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 The name “High Bridge” does not appear on earlier maps, but an adjoining field is called High Burge Meadows on an 1823 map.
2 The present bridge is modern, of ...
High Bridge, the site of a modern bridge. A map of 1823 suggests that this might be the site of an earlier bridge. The site is located 700m west of Walsgrave Hill.
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 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 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 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 On the 1903 OS 25″ the bridge here is marked ‘Coton old wharf bridge’.
2 The bridge is date-marked 1925. To the E of the bridge is a wide section ...
Coton Old Wharf. Documentary evidence suggests the site of a canal wharf, where vessels loaded and unloaded goods, situated to the east of Coventry Road, Chilvers Coton.
1 Tradition has it that the then-existing bridge was built by John Vesey, Bishop of Exeter, during the reign of Edward VI in 1553. It was reputedly built of stone ...
The remains of Curdworth Bridge which was built during the Post Medieval period. The site is located 300m south of Spring Farm.
1 Ryton Bridge is modern but there was an earlier bridge on the same site although the name given to that seen by Leland and mentioned by Dugdale was ‘Finford’ ...
The possible site of a Medieval bridge. The bridge may have stood on the site of the modern Ryton Bridge, 500m south east of Toll Bar End.
1 Over the river Blythe near Little Packington is a packhorse bridge of C17 date. This carries the track which crosses the N part of Packington Park.
2 ...
Little Packington Bridge, a road bridge dating from the Post Medieval period. It is situated 250m east of Brook Farm.
1 A stone bridge which carries the drive over Compton Pool. Stone bridge of three arches with 19th century balustraded parapet. Possibly by Adam.
2 The bridge is little used today; ...
An 18th century stone bridge built for the private drive to the house in the landscape park at Compton Verney. It is now used only as a footbridge. It is situated 250m east of the church at Compton Verney.
1 A bridge carrying the public road over Compton Pool. An 18th century stone bridge of five arches. Possibly by Adam.
2 The bridge is as described and still in regular ...
An 18th century public road bridge, built of stone, and possibly by Adam, and associated with the landscape park at Compton Verney. It is still in use as a road bridge, and is situated 300m south east of the church at Compton Verney.
1 Excavation inside the moat revealed the foundations of a number of walls, usually about 0.23m below the surface. Several of these were followed, but insufficient work was done to ...
The site of Goodrest Lodge, a Medieval/Post Medieval manor house with double moat, bridge, fishponds and well. Remains of these features are visible as earthworks. On excavating the site, walls and floors were revealed. It is situated at Leek Wootton.
1 The old bridge at Weston Mill.
2 This photograph shows an old timber bridge. The present bridge is a more substantial structure of metal and concrete.
The site of a timber bridge, possibly of Post Medieval date, which crossed the River Leam. It was situated 1.5km south of the church at Weston under Wetherley.
1 A good bold bridge, over the Leam, with buttresses of the usual character but exceptionally massive. It has three arches over the stream, and one dry arch at each ...
Hunningham Bridge, originally Medieval, but the present structure is mostly Post Medieval with later repairs. It crosses the River Leam 400m north of the church.
1 Before 1808 the bridge was a brick structure and was not in quite the same place as its successor. A new bridge was described as ‘a very handsome stone ...
Victoria Bridge, a stone bridge in the Gothic style, was built in the Imperial period, close to the site of an earlier brick bridge. It crosses the River Leam at the north end of Victoria Terrace, Leamington Spa.
Railway Bridge.
1 The bridge was composed of two wooden girders, resting on two piers of Derbyshire stone.
2 Photo.
3 All that remains of this bridge are the two stone piers. It ...
A railway bridge which was constructed in the Imperial period. It was demolished when the line was closed in 1959 and all that remains are two stone piers. The bridge stood 500m south east of the Pump Room Gardens.
1 Bridge over the Arrow built in 1866; spans demolished 1960s. 2 circular piers visible in river, also 3 small floodwater gaps in blue brick.
The remains of a bridge built in the Imperial period. It was largely demolished in the 1960s, apart from two circular piers still visible in the Arrow. The site is 300m north west of Wixford Bridge.
1 Skew bridge carries Alcester-Evesham Road over railbed: 1866, single arch, lined red brick; stone faced.
A road bridge over the railway which was built in the Imperial period, from brick with stone facing. It is situated on Evesham Street, 150m west of Newport Drive.
1 Bridge over the Arrow built 1866 and demolished in 1965.
2 The former railway bridge abutment spanning the Arrow is very minutely described in a survey, and quarter milepost added ...
The site of a railway bridge which was built over the River Arrow in 1866 but which was demolished in 1965. A Midland Railway style quarter mile post stands north of the river. The site lies 200m south east of the church at Arrow.
1 Dugdale records that in 1375 a patent was issued for repair of the great bridge. This bridge was destroyed by a great flood soon after the construction of the ...
Old Castle Bridge, which crosses the River Avon 100m south east of Warwick Castle. Sections of three arches remain of the late Medieval structure.
1 A concrete footbridge erected in 1934; but a stone let into one of the side piers records the existence of a bridge on the site in 1599. Information exists ...
The site of a bridge which was in use from the Post Medieval to the Imperial periods. It crossed the Avon 70m south of Lucy's Mill, and was of wood with stone piers. The present concrete footbridge was erected in 1934.