2 There was a corn mill here by 1550. In about 1670 it was demolished and an iron forge built by Francis Watts. After about 1730 the mill seems to ...
Clifford Mill, 600m north of the church, for which there is documentary evidence from the late Medieval period. It became a forge in the Post Medieval period, and then reverted to a corn mill. The present building dates from 1853 and a chimney of auxiliary steam power survives.
1 Beighton’s map of Warwickshire shows a windmill to the west of Weston Hall.
2 Greenwood’s map also shows a windmill to the west of Weston Hall.
3 A record card for ...
Evidence from early maps shows that there was a windmill to the west of Weston Hall.
1 In 1240 there was a corn mill and fulling mill, both held by Henry Brunmon, in Tiddington. Tiddington Mill has disappeared.
Tiddington Mill, a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period. It was used as a corn mill and a fulling mill. Its exact location is unknown.
1 There is an undoubted sepulchral mound, once opened by Mr Bloxam. It has no encircling ditch.
2 The labourers employed missed the deposit and a few fragments only of ancient ...
The site of a possible windmill mound, a mound of earth on which a windmill would have stood, of Medieval or Post Medieval date. Alternatively, the mound might be a round barrow. It is situated 600m east of Smith's Spinney.
1 A well-preserved little moated mount castle. The remains consist of a low circular artificial hill, measuring about 46m in diameter at its base, with a flat top about 21m ...
The site of a windmill mound, a mound of earth on which a windmill would have stood. It might be of Medieval date and associated with the deserted settlement of Coton. The windmill mound is situated 700m south of Coton House.
1 Mill Holme marked here.
2 This site is in Newton and Biggin parish and therefore is probably not one of the mills recorded in Domesday Book (PRN 4155).
3 This is ...
The possible site of a Medieval watermill which is suggested by documentary evidence. The site lies 1km north east of Clifton upon Dunsmore.
1 A mill is recorded in 1086 and there were two mills in the 12th century and 14th century. The site of at least one of these mills was that ...
The site of Washford Mill, a watermill. There is documentary evidence for mills in Studley from the Medieval period onwards. The mill buildings and the mill house have now been converted to a hotel, with the waterwheel restored. It is located 100m west of Icknield Street Drive.
1 A mill is mentioned at Studley in 1086 and in the 13th century and 14th century there were two mills. Further references exist in the Medieval and Post Medieval ...
Studley Mill, a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period onwards. It was used as a cornmill and needle mill in the Imperial period before its demolition. The remains are visible as earthworks which lie to the east of the Riverside area.
1 There was a mill in 1086 and an isolated reference to 2 mills occurs in 1370. Coughton mill, which stood by the Arrow, SE of the Court, ...
Coughton Mill, a watermill for which there are documentary records from the Medieval period. It was disused by the late 19th century and was later demolished, but watercourses and building foundations remain. The mill was situated 300m south east of Coughton Court.
1 A mill at Bidford was leased to John Penn in 1535. In 1545 Penn occupied three mills called Grange Mills. Further references exist in the 16th ...
The site of Grange Mills. Various mills dating between the Medieval and Imperial periods are known from documentary evidence to have existed here. They included a watermill, windmill, fulling mill and paper mill. The site was 1km northeast of Barton.
1 ‘Windmill Hill’. Large windmill mound surrounded by ridge and furrow. SP4861.
2 The grid reference given in reference 1 is incorrect. The mound is situated in a field with very ...
A windmill mound marks the site of a former windmill which might date back to the Medieval period. The mound is visible as an earthwork. It is situated 400m south west of Lower Shuckburgh.
1 Several fields have ‘Windmill’ names.
2 Several fields have ‘Windmill’ names.
3 Site now lost.
The site of a possible Post Medieval windmill. Several fields have 'windmill' names on maps of the Spencer Estate in 1634 and 1734, but no surface evidence is visible. The location is at Windmill Spinney, 1km north west of Wormleighton.
1 ‘An outlying windmill a quarter of a mile to the E’ of Wormleighton church.
3 Thorpe appears to derive his evidence from a map of 1634, but there is no ...
There is possible documentary evidence that there was a windmill at this site in the Post Medieval period. The unconfirmed location was 400m south east of the church at Wormleighton.
1 On the N side of the moat a large pond has been dug into the earthwork of the moat, destroying its symmetry. It appears to be, therefore, of later ...
A possible fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. Alternatively, this may be a mill pond, an area of water retained above a mill dam, dating to the Medieval period onwards. It is visible as an earthwork, and is situated 100m south east of the church at Morton Bagot.
1 Site of possible fish pond/mill pond, Fillongley.
Boggy area with stream through centre. Possible fish/mill pond from the damming of the stream.
There is a similar area to the south.
Possible fish pond or mill pond situated to the north of Fillongley.
1 Site of earthworks, Fillongley.
Large area delineated by earthworks in the parkland surrounding Castle Yard, to the south west of the castle. Earthworks associated with a stream
Possible fish pond/mill/settlement.
Site of earthworks possibly a fish pond/mill/settlement within the parkland associated with Castle Yard.
1 In 1086 there was a mill. Two mills are mentioned in 1266. The mill is also recorded in 1538, 1562 and 1649. The mill was used as the manor ...
The remains of a watermill which is documented from the Medieval period. The building was converted into a house in 1972. The mill race survives. The site is located to the south east of Clifford Chambers.
1 Clifton Mill Race is still intact. The mill race has been diverted from the river between SP2051 and SP1952. Part of it forms the eastern side of ...
The site of a mill race which was in use from the Medieval to the Imperial period. It is still visible as an earthwork. The mill race was located to the south east of Clifford Chambers.
1 Cider mill and press. Horse drawn edge runner stone; used to crush apples for cider making. The press was nearby and used to extract the juices from the ...
The site of a cider mill and cider press which was first used during the Imperial period. It was situated at Walcote Farm, north west of Walcote.
1 Brick built barn with tiled roof. Iron shafts pass through the walls. The machinery consists of two pairs of stones and complete cast iron gearing. It formerly had three ...
A steam mill which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated 100m south of Exhall Court.
1 The earliest reference to paper-making occurs in the inclosure award of 1743, from which it appears that there must have been a mill near the junction of the Alne ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval watermill, known from documentary sources. The mill may have used for making paper. It was located 300m north east of Little Alne Bridge.
1 This may have been the paper mill operated by Thomas Fruin during the 18th century. It seems to have reverted to corn grinding in the early 19th century. Limited ...
Grey Mill, the remains of a brick watermill of Post Medieval date, when it may have been used for making paper. It was later used for grinding corn. The mill continued in use throughout the Imperial period. It stands 200m south east of Round Hill.
1 There was a mill at Preston Bagot in 1086. Two mills are recorded in 1200 and 1291 and the mills are recorded at the beginning of the 17th century. ...
A mill was recorded in the Domesday survey and two mills in later Medieval documents. This watermill fell into disuse in the early 17th century. The mill pond and vestiges of a leat still survive. Its location was 200m north of Warwick Road Bridge, Preston Bagot.
1 There was a mill at Preston Bagot in 1086 valued at 16s. In c1200 Simon Bagot gave two mills (see also PRN 1604), with “the multure of his ...
Preston Bagot Mill, the partial remains of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period to the 20th century. Traces of the mill race survive. The mill is 200m northwest of Warwick Road Bridge.