1 The house built by the Burgoynes about the end of the 16th century occupied the site of the whole W end of the cloisters. It had symmetrical wings projecting ...
The site of a country house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It occupied the site of Wroxall Abbey and the remains of the abbey buildings may have been incorporated into the house. It was situated 600m south east of Wroxall.
1 Baginton Hall, a Georgian building standing 137m to the N of the church, was destroyed by fire in 1889 and never rebuilt. It was erected by William Bromley, Speaker ...
The site of Baginton Hall, a country house that was built during the Post Medieval period. The house was destroyed by fire in 1889. It was situated 150m north of the church at Baginton.
1 A prominent mound 3 to 4.6m high. Possibly an ice house. There was a door in the base of this mound (B2). Landowner between the wars attempted to excavate ...
The site of a possible icehouse dating to the Imperial period, though it has also been suggested that the site is a Medieval castle. It is located 200m south of the church, Wootton Wawen.
1 Ice house marked.
2 The ice house is concealed beneath a mound of earth about 2m high. It is a substantial red brick dome-shaped structure about 9m in depth. Access ...
An icehouse, a structure built partially underground in which ice was stored during the warmer months. It was built during the Post Medieval period and is situated 100m north east of Ragley Hall.
1 A moulded stone Tudor doorway reset in the N revetting wall of the moat may be a relic of the earlier house on the site. It forms the entrance ...
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground and used to store ice during the warmer months. It dates to the Imperial period and is situated 100m north of Grove Park House.
1 Built in 1834 by Beazley. Symmetrical, with a large keep at the centre, in a mixture of architectural styles.
2 1903 purchased for use as an agricultural college. ...
The site of a country house, known as Studley Castle, dating to the Imperial period. It is situated 400m north of Studley Thorns.
1 Lower Skilts is all that remains of the ‘very beautiful house of brick’ with which William Sheldon, c1560-70, replaced the Prior of Studley’s Grange. It is of red ...
Site of a manor house dating to the Post Medieval period. The house is known from documentary evidence and its remains are visible as an earthwork. It was situated 800m north east of Cracknut Hill.
1 Ice house revealed during demolition/clearance of, apparently, the old police station. Examined 9.3.75 at request of County Surveyor’s Department. The ice house was a domed shape, ...
The site of an icehouse, a building partially constructed under ground and used to store ice in the warmer months. It dates to the Imperial period and was situated west of Ratcliffe Street, Atherstone.
1 Description. Gorcott Hall began probably with a 15th century timber-framed house of two fairly low storeys, with a middle hall and end cross-wings, jettied in the gabled upper ...
Gorcott Hall, a country house originally built during the Medieval period. It is situated 900m north of Mappleborough Green.
1 Newnham Paddox, the seat of the Earls of Denbigh, was so much altered about 1875 that architecturally it can only be called a fine modern house.
2 Now demolished. An ...
The site of Newnham Paddox Mansion, a country house that was built during the Imperial period. It was later demolished and replaced with a modern house. It was situated in Newnham Paddox Park.
1 Possible icehouse discovered by the owner when digging a trench behind some out-houses. The structure was subterranean, built of brick, with a quite low arched roof. It was undoubtedly ...
The site of a possible icehouse which was discovered during the excavation of a trench. It was built of brick and was used for storing ice in the warmer months. The icehouse dated from the Imperial period onwards. It was situated 200m east of Newbold Comyn park.
1 ‘Icehouse Grove’ marked.
2 Probably the site of an icehouse associated with Ragley Hall.
3 Beamon and Roaf state that the ice house is egg-shaped and was built in the loam ...
The possible site of an icehouse, a structure built partially below ground where ice was stored during the warmer months. It was probably associated with Ragley Hall and was in use during the Imperial period. The site lies in Icehouse Grove, 400m west of Ragley Hall.
1 Two icehouses at Walton Hall (see also PRN 4903). The second icehouse is situated on the side of the lake. There is a well-defined and regularly-shaped mound covered with ...
The site of an icehouse dating to either the Post Medieval or the Imperial period. It is visible as a mound. It is situated 500m south of Walton.
1 Ice house marked.
2 This is one of two icehouses at Walton Hall (see PRN 4902). The icehouse has now disappeared. There is no depression or mound to show its ...
The site of an icehouse dating to the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The bricks from the domed roof were apparantly removed during the 20th century. It was located 700m south of Walton.
1 Ice house marked on map.
The site of an icehouse, built partly under ground and used for storing ice. It was built during the Imperial period and is situated 125m south of Harper's Lane, Mancetter.
1 1873 country house with joining stables and a coach house. Grade II Listed. Was a hospital, now re-named Coleshill Manor.
2 ‘It is rather gaunt and can never ...
1873 country house with joining stables and a coach house. Grade II Listed. Was a hospital, now re-named Coleshill Manor.
1 Ice house occupies site of a former watermill (see WA 2280).
2 Letter mentioning this article.
A Post Medieval icehouse, a structure built partially underground where ice was stored during the warmer months. The icehouse was situated in Mill Pond Spinney, 400m north of Compton Wynyates.
1 Created in 1828 when Sir George Philip’s new house (PRN 5286) was nearing completion.
2 A cylindrical structure, in brick, with a domed top.
3 Photographs in FI file.
4 Beamon ...
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground and used for storing ice during the warmer months. It was built during the Imperial period. It is located 1km south west of Cherington.
1 18th century square pigeoncote of brick with lantern and cupola, attached to country house.
2 Foster dovecote No 35.
Weston Hall Dovecote, an eighteenth century brick building that was used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. It is at Weston Hall Farm, Weston under Wetherley.
1 Ice house, Charlecote Hall, Charlecote.
Beamon and Roaf report the ice house is sited in the garden of the provate house, opposite the main gate of the 16thC mansion. Brick-lined, ...
Ice house situated opposite the main gate of the 16th C mansion.
1 Ice house, Ettington Park, Ettington.
Beamon and Roaf report a brick construction set in a steep bank and covered in earth, situated behind the private hotel at the rear of ...
Brick construction situated behind the private hotel at the rear of the stables.
1 Ice house, Honington Hall, Honington.
Beamon and Roaf report an ice house, constructed c. 1830, situated 150 yds (135 m) NE of the house in a heavily wooded area. Access ...
Ice house 150 yds (135 m) NE of Honington Hall. S-facing entrance. Access to the brick ice house through former ancillary buildings. Later converted to a pumping stating by insertion of a water wheel.
1 Ice house at Packington Hall.
Beamon and Roaf report this structure as being built in the park during the 17th – 18th centuries.
Park laid out by ‘Capability’ Brown.
17th to 18th century ice house built in the park at Packington Hall.
1 Ice house, The Quarry House, Nuneaton Road, Over Whitacre.
Beamon and Roaf report a chamber lined with sandstone rubble of irregular plan; exhibiting four ribs to a groin vaulted roof. ...
Ice house of irregular plan with vaulted roof close to the turnpike road with foundations of which it shares one side wall.