1 Mainly C14-C15. Chancel, nave, N and S aisles and porches, and W tower with spire. Rich in detail but severely restored 1868. Important monuments and C12 font.
2 There was ...
The Medieval parish church of St. Peter and St. Paul which is located 100m east of High Street, Coleshill.
1 Pipe yard by canal. One chimney dated 1813. In 1927 there were three kilns. Demolished pre-1965. Site now being landscaped.
2 ‘The site is now a black gaping hole in ...
The site of terracotta, brick and sanitary pipe factory situated on the southern side of Tamworth Road, Polesworth.
1 The Listed Building entry (1990) for Oldfield Farmhouse reads: Mid 17th century, with 18th century brick front. Red brick; old plain-tile cross-gabled roof; brick ridge stack to centre with ...
Mid 17th century farmhouse, and associated barns at Oldfield Farm, Rowington.
1 A 19th century drain and layers containing 19th and 20th century pottery were recorded during the excavation of three test pits. A sandstone layer appeared to be beneath the ...
A 19th century drain and layers containing 19th and 20th century pottery were recorded during the excavation of 3 test pits. A sandstone layer beneath the 19th century footings of the existing building may have represented the remains of an earlier building. The site was located at 4 Meeting Lane, Alcester.
1 Outbuilding, one wheelwright’s shop. C18th. Cob on a base of squared, coursed limestone. Thatch roof. 5 bays. To left and centre double plank doors rising ...
A wheelwright's outbuilding dating from the post medieval period. The original structure survives of limestone base beneath cob walls and thatched roof. It is soom west of the church in Tredington.
1 By Denys Hinton & Associates, 1961-2. ‘A very remarkable building’. Brief description given.
The Church of St George, built in 1961-1962. The church is situated immediately east of Paddox 1st School.
1 Site of mineral railway marked on OS map of 1913.
The site of a mineral railway which was constructed during the Imperial period. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1913.
1 Stone foundations for a covered walkway were recorded in the garden to the east of the main house. The walkway was designed by C S Smith in 1818 ...
The remains of stone foundations for a covered walkway linking the stables and riding school to the main house. Designed by C S Smith in 1818. Demolished mid 20th century.
2 A mill is known to have existed at Alveston since 966 and in the Domesday survey there were three mills. In 1240 there were two mills and a mill ...
Alveston Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the early Medieval period. Derelict by 1886, it was demolished in the 1940s. Only a weir survives. The mill was 400m north east of the church.
1 A mound at SP33077235 is likely to be the Hundred mound of Motslow.
2On modern OS maps this is shown as a quarry.
The site of a mound which is visible as an earthwork. The mound may have been the Post Medieval meeting place of the hundred of Motslow. It is situated 400m south of Stoneleigh.
1 Built by the architect Mr G H Hunt for Mr Daniel Rowlinson Ratcliff in 1876. It was demolished in c 1935 and a smaller house built on the same ...
Built by the architect Mr G H Hunt for Mr Daniel Rowlinson Ratcliff in 1876. It was demolished in c 1935 and a smaller house built on the same site.
1 Site of the medieval and post medieval settlement of Freasley, Polesworth. Settlement has 17th and 16th century houses. The village extrends to the S in a more disorganised way. ...
Buildings of 17th and 16th century with an extension South onto the Green.
1 The farmhouse itself appeared to have 17th century origins, as evidenced in its timber framework, but a variety of date ranges up to the end of the 19th century ...
A 17th century farmhouse with associated outbuildings dating mainly from the mid-19th century to mid-20th century.
1 A watching brief carried out when the weir was demolished in February 2012 revealed remains of a 20th century weir and dam. Concrete wingwalls were uncovered which appear ...
Early 20th century mill weir with remains of 19th century or earlier wooden sluice. Associated with the water management features for Baginton Mill.
1 The sandstone ashlar bridge was constructed between 1791 and 1839. It was widened sometime between 1840 and 1887. The bridge parapets had been repeatedly repaired in the 20th century. ...
Sandstone ashlar bridge. The earliest part of the bridge dated to the late 18th/Early 19th century. Now demolished due to it being a cause of flooding. It was formerly Grade II Listed.
1 Site of Griff mineral railway marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of Griff Mineral Railway at Heath End, which was built during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 Site of mineral railway marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of a mineral railway which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated at Heath End, and was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 Built in 1834 by Beazley. Symmetrical, with a large keep at the centre, in a mixture of architectural styles.
2 1903 purchased for use as an agricultural college. ...
The site of a country house, known as Studley Castle, dating to the Imperial period. It is situated 400m north of Studley Thorns.
1 Site of mineral railway marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of a mineral railway dating to the Imperial period. It was situated 500m west of Camp Hill, and was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 Originally owned by a firm called ?Alloy Bricks. The kilns were originally coal-fired, the coal coming by canal; c1963 they installed oil-fired German machinery including a linear kiln and ...
The site of Napton Brickworks which are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. They date from the Imperial period through to Modern times, closing down in the 1970s. They were located between the Oxford Canal and the Napton Windmill.
1 Racecourse shown.
2 The racecourse is first shown on the OS map of 1924 and thus post dates 1903 when the OS 25″ was published.
3 OS 25″ 1903 map.
The site of a race course at Moxhull Park, which was used from the Imperial period onwards, is located c 600m to the south west of Middleton Farm.
1, 2 The western part of the building known as Old Chapel Cottage was a 19th-century chapel provided by the Quakers for use by any denomination. It was used on ...
The western part of the building known as Old Chapel Cottage was a 19th-century chapel provided by the Quakers for use by any denomination. It was used on alternate Sundays by Methodists and Anglicans until the mid-late 20th century.
12 Cruck framed house forming three bays and an open hall. Dendrochronoligical analysis identified a date of 1475 for some of the timbers although several cruck blades (not dated) were ...
House at Binton 150m north west of St Peter's Church. Listed building with cruck framed timbers dated by dendrochronology to 1475, elements from the 16th century, alterations in the 19th century, restored in 1984.
12 To the north of Ansley Hall, on the opposite side of the B4114, is the site of a walled kitchen garden, now the site of a modern bungalow. The ...
Kitchen garden situated on opposite side of B4114 from Ansley House.