Double palisaded enclosure. Site no 34.
2 A double parallelogram structure of C1 date, and a bridge over the N ditch of the E-W road (PRN 451). ...
The remains of a series of Roman buildings and a bridge were found during an excavation. The site was located on Chantry Crescent, Alcester.
1 Area excavation examined road and occupation. To the N were seven superimposed gravel surfaces with intervening occupation layers. Cutting through the second from top was a long narrow building ...
The remains of a series of Roman roads as well as the remains of a Roman building were excavated. Roman pottery was found on the site which was located in the area of Chantry Crescent, Alcester.
1 Mahany’s Road C. This runs through her Sites A, H, D and E and appears to cross the S ditch (PRN 449). It was probably in use in the ...
The site of a Roman road which was partially excavated. The site was located in the area of Birch Abbey, Alcester.
1 Mahany’s Road B, known from excavations on her Site C, may also have been visible in Taylor’s 1969 excavation (PRN 500). The alignment of buildings may suggest that it ...
A Roman road running south out of Alcester. The road runs down the High Street and then to the west of Bleachfield Street. It has been partially excavated.
2 Roads, trackways and linear ditches show to the E of Chesterton Roman Camp. These evidently indicate a settlement area outside the Camp.
The possible site of a Roman settlement. It is indicated by a number of roads, trackways and linear ditches which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site lies in the area to the east of Chesterton Roman Camp, 400m north west of Windmill Hill.
1 Construction of a flood barrier in 1970 resulted in an area of the Roman town some 150m by 9-25m being stripped. The excavations revealed a Roman road 4.3m in ...
Excavations revealed the remains of a Roman road to the east of Bleachfield Street, Alcester. The road is also visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs.