1 A meeting was in existence by 1673 in which year a conventicle held at the barn of John Halford was the cause of George Fox’s last arrest and imprisonment. ...
A former Society of Friends' Quaker Meeting House dating to the Post Medieval period. It is located 200m south of Middle Street, Armscote.
A 19th century church.
1 1833. Typical of its date, with the many thin buttresses along the sides and the short chancel. Only the NW tower is a locally explicable anomaly. ...
The Church of St David, a 19th century church. The spire was removed in 1948. The church is situated south east of the war memorial, Newbold on Stour.
1 A simple stone structure with no distinguishing features or dating evidence other than it conforms in architectural style to other nonconformist chapels of 19th century date.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located in Chapel Lane, Newbold on Stour.
1 There were three mills at Tredington in 1086 and at least one of them probably stood on this site. By 1649 only two mills are mentioned. Details of ownership ...
The site of Tredington Mill, a Medieval mill, known from documentary evidence. A later watermill was built on the site during the Imperial period. The site is located 100m south east of the church at Tredington.
1 Now much modernized a simple gabled building (stone built).
2 Was orginally of mid 18th century date of which only the sash windows are truly indicative of that period.
Talton House, a country house that was built at the beginning of the Imperial period. Many modern alterations have been made to the building. The house is located 500m south east of Crimscote.
1 A mill at Talton is mentioned in 1308. Later in the same century it passed to the Abbey of Evesham. Various owners are known from the 16th to 19th ...
Talton Mill, the remains of a watermill. There is documentary evidence for a mill at this site from the Medieval through to the 20th century. Only a wheel pit, the slots of the angled sluices and a brick plinth survive. It is 400m north east of Crimscote Coppice.
1 The present rectory was built in the late 19th century and is situated on the spot which the previous rectory, a fine 15th century building, stood before it was ...
Tredington Rectory, a house dating to the Medieval period. It was rebuilt in the Imperial period although the Medieval windows were incorporated into the present building. It is located 100m south west of the church.
1 Talton. Five coins – Julian (2), Valentinian I, Flavius Victor, Valentinian III found.
2 Marginal.
3 Present whereabouts of these coins is unknown.
Findspot - five Roman coins were found in the area of Crimscote.
1 A mill at Armscote is mentioned in 1328-9, when Simon de Croome exempted it from a grant of the manor to his son.
2 It may have been situated at ...
The site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period and known from documentary evidence. It was located 600m south of Armscote.
1 In 1240 the Prior of Worcester had a mill at Tredington belonging to the manor of Blackwell. It is mentioned again in 1291 and in 1654 a watermill at ...
The site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period which is known from documentary evidence. It was located near Blackwell.
1 Mentioned in 1299, but nothing else is known of its early history. Details of ownership exist for the mid 19th century onwards. It is not certain when the mill ...
Newbold Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence in the Medieval period, but not again until the Imperial period. The present 19th century building has been converted into housing by 1947. It is 500m east of the church, Newbold on Stour.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 The chapel of Blackwell was in existence before 1240. It was a demesne chapel of the Prior of Worcester, but belonged to the church of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel in Blackwell in the Medieval period.
1 A chapel at Newbold on Stour belonging to the church of Tredington was granted in 1549 to Richard Field and others and probably demolished. The date of its foundation ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel at Newbold on Stour in the Medieval period. Its exact location is unknown.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 A chapel at Armscote belonging to the church of Tredington was granted in 1549 to Richard Field and others and probably demolished. The date of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel at Armscote during the Medieval period.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 A chapel at Darlingscott belonging to the church of Tredington was granted in 1549 to Richard Field and others and was probably demolished. The date ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel at Darlingscott during the Medieval period.
1 A Roman milestone was found during road widening in 1962. It was re-erected some 20m N of the findspot. 1968: This stone is not Roman. It is without inscription, ...
A milestone dating to the Imperial period. It is located 700m north of Tredington.
1 1858: In a stone pit in Armscot Field were found fragments of pottery in close proximity to antlers of red deer. The pottery was coarse and imperfectly fired, and ...
Findspot - fragments of Anglo Saxon pottery and red deer horns, dating to the Migration or Early Medieval period, were found 300m south west of Halford Bridge.
1 Spring called ‘Drakes Well’. This quarry has yielded Romano British pottery which is in possession of the finder, who gave this information.
2 This quarry has been disused for at ...
Findspot - fragments of Roman pottery were found at a quarry site, 150m east of Stepstone Bridge.
1 A Roman coin of Constantine found at the above grid reference between 1967-1974, was reported to the Birmingham City Museum. No other details are known.
Findspot - a single Roman coin was found in the area of Middlefield Lane, Newbold on Stour.
1 Bloom extracted the following from an undated newspaper. Workmen digging out earth for the foundation of the new entrance on the SW side of Talton House, at a depth ...
The possible site of a cemetery. Eight burials were found to the south of Talton House. The date of the skeletons is unknown.
1 A terracotta head (Romano British), perhaps the spout of a Roman pot. Details of finder and informant.
2 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
Findspot - a fragment of Roman pottery, perhaps a spout, was found to the south west of the church, Newbold on Stour.
1 Romano British site and burial.
2 This was an excavation conducted by Stratford schoolboys which recovered Romano British pot and a burial thought to be Romano British. Reports of slabbed ...
The site of a burial, possibly of Roman date. It was found 150m east of the dimantled tramway.
1 1874. Nave and chancel; bellcote. Decorative roof slates. Bleak bar-tracery.
The Church of St George, built in the Imperial period. The church is situated south west of the Darlingscote Post Office.
1 Chancel with N vestry, N aisle, S aisle, N porch and W tower. The remains of the Saxon church consist of the range of windows above the nave arcades, ...
The Church of St Gregory, which was built during the Early Medieval period, around 800 AD. The church underwent various alterations in later centuries. It is located 275m south east of the Tredington Post Office.