1 Alcester-Bromsgrove Turnpike milestone. Cast iron plate set into boundary wall of Coughton Court grounds. Letters slightly set above surface and painted black on white ground. ...
A turnpike milestone, Alcester to Bromsgrove road, dating to the Imperial period. It is set into a boundary wall of the Coughton Court Estate in the centre of the village, on the east side of the A435.
120 Ryknild Street which runs north from the Fosse Way at Bourton on the Water may have been an advanced section of the frontier line supposedly represented by the Fosse ...
Roman Road.
1 2A turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775, part of the Alcester/ Evesham network.
The site of a toll road. During the Imperial period, travellers had to pay to use the road. It ran from Alcester to Lickey and Bromsgrove.
1 In Medieval period known as Icknield Street/ Ryknield Street. Earlier, a Gloucestershire reference records it as Buggildestret (the road of Burghild). Between Studley and Alcester the Medieval route along ...
The line of a road dating to the Medieval period. It follows the route of the Roman road, Icknield or Ryknild Street.
1 A destruction level with 18th century material probably comes from the east range, which was demolished in 1780. Limestone blocks from the north wall are thought to have ...
Excavations at Coughton Court uncovered layers dating from the Imperial period. The features were related to the destruction of the east range and infilling of the moat, a former bridge over the moat, a garden feature and a leat.
1 The railway was opened in 1868 and the station must date to around this time. The 1886 1st ed OS 1:10560 shows the station with signals to the ...
Coughton Railway Station which dates to the Imperial period. The station and signal boxes are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.