1 The Deer Park is shown on a map of 1597 (CRO Z139/3b). It is difficult to assess its exact area, but the southern boundary follows a line ...
Stoneleigh deer park, where deer were kept for hunting during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is marked on several maps, the earliest of which dates to 1597. The deer park is located to the south east of Stoneleigh.
1 Sir William Compton began the park in about 1513, when he had a licence to impark certain grounds enclosed at the time and also 2000 acres more land and ...
Compton Wynyates Park, parkland originating as a Post Medieval deer park was converted to a formal garden during the Imperial period. It was situated in the area to the east of Compton Wynyates.
Recommended for Register by Lovie.
1 At Honington, the seat of the Townsend family, was a small park or paddock as appears by Buck’s print of the house in 1731.
2 No evidence of a pale ...
The site of a formal garden and a deer park, associated with Honington Hall, both dating to the Post Medieval period. They are known from documentary evidence and are located to the north of Honington.
1 In 1165 and 1187 the Pipe Rolls contain references to the park which surrounded Kenilworth Castle. Further references occur in the 13th century. It was considerably enlarged in 1302. ...
Kenilworth Chase, the site of a deer park which was in use during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. It is known from documentary sources and is located west of Kenilworth Castle.
1 Visible on 1st Edition Ordnance Survey Map.
2 Parkland with remnants of formal avenues; formal gardens around the house; kitchen garden. Shown on Yates.
Post Medieval Landscape Park associated with Grendon Hall. It contains remnants of formal avenues, formal gardens around the house and kitchen garden.
Recommended for inclusion on lLocal List by Lovie
1 Noted.
2 ‘Skilts Park’ was made for deer by William Sheldon, the builder of the manor house early in Elizabeth’s reign. By 1730 it had been disparked and turned into ...
The site of a deer park dating to the Post Medieval period, surrounding the site of a grange of Studley Priory. It was situated east of Mappleborough Green.
1 An 18th century landscape park and lakes, c. 150ha, with 19th and 20th century gardens in vicinity of the Hall. Was originally a deer park (PRN 5739). Listed as ...
A landscape park surrounding Arbury Hall which dates from the Post Medieval period.
1 Imparked by Sir Clement Fisher in the reign of James I ‘out of the outwood and some other grounds here’ (Dugdale). It is at present a park of ...
The site of a deer park where deer were kept for hunting. It dated to the Post Medieval period and was situated north east of Packington Hall.
1 A deerpark is mentioned in Ettington in a lease of 1653, the park is also marked on a map of 1738. It was restocked with deer in 1762 and ...
Ettington Park, a deer park dating from the Post Medieval period to the Imperial period. The deer park appears on a number of historic maps. It was situated to the south west of Ettington.
1 Leamington Hastings Manor garden/park, Leamington Hastings, Rugby.
Paddocks/parkland, remnants of old avenue to S, pleasure grounds with walks, mixed planting, kitchen garden.
Lovie reports that avenue appears to have been lost. ...
Pleasure grounds, paddocks/parkland. Some development of site.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 Weston. 300 acres imparked by William Sheldon in 1546. Disparked mid 18th century.
2 The park must have included the fields called Green Park and The Park. The S limb ...
The site of a Post Medieval deer park, which is known from documentary evidence. It was situated near the hamlet of Weston.
This is duplicated by mwa 8626.
1 The walled ha-ha at Charlecote Park formed part of the garden redesign by Capability Brown in the 1760s. There was a second wall in the 19th century.
2 The ...
A walled ha-ha dating to the 18th century with a later partial rebuild. It was part of the Capability Brown redesign of the 1760s.
1 Alscot Park was apparently established NE of the Stour in 1401, when the lord of Alscot was granted free warren. The park was infringed in 1593 and was possibly ...
The site of Alscot Park. The deer park dates back to the Medieval period and was remodelled in the 18th-19th centuries to become a landscape park. It was situated 500m east of Preston on Stour.
1 Landscape gardens laid out by Lady Luxborough from 1736 onwards under the influence of Shenstone. Many features were removed in the late 18th century when the house was extended. ...
The site of Barrells Park, a landscape park. It was originally constructed during the Post Medieval period but alterations were made to it during the Imperial period. It apppears on the Ordnance Survey map for 1906 and is located south of Ullenhall.
1 A substantial house was built in the early 17th century on a moated Medieval site. This was demolished and replaced with a farmhouse in the 18th century, but ...
The site of formal gardens and an orchard dating to the Post Medieval period. The gardens are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and were situated 750m south of Broom.
1 Chesterton House is one of the most significant lost houses of Warwickshire. The mansion house, which was built for Sir Edward Peyto in 1657 on a site some distance ...
The site of a landscape park which was created during the Post Medieval period. The layout of the park is depicted on two maps from the 1700s and shows avenues and vistas. The manor house was demolished in 1802. The park is located 300m north of Chesterton church.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 Villa type pleasure grounds with walks, paddock park, lodge, drive/avenue, kitchen garden, orchard. Attached to mid 18th century house on earlier site. House and grounds remodelled in 19th century ...
The site of Idlicote Park, a landscape park dating to the Post Medieval period. It is marked on various maps including the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is located to the south west of Idlicote.
1 17th century house, restored in early 20th century; arts and crafts garden made in same period.
2 Believed to have had elaborate formal gardens in the early 17th century, when ...
Formal gardens dating from the Post Medieval period and restored in the 20th century. The gardens are associated with Little Compton Manor. They are located to the north, west and south of the church at Little Compton, and features include walled gardens.
1 A view by John Wootton shows the 17th century house, built by Thomas Coventry, with walled formal gardens. Sold 1816, becoming part of Welcombe estate. Shrubbery planting, walks and ...
A park land and formal garden attached to the Post Medieval Park House. The grounds were later included in Welcombe estate.
1 Monastic site, with 17th century and later building. There was a formal garden to the east of the house, though this has now been removed. House restored as hotel ...
The site of a formal garden dating originally from the Post Medieval period. A modern garden has recently been created on this site. Features include the remains of a moat, an orchard and a drive. It is situated in Abbots Salford.
1 Parkland surrounding Upton House containing features from the 17th to the 20th century, including: pleasure grounds with avenue drive, lawns, terraces, ponds, woodland, kitchen garden, Temple Pool and chain ...
A series of a landscapes park and gardens laid out from the Post Medieval period onwards around Upton House.
1 Early 18th century house shown with formal gardens in 1728 plan. Mid 18th century work included Bath House, possibly by Sanderson Miller. Late 18th century work included planting and ...
A park at Walton dating from the Post Medieval period. In the 19th century features of the park included woodland with a bath house, a lake, drives, pleasure grounds with terraces, formal gardens, a ha-ha and a kitchen garden. It is marked on Greenwoods map of 1822.
1 19th century house demolished 1934; terraced gardens survive. 16th century house with elaborate 17th century formal gardens had preceded it. Fine parkland landscape remains. Features included lake, terrace, avenue, ...
Weston Park, a formal garden and deer park dating from Post Medieval period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is located to the west of Cherington.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 Formal gardens attached to 16th/ 17th century house belonging to Spencers of Althorpe. Remnants of house survive, but little evidence of gardens. Recommended for inclusion on Local List.
2 Site ...
A formal garden which dates to the Post Medieval period and surrounded a 16th or 17th century manor house. The garden is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, though little evidence of it survives. It is situated in Wormleighton.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.