1 In 1086 a mill is recorded. References also occur to this mill in the 17th, 19th and 20th centuries. The mill operated until the early 1950s and restoration of ...
Charlecote Mill, a watermill recorded in the Domesday Survey and in written sources from the Post Medieval to the Modern periods. The present building dates to the 18th century, with two undershot water wheels, and two sets of milling machinery. It was restored in 1978.
1 ‘Old Town’.
2 ‘Deserted Village?’ said to have been explored by one of the Lucys. Medieval pottery found November 1958 by Alan Dyer. NB Lucys had a key and ?skeletons ...
The site of the Medieval deserted settlement at Charlecote. Remains of the settlement are visible as earthworks which include three house platforms and a hollow way. It is located 150m south east of Charlecote Park House.
3 Two side ditches of a possible cursus monument show on air photos. The side ditches are very straight, although it is not certain that this is a cursus monument.
4 ...
Two linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They may be the side ditches of a possible cursus, which dates to the Neolithic period, though this has not been proven. The site is located 550m east of the church, Charlecote.
1 Mill pond, incorporated into WA1114 (mill).
The dam, sluice, race and pond associated with Charlecote watermill. They date to the Post Medieval period, and are situated to the west of the restored mill, 300m north east of the church at Hampton Lucy.
1 The disovery of a well was repoted by Sally Mann st WHRI on 1/3/2010.
The well is marked on the OS 2nd edition but not on the OS 1st edition.
The ...
A well that was found immediately to the west of the farm (Cottage Farm) at WHRI, Wellesbourne. The well appears to be of 19th century date and associated with the 19th century farm.
The response to this photograph might be amusement, if not outright laughter. Certainly the explanation for the naming of this stile is demonstrated clearly in this photograph. Unlike a more ...
The mill as you see it was probably built in the 18th century, but on the site of earlier mills. A mill at Hampton Lucy is even mentioned in the ...
1 Excavation in 1972 to the W of Thelsford Priory produced a sequence of five ditches. One was probably Prehistoric (PRN 5172), but the others were probably contemporary with the ...
A field system dating to the Medieval period was identified from aerial photographs. On excavating the site, archaeologists discovered several ditches. The site is located 800m south east of the church, Wasperton.
2 A group of linear cropmark features has been identified on one air photograph. These may represent the remains of a Prehistoric field system or settlement enclosures.
Linear features and rectangular enclosures of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 500m east of the church, Hampton Lucy.