1 Brick/tile works marked.
2 The area contains a number of indiscriminate scoops which vary in shape, profile and size. Some, chiefly at the W end, have been filled in by ...
The site of brick/tile works from the Imperial period. They are marked on a nineteenth century tithe award map, but only faint undated scoops remain. The site was at Brickyard Spinney, Honiley.
1 Pound marked.
2 1977: Renovated by local youth service.
3 Walls intact and standing to original height although there are large cracks. The gate was off its hinges and resting against ...
A pound which was used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. It is situated at Haseley Green.
1 On the 1841 tithe map, a field centered on this NGR is called Sandpit Close: no further documentary references are available.
2 The site visit revealed no surface indication of ...
The possible site of a quarry which may date back to at least the Imperial period. The quarry is suggested by the place-name 'Sandpit Close', which appears on a map of 1841. The site is located 1km south west of Haseley Green.
1 ‘Icehouse’ marked in the garden of a house on Rose Hill.
2 The site is now covered by a housing estate.
The site of an icehouse, a building constructed partly under ground for storing ice during the warmer months. It was constructed during the Imperial period and was situated south of Church Walk, Atherstone.
1 On the tithe map a field centered on this NGR is called Gravel Pit Close: No further documentary references are avaialable.
2 A site visit revealed no surface indication ...
The possible site of a quarry which dates back to at least the Imperial period. The site is suggested the use of the place-name 'Gravel Pit Close' which appears on a map of 1841. The site is located 400m south west of Haseley Green.
1 On the 1841 tithe map, a field centered on this NGR is called Gravel Hill incl. Lay Brook: no further documentary references are available.
2 The site visit revealed no ...
The possible site of a quarry which dates back to at least the Imperial period. The quarry is suggested by the use of the place-name 'Gravel Hill' which is shown on a map of 1841. The site is located 400m west of Haseley Green.
1 On the 1841 tithe map a field centered on this NGR is called Marl Pit Close: no further documentary references are available.
2 The site visit revealed no surface indication ...
The possible site of a quarry which dates back to at least the Imperial period. The site is suggested by the use of the place-name 'Marl Pit Close' which is marked on a map of 1841. The site is located 600m west of Haseley Green.
1 On the 1841 tithe map, a field centered on this NGR is called Marl pit close: no further documentary references are available.
2 The site visit revealed no further indication ...
The possible site of a quarry which dates back to at least the Imperial period. The quarry is suggested by the place-name 'Marl Pit Close' which is marked on a map of 1841. The site is located 500m east of Haseley Green.
1 Marked on all but the most recent OS maps, as a scarped depression just north of the road in its own small, wooded enclosure. On frist edition of OS ...
The possible site of a clay pit dating to at least the Imperial period. The site is located 600m south east of Haseley. Field names suggest it might have been a marl pit.
1 Haseley (adjoining watermill). Built by 1814. Ceased by late C19. Post mill.
2 No obvious siting evidence. The ground is now marshy and unusable and the area seems rather unsuited ...
The possible site of Haseley Windmill which dated to the Imperial period. It was situated 600m east of Birmingham Road.
1 Clearly marked as gravel pits on the 1841 tithe map.
2 2 distinct gravel pits shown in 1905.
3 No further references have been found and the site visit revealed only ...
The site of a possible quarry dating to the Imperial period. Gravel pits are marked here on a tithe map of 1841. The site is located 1km west of Beasale.
1 Probable site of ‘The New Windmill’ shown on an early OS 1” map. Built by Choyce, a hatter of Atherstone.
The site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It was situated near South Street, Atherstone.
1 Kiln and Brick Works marked.
2 The area is wooded and the ground covered with indiscriminate scoops of varying shape, size and depth, which look as if they are the ...
The site of brickworks dating to the Imperial period. They are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, but only faint scoops in the ground remain visible. The site is to the north east of Hay Wood, Baddesley Clinton.
1 Two buildings marked, the smaller of which is labelled ‘kiln’. Just to the E is written ‘Brick Works’.
2 A field centred on SP2172 is called Great Brick field, a ...
The site of brickworks dating to the Imperial period. They are marked on a tithe map of 1841, and on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. Only faint earthworks remain. The site is south west of Brickyard Cottages, Baddesley Clinton.
1 A small square area labelled ‘pound’ by the side of the track.
2 No surviving trace on the ground.
The site of a pound dating back to the Imperial period, when it was used for penning livestock. The site lies on the south side of Rising Lane, Baddesley Clinton.
1 On the 1886 OS map, a wharf is indicated in this area and presumably occupied a corner of a larger field still separate, and now partially wooded over and ...
The site of a canal wharf, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods during the Imperial period. It was located at the north west side of Rising Bridge, Lapworth, and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 Marked as ‘Brickkiln Close’.
2 No further reference could be found and the site visit revealed no indications of the site on the ground.
The site of possible brickworks, which were indicated by a place name on a tithe award map of 1848. The site is 1km south east of Wakefield Wood, Beausale.
1 On the 1842 tithe map, this field is called Gravel Pit Close.
2 The site visit failed to recognize any surface evidence of the site except a shallow depression in ...
The possible site of a gravel pit dating to the Imperial period. The site is located at Beasale.
1 On the 1842 tithe map, a field centred on the above NGR was called Marl Pit Ground.
2 No other reference to this field could be found but the field ...
The site of a possible quarry dating to the Imperial period. It is known from a field name marked on the 1842 Tithe map and is possibly still visible as a deep pond. It is situated 700m south of Thorny Coppice.
1 ‘Brick Yard Close’ marked.
2 Building labelled Brick Works marked.
3 1983: No sign of the building, but signs of quarrying do exist. Most of the field has been quarried and ...
The site of brick/tile works from the Imperial period. They are marked on a tithe award map of 1842, and the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. Evidence of quarrying can be seen. The site is to the south east of Clattyland Wood, Beausale.
1 On the 1842 tithe map, a field centered on this NGR is called Clay Pit Close: no further reference can be found.
2 The site visit revealed no surface indication ...
A clay pit which dates back to at least the Imperial period. It is suggested by the use of the place-name 'Clay Pit Close' which is marked on a map of 1841. The site is located 1km north east of Hatton.
1 Earthwork called Old Sand Pit shown at this NGR on 1886 map.
2 The feature is included on the 1905 map (without its label) but not on the more recent ...
The site of a possible quarry, with a trackway, dating to the Imperial period. It is marked as a sand pit on the 1905 Ordnance Survey map. It is still visible as an earthwork and is situated near Fernhill Oldhouse Barn.
1 On the 1841 tithe map, a field centered around this NGR is labelled Marl Pit Close.
2 On the 1905 OS map an area of the approximate size shown on ...
The site of a quarry which was in use during the Imperial period. It is marked on a tithe map of 1841 as a marl pit and on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905 as a gravel pit. The quarry has now been built over but it was situated in the area of the Coventry Trading Estate.
1 Pound marked.
2 Pound marked.
3 The only remains of the pound now is a 1.2m high, 4.6m long stone to the E of the smithy. This could originally have been ...
The site of a pound which was used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. The pound is marked on the Ordnance Survey maps of 1886 and 1905. It was situated 200m south east of Oak Farm.