1 An ancient hump-back bridge across the River Anker. The bridge, of coursed ashlar, may be of 15th century date and has 4 depressed pointed arches below the ...
Grendon bridge, a bridge over the River Anker which is Medieval in date. It is situated 300m northwest of the church at Grendon.
1 1783. Built on Medieval lines. Sandstone. Of 5 bays with round arches and cutwaters. The parapets of the middle piers are inscribed with names.
4 In early January 1982 Hemlingford ...
Hemlingford Bridge, a bridge built during the Imperial period. Situated to the north west of Hemlingford Green.
1 The present bridge was built in 1825 to replace the earlier Grendon Bridge (PRN 198)
2 1825. Large single arched ashlar bridge, splayed ramped approaches, soild parapets.
3 ...
Grendon Bridge, a large, single arched ashlar bridge that was constructed in the Imperial period to replace an earlier bridge. It is situated 300m south of the church, Grendon.
1 Old Pack Horse Bridge.
2 The bridge is at the above grid reference, but is not outstanding.
3 About 4.6m span, consisting of oak planks resting on stone buttresses and one ...
The remains of a packhorse bridge which dates to the Medieval/Post Medieval period. It was situated 400m east of the church at Butlers Marston. The present bridge is a footbridge with oak planks on stone butresses.
1 A bridge is marked.
2 The present bridge is iron, probably late Victorian, and is still usable.
An iron footbridge from the Imperial period, on the site of an earlier bridge. It is marked on a tithe map of 1843. The footbridge crosses a loop of the Avon, 300m southwest of Stoneleigh Abbey, and is still usable.
1 During the construction of the Park at Ladbroke the bridge over the brook was knocked down and a new bridge built further to the N.
The site of a Post Medieval bridge which was demolished during the creation of the park at Ladbroke. It crossed the Itchen 250m south east of the church.
1 A small one-arched bridge with large stone balls to the piers crosses Sherbourne Brook to the W of the village. The bridge is dated 1800.
2 The date ...
Sherbourne Bridge was built in the Imperial period. The date 1800 is inscribed in the coping. The bridge lies 150m south west of Sherbourne Manor.
1 An unusual two-storied sandstone structure that spans the deep and narrow valley of a tiny brook. May be associted with PRN9556 of similar building materials.
2 Photograph
A sandstone bridge lies under undergrowth 50m north of Close Wood.
1 An early 19th century canal bridge with cast iron elements. It has brick piers and has the inscription ‘1965’ in the render, referring to repair work. The trackway ...
A canal bridge dating from the Imperial period and situated 300m southeast of Pettiford Bridge.
1 The remains of a bridge exposed in the bank, which was identified during a site visit.
The masonry of a bridge exposed in the bank, just to the north of Castle Yard Fillongley.
1 The possible remains of a brick bridge , together with modern building material, observed in a hedge at this location during a site visit.
The possible remains of a brick bridge, together with modern building material, located in a hedge on the north west side of Castle Hills, Fillongley.
1 Bridge over the (now disused) East & West Junction Railway line. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887. The bridge is situated 525m north of ...
A railway bridge that was built during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887. The bridge is situated 525m north of the Church of All Saints, Luddington.
1 During the latter part of 1961, the A5 over Bransford Bridge was widened, necessitating the demolition of the old bridge: the work was apparently watched with keen interest due ...
The site of Bransford Bridge, a bridge dating to the Imperial period. It was demolished when the road was widened during the 1960s. The bridge was situated 200m north west of Bransford Spinney.
1 On the Newbold on Avon road and appears to be of late 18th century construction, having three uniform arches in stone but repaired in brickwork.
2 A parapet and causeway ...
Mill Bridge, a road bridge that was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Newbold Road, Rugby.
1 A few yards above Duke Bridge (PRN WA 342) are the bases of the piers of a narrow packhorse bridge leading to a stone causeway, now overgrown.
2 ...
The site of a packhorse bridge which dates from the Medieval period. It was situated 100m south east of Duke Bridge.
1 Wolston Bridge, over the Avon, is a private bridge belonging to the destroyed Manor House, W of the Church.
2 Situated at the above grid reference. The centre span collapsed ...
The site of a bridge that was built during the Post Medieval or Imperial period. The remains of the bridge are situated 300m south west of St Margarets Church, Wolston.
1 ‘Townpool Bridge’ marked.
2 A bridge marked in this location.
3 Bridge of red sandstone, spanning the Finham Brook and an area to each side of the stream, with a flood ...
Townpool Bridge, the site of a Post Medieval bridge , which was marked on a map of 1692, and on an Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The present footbridge is of red sandstone, and crosses the Finham Brook at the southern end of Bridge Street.
1 The great flood of 1673 – one of the worst floods ever in the town – destroyed the Medieval Packsaddle Bridge, which carried traffic across the brook to the ...
Packsaddle bridge, the site of a Medieval bridge destroyed by a flood in 1673. Traces of the stone abutments are still visible in the banks of Finham Brook, just west of the present iron footbridge in the Abbey Fields.
1 Laneham mentions a great wooden bridge built across the great N arm of the Mere. Laneham records that Lord Leicester built a ‘fayre tymbred bridge’ 14 feet (4.2m) wide ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a Post Medieval bridge associated with Kenilworth Castle. It was built of timber across the north arm of the Mere. The site lies to the north of Castle Green.
1 From Ryton a road runs E, crossing the Anker by the ‘stone horse bridge called Goose Bridge’ in 1659. The repair of this bridge caused disputes between Wolvey and ...
The site of a Post Medieval bridge which is known from documentary evidence. The bridge was situated on Bulkington Road, 500m west of Wolvey.
1 Bridge over the River Blythe. One of the earliest stone bridges in Warwickshire. Five obtusely pointed arches, probably of C14 date. Arches in two splayed courses.
2 Photographed.
3 Mr Cossins ...
A bridge which has its origins in the Medieval period but was widened in the 20th century. No part of the original bridge remains visible. It is situated on Blythe Road, 1.5km north east of Coleshill.
1 Late 17th or early 18th century bridge of one span over Wellesbourne Brook. End pieces surmounted by ball finials, parapet with ‘blind’ balustrading on outside formed of fluted pilasters. ...
The site of a road bridge over the Wellesbourne Brook which George Lucy had built in 1755 to divert traffic away from Charlecote Park House. It was built in the Classic design by David Hiorn and is situated 300m east of Charlecote House.
1 Simple three-arched bridge, built of brick with cast iron handrail of ‘Gothic’ design similar to the next bridge in Hampton Lucy parish.
2 The bridge is still intact and in ...
A brick bridge built during the Imperial period and still in use. The hand rail is cast iron. It crosses the Avon 200m north east of the church at Charlecote.
1 In 1676 a bridge was built over the brook in the Rother Market, which remained open until the 1780s.
The site of a Post Medieval bridge built in 1676 over the brook in Rother Market. It was in use for just over 100 years. The site was at the west end of Wood Street.