1 Turnpike road from Birmingham to Warwick and Banbury, established between 1725 and 1750. Under the control of the same trust which ran the Birmingham to Edgehill route. The stretch ...
A toll road, where travellers had to pay a toll to use the route. The road was built during the Post Medieval period. It runs from Warmington to Birmingham via Warwick.
1 Gabled front with arched gallery windows and tablet dated 1831. Sunday School adjacent built 1900.
2 Listed Building description.
A Wesleyan Chapel built in the Imperial period. It is located to the east of Bottom Street, Northend.
1 Methodist Chapel, dated 1831. Red brick with stone plinth. Sunday School room added after 1900.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located to the east of Bottom Street, Northend.
1 Opened in 1873 and disused from 1918, although not formally closed.
Site of a railway halt on the East and West Junction Railway Line at Burton Dassett.
1 Fieldwalking to the S of the road revealed a number of dense scatters of rubble, tile and pottery across the W field known as Dovehouse Close. It ...
The site of an area of Post Medieval deserted settlement. Scatters of tile and pottery were found at the site during a fieldwalking survey. The site lies between Temple Herdewyke and Little Dassett.
1 The earliest village at Burton Dassett belongs to the Anglo Saxon period. A cemetery of this date was found during quarrying on the Burton Hills in 1908, probably ...
The remains of a Post Medieval window inserted into the Medieval Chapel at Dassett Southend for the purpose of Roman Catholic Mass in the Post Medieval period.
1 The earliest village of Burton Dassett belongs to the Anglo Saxon period. A cemetery of this date was found during quarrying on the Burton Hills in 1908, probably ...
A priest's house of Post Medieval date which was attached to a chapel at Southend.
1 The chapel at Dassett Northend is in regular use. It was converted from a Victorian Chapel of Ease into a chapel to supplement the church at Burton. ...
Northend Chapel, built in the Imperial period, originally as a chapel of ease. It is situated 100m south east of the church at Northend.
1 Low three-bay gabled front dated 1837; porch added 1914.
A Wesleyan Chapel built in the Imperial period. It is located in Knightcote.