1 Haseley Park may have been made by Sir Thomas de Cherlecote, who obtained a grant of free warren in 1267, or by his father Sir Thomas. Sir George Throckmorton ...
Haseley Park, a Medieval deer park, where deer were kept for hunting. The deer park was situated to the north east of Hatton Green.
1 Rowington Park was an area of woodland lying in the centre of the parish, to the SW of the Birmingham to Warwick Road and between Rowington Hall and High ...
In the Medieval period a deer park existed in the centre of the parish of Rowington and it possibly contained a rabbit warren. By 1606 documents record that the park had been broken up and turned to pasture.
1 Grove Park is first mentioned as a manor distinct from Budbrook in 1284. A public coach road formerly ran across the park in an east-north-easterly direction from Norton ...
Grove Park is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887. A manor was established here in the Medieval period. It is located west of Hampton on the Hill.
1 A park appears to have existed in this area from at least 1547, where it is mentioned in a Bailiffs account. A Priory Cartulary of 1411 mentions ‘Newland Manor’ ...
Medieval and post-medieval park associated with Newlands Hall.
1The Bishop of Worcester obtained a charter of free warren 1248/9. A park is referred to from 1299 onwards and sources indicate that it contained pasturage but ‘barely enough wood ...
Hampton Park, a Medieval park, originally part of the Bishop of Worcester's demesne, later incorporated into the Post Medieval Fulbrook Park.
1 Park field names occur on Tithe Award around Salford Lodge. Not shown as a park on 19th century maps. Fieldnames may by indicative of earlier park, perhaps belonging to ...
Salford Lodge Park, a park dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. It is known from documentary evidence. The site of the park is in the area of Salford Priors.
1 The Old Park of Tanworth (126 acres), is mentioned in 1630 among the holdings of the Archers. Its position is not certain. An earlier reference to it occurs in ...
The site of a park dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods and known from documentary evidence. It was possibly located north east of Tanworth.
1, 2 Moxhull Park is marked on the OS 6″ 1887 map.
3, 4 Lovie mentions park with lake, plantations, lodge, drive; pleasure grounds with terrace, some documentary evidence of lawns, ...
The site of Moxhull Park which originated during the Medieval period. It is situated to the east of Wishall Hall Farm. The park is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.