1 Find of post medieval potsherds at Hunningham House Farm in 1997. Grid reference given as SP391672. Method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of post medieval potsherds in the area of Hunningham House Farm.
1 Gun flint 15 by 15 mm. 18th or 19th century, for muzzle loader. Found in September 1987.
Findspot - a gunflint dating to the Imperial period was found 400m south east of the church, Hunningham.
1 Pit Close is marked on a map of 1766.
2 A large pit was observed at this location in 1983.
The site of a quarry which was in use during the Imperial period and is visible as an earthwork. A map of 1766 marks the site as 'Pit Close'. It is located 700m south west of the church, Hunningham.
1 Two Pit Grounds are shown on a survey map of 1766.
2 Several pit sites are still visible as tree-filled indentations in an otherwise arable field.
The site of two quarries which were in use during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods and are visible as earthworks in a field. A map of 1766 marks them as pit grounds. The site is located 500m south of Parker's Hill Brake.
1 17th century timber framing in gables, otherwise rebuilt modern brick.
The Old Hall, a Post Medieval manor house. It retains timber framing of this date in the gables. It has been rebuilt in brick in a later period. It is situated 300m north east of the church, Hunningham.
1 Brick/tile works marked.
2 No evidence survives to indicate that this was the site of a brickworks.
3 Partial excavation suggested a brick kiln site. The top/plough soil was shown to ...
Brick and tile works were marked on an eighteenth century map. They were situated 300m south east of Hunningham Hill.
1 Signal box marked on 1904 map.
The site of a railway signal box, built in the Imperial period, and marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. It was situated 800m south of Hunningham Hill.
1 Bridge marked.
2 The bridge is apparently of two quite distinct styles – the N half is a brick single-arched, humped Victorian-looking structure; while the S half is a very ...
The partial remains of a footbridge from the Imperial period, that crossed the River Leam 200m south west of the church at Wappenbury. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The present bridge is part Victorian brick, part modern concrete.