1 This may have been one of the three mills at Offchurch mentioned in 1279. It is recorded in 1530 and 1561. The mill was still working in 1793. The ...
The remains of a watermill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. Only the Mill House still survives, 300m east of Butt Bridge.
1 A stone dovecote was part of the complex of Offchurch Bury in 1542.
2 It was presumably replaced by the brick dovecote (WA 2219), which still stands, in the 18th ...
The site of a Medieval dovecote, a building used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. An eighteenth century brick replacement now stands on the site south west of the pond at Offchurch Bury.
1 One of two probable mill sites in Offchurch. Three mills are recorded in 1279. In 1585 two mills are mentioned but one of them had disappeared by 1702. Traces ...
Offchurch Bury Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period, and which was probably still in use in the Post Medieval period. A grooved sluice and traces of watercourses survive. The location is to the south of Floodgate Spinney.
1 Chancel with N vestry, nave with S porch, and W tower. Early 12th century nave; owing to the failure of the foundations the chancel arch collapsed and had to ...
The Church of St Gregory, originally Medieval, with alterations through to the Imperial period. The church is situated 275m south east of The Grove, Offchurch.
1 There are two probable watermill sites in Offchurch. These may be two of three mills mentioned in 1297. One of them, known as Offchurch Mill, was held by Edward ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a watermill in use from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. The location is 400m north of the church at Offchurch.