1 Icehouse Spinney marked.
2 An overgrown mound with building debris scattered about represents the position of the icehouse. It presumably belonged to Coton House.
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground and used for storing ice in the warmer months. It dates to the Post Medieval or Imperial periods. The icehouse is situated 300m south of Coton House.
1 Coton House was a fine late 18th century house ascribed to Samuel Wyatt. The main front has an ample bow with a corresponding circular room inside.
2 The house ...
Coton House, a country house that was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 600m south west of Coton Spinney.
1 ‘Congl. Ch.’
2 The Congregational Chapel marked on the 1936 OS 6″ map is now out of use as a church and survives as a brick outbuilding on a farm ...
A Congregational Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. The building is still standing but it is in use as an outbuilding. It is situated on Church Street, Churchover.
1 A pond marked.
2 The fishpond is thought to be of Post Medieval date.
A fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish, which dates to the Post Medieval period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and is visible as an earthwork. It is situated at Icehouse Spinney, Churchover.
1 Gibbet Hill was called ‘Loesby’s Gibbet’ in 1729 and is to be identfied with Pelgrimslowe of c1350.
2 Pilgrims Lowe was the site of the gibbet of Loseby, a murderer. ...
The site of a gibbet, a structure from which the bodies of criminals were hung after they had been executed. The gibbet was in use during the Post Medieval period. The site is suggested by documentary evidence and is situated at Gibbet Hill.
1 Finds recovered from a pit included a small square bottle of ‘Hauthaways Peerless Gloss’, which was an oil-based shoe polish manufactured in Boston, USA in the early 20th century. ...
Two early 20th century glass bottles. Hauthaways Peerless Gloss (Boston, USA) and Day's Purified Driffied Oils.
1 A fragment of decorated 17th-century slipware, probably from a posset pot, along with fragments of 18th/19th century blackware and a Nottingham brown salt-glazed stoneware lid were recorded during a ...
A fragment of decorated 17th-century slipware, probably from a posset pot, along with fragments of 18th/19th century blackware and a Nottingham brown salt-glazed stoneware lid were recorded during a watching brief in School Street, Churchover.
1 Photographs show the ridge purlin over crossed roof trusses.
Thatched barn with Ridge purlin over crossed roof trusses. Rough collars with bark still in place. L-shaped open sided barn shown on First Edition OS map.
1 2 Coton House garden, Coton House, Churchover, Rugby.
Lovie reports that this site is ill-documented, so while the grounds were extensively landscaped in the 18th century, there is no indication ...
Pleasure grounds round house, terrace, kitchen garden, parkland with boundary planting.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 Cattle-shelter. 18th century. Timber-framed with red brick rear wall in garden wall bond. Corrugated-iron roof with gabled ends, some thatch remains underneath. L-shaped on plan, 5 bays with 1-bay ...
A barn dating to the Imperial period. It is situated on Church Street, Churchover.
1 The course of a short length of canal, connected to the Oxford Canal, is depicted on a tithe map of 1839.
2 This appears to have largely destroyed by 1886, ...
The site of a disused canal arm, part of the original course of the Oxford Canal, and used for the transporting of goods. It was marked on the Cosford tithe map of 1839, and was situated between Cosford and the Swift Valley Industrial Estate.
1 Canal marked on 1886 map.
The site of a disused canal, a waterway used for transporting goods during the Imperial period. The canal ran between Cosford and Brownsover. It was marked on the Ordanace Suvey map of 1886.