1 Excavation in advance of destruction by the M40. The main part of the excavation covers a row of buildings along the N side of a street, running E-W ...
The site of a Medieval deserted settlement at Dassett Southend. The settlement was excavated and the first buildings on the site date from the 13th century. The site was located 100m north west of the chapel at Little 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 is ...
The site of an area of Medieval deserted settlement at Dassett Southend. Fragments of building material, such as roof tiles, have been found at the site, which lies between Little Dassett and Temple Herdewyke.
1 ‘There hath anciently been a chapel here, dedicated to S.Leonard, but now it is ruinous’.
2 The site of the chapel and deserted village was probably between Owlington and Marlborough ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of the Medieval Chapel of St Leonard, associated with the deserted settlement at Hardwick. It is located 1km south west of Temple Herdewyke.
1 At Little Dassett is an ancient stone chapel, long since disused, now a store-shed with a thatched roof. The E part, about 8.9 by 6.6m outside, has ...
The remains of a Medieval Chapel. The west end of the building was removed during the Second World War. It is situated at Little Dassett.
1 Stands on a hillside which rises considerably from W to E. Chancel, nave, N and S transepts and aisles, N porch and W tower. This is one ...
The parish church of All Saints, Dassett. This is one of the finest churches in South Warwickshire. It was built in the Medieval period, with alterations in the 13th Century, with the west tower added in the 14th. The church is situated on the slopes of Church Hill.
1 NW of the beacon stood until 1946 a wooden post windmill complete with sails, perhaps the successor of the ruined windmill called ‘le Stonmilne’ which Sir John, Lord Sudeley, ...
There is documentary evidence for a windmill here from the Post Medieval period and possibly earlier. It was of the post mill type and was restored in the 1930s but blew down in the 1946. It was at Windmill Hill.
1 On top of the Burton Hills is a round tower called the Beacon, built of uncoursed square rough ashlar. It was apparently a late Medieval lookout tower which was ...
A Medieval tower known as The Beacon. It has been suggested that it was originally used as a windmill and was later converted to a look-out tower. It stands on Windmill Hill, Burton Dassett.