1 In 1545 Francis Goodere owned ‘Netherwalke myll’ at Baginton situated ‘below the place where the castle once stood’. A fulling mill is recorded in 1656. It continued as a ...
Baginton Fulling Mill, a watermill that was in use from the Post Medieval period onwards. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks. The mill was situated 1km south west of Baginton.
1 A sulphorous and saline spring was discovered around 1800 on a farm in the S of the parish and recommended for both drinking and bathing.
3 There were two bathing ...
The site of Willoughby Lodge Spa, baths which dated to the Imperial period. The baths were opened because it was believed that the water could help to cure complaints such as rheumatism. They were situated 1km south west of Willoughby.
1 A water tower is shown at the end of Northgate Street.
2 A waterhouse built by John Hopkins in 1693 to supply Warwick’s inhabitants with water. It was a ...
A waterworks, to supply the inhabitants of Warwick with water, was built in the Post Medieval period. It was situated at the end of Northgate Street, Warwick.
1 Well Close is marked.
2 The field had been subdivided and was known as Middle and Further Well Close.
3 The site is under crop and there is no trace of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a well dating from the Post Medieval period. No trace now survives. The location is 1.5km north west of Ashorne.
Imperial brick walls and a brick-lined well
1 Two brick walls and a brick-lined well were uncovered during a watching brief on ground works for a rear extension. The walls ...
Two brick walls and a well were uncovered during archaeological works in Chapel Lane, Rugby. The features are believed to be late 18th/early 19th century in date.
1 An undated stone well and an undated ditch were recorded during archaeological observation at ‘The Green’, Long Itchington. The stone well was recorded just to the south-east of ...
An undated stone-well and ditch recorded during archaeological observation at 'The Green', Long Itchington.
1 A watching brief during the reduction of ground level for a new Criminal Justice Centre and associated external facilities recorded four brick-built wells running in a line at ...
Post-medieval walls and wells recorded during the reduction of ground level across the site. These probably belonged to the terrace of houses shown on the First Edition OS map of 1887. The site is located at Wheat Street/Vicarage Street.
1 An archaeological watching brief during the excavation of foundation trenches for an extension to the west side of Manor Farm recorded a large (1.5m diam.) brick-built well still filled ...
A large brick-built well, probably associated with the existing 18th/19th century Manor Farm house. The site is located at Manor Farm, Draycote.
1 Water tower, Barby Road. The Illustrated London News in 1852 call it ‘in the Italian style’. Yellow brick, but the top bands of white and blue tiles and a ...
The possible site of a water tower which was in use during the Imperial period. The water tower is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. It was situated near Stoney Road, Rugby.
1 Shown in plan of 1959. Inside a pub which is in normal use. Various finds are in Warwick Museum, these included: 15 pottery and glass sherds; 14 ...
The site of a well which dated to the Imperial period. It was found at The Royal Hotel in Sheep Street, Rugby. Finds recovered from the well included fragments of glass, pottery and clay pipe.
1 In the grounds of Wolvey Hall, close to the road, is Jacob’s Well, with the ruins of a masonry well-head piled over it. Among the stones is a carved ...
The site of Jacob's Well, a well that dates to the Post Medieval period. It was situated north of Hall Road, Wolvey.
1 Opposite the entrance to the drive of the manor house is a small green and on it a well-house, said to date from 1874, but of a late 17th ...
Ornate monumental well of dating to the Imperial period. A carved urn stands on an inscribed plinth beneath a column, supported dome with a lead trough and lion-head spring to the front. It is situated on Barton-on-the-Heath village green.
A fountain.
1 In a wall on the roadside by the Manor House is a public drinking-fountain set in a recess partly made up of architectural fragments, including pieces of C15 ...
A public drinking fountain dating to the Imperial period, and made up of an assemblage of architectural fragments. It is set in a wall at Little Wolford.
A wellhouse.
1 On the E side of the road which forks right to Little Wolford from the A34 is a drinking fountain, stone-built with a tiled roof. This is no ...
The site of a drinking fountain dated to the Imperial period is located 400m south west of Clay Bank Coppice.
Site of a well house.
1 Wishing well with small building over – ?early C19 with two arched openings in Gothic manner and incorporating various carved Medieval stones.
2 There is just ...
The site of a wishing well dating to the Imperial period . It was located 200m west of Little Wolford.
1 A well was uncovered during a watching brief. Th upper part consisted of a course of roughly cut sandstone blocks, some of which had handmade bricks (probably early 19th ...
A well dating from the post medieval period uncovered during construction work in West Street, Warwick.
1 The well was rebuilt in it’s present location within living memory, due to the widening of the Lichfield Road. Cllr P Fowler Pers Comm
2 Ordnance Survey Maps show that ...
Beggar's Well was rebuilt in its current location in the second half of the 20th century due to road widening. It is not known if any of the original brickwork survives.
1 1972: Excavation in advance of development. Five trial holes dug by the developers revealed two wells. Well B was circular, brick-lined and Post Medieval. In addition a soak-away of ...
Two wells were discovered during an archaeological excavation. One of the wells dated to the Post Medieval period and was circular with brick lining. The site is located near Swan Street, Warwick.
1 Three trial holes, 1m square, were dug prior to construction of old peoples’ bungalows. Machine stripping indicated that a raised area was composed entirely of 19th century deposits. The ...
The site of Post Medieval houses. The remains of a well were found during archaeological work. The site was situated south of the High Street, Bidford on Avon.
1 A well was recorded during a watching brief for the construction of houses at 43-47 Warwick Road, Kenilworth; it was constructed of handmade bricks and of post-medieval date. It ...
A well was recorded during a watching brief for the construction of houses at 43-47 Warwick Road, Kenilworth; it was of post-medieval date.
1 A watching brief was carried out when a weir at the eastern end of the channel was demolished in February 2012. In the course of the works the weir ...
A sluice channel probably built in the late 18th or early 19th century with a natural gravel bed.
1 The springs at Bishopton were first brought to the attention of the public by Dr Charles Perry in 1744. The spring is situated in a field called Shottery. The ...
The site of Bishopton Spa, comprising of baths and a well. The spa was in use during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods and is known from documentary evidence. It was situated 400m west of Mt Pleasant Farm.
1 The fourth Leamington spring was discovered by Richard Robbins, who erected six marble baths and a small pump rooms. Robbins’ Baths were later rebuilt as Victoria Baths, with a ...
The traces of Robbins Baths, later Victoria Baths, that survive in the colonnaded buildings facing the river. The baths dated from the Imperial period, and were situated on Victoria Terrace, Leamington Spa.
1 In the C19 some sort of industrial activity took place on this site. This entailed at least two large barrels being set in the ground to their full depth, ...
A possible industrial site dating from the Imperial period. The site comprised a well and two barrels that were set into the ground, which were found during an excavation. The site is located to the west of Bleachfield Street, Alcester.