1 Building standing on site, of red brick with a tile roof. The smithy is no longer working.
2 Photo of the smithy.
During the Imperial period a forge operated from a building which still stands though it is no longer in use. The building is built of red brick with a tile roof and stands on the High Street, Cubbington.
1 The quarry is shown on Leigh estate map of 1766. The people of Cubbington had the right to quarry stone there as early as 1768 which is known ...
The site of a quarry which was in use during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is marked on an estate map of 1766. It was used as a rubbish tip from 1949 onwards. It is located 600m south of Cotton Mill Spinney.
1 Brick kiln close marked.
2 No evidence visible in field.
The possible site of Post Medieval brick kiln. 'Brick Kiln Close' is marked on an eighteenth century map. The site is located 1km north west of North Cubbington Wood.
1 The original Wesleyan Chapel in Cubbington was situated in what was known as ‘Chapel Yard’. This building was used until 1843.
2 This was later converted into three cottages.
3 There ...
The site of a non conformist Wesleyan Chapel built in the Imperial period. The site, in the area of North Close, Cubbington, has now been redeveloped for modern housing.
1 A small building, square, of dressed stone with quoins and tiled roof, is located in the garden of the Manor House. No evidence is available for its purpose, but ...
The site of a small building which has been suggested is a gazebo which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated 100m south west of the church, Cubbington.
1 Chancel with N and S vestries, clearstoried nave with N and S aisles, S porch, and W tower. Earliest part is the S arcade of early 12th century date. ...
The church of St Mary which was built during the Medieval period. The chancel was repaired in 1780 with further work carried out during the 1800s. It is situated in Cubbington.
1 Brick Methodist chapel with dressed stone quoins. Built 1888.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located on Queen Street, Cubbington.
1 18th century, probably embodying some earlier fabric. Red brick with stone dressings, quoins. Stone-coped gable ends. Projecting chimney on the north.
A manor house which dates to the Imperial period and may incorporate an earlier, possibly Post Medieval, house. It is situated 100m west of the school, Cubbington.
1 The Dovecote no longer exists, but was square, of brick with stone quoins and had a cupola and lantern. A manuscript (CRO Z-149) says that the Dovecote was a ...
The site of a Post Medieval dovecote, a building used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. It was situated 300m south west of the church at Cubbington.
1 A windmill is mentioned in 1355 but not in later records until the 18th century.
2 The windmill stood at the top of the hill now known as Windmill Hill, ...
There is documentary evidence for a windmill at this site from Medieval to the Imperial period. It stood at the north west of Cubbington.
1 The village pound was a fenced enclosure divided into two compartments and situated on a grass verge on the lower side of the entrance to Hill Farm.
2 This is ...
Site of a pound used between the Post Medieval and Imperial periods for penning livestock. It was situated 200m north east of Hill Farm.
1 ‘Gallows Knob’. Here malefactors suffered the extreme penalty.
2 Gallows Knob, now known as Mount Pleasant, is at the entrance to Mill Lane on the right hand side. A bungalow ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of gallows, known as 'gallows knob', where criminals were hanged from a wooden structure. The period of use is unknown. The site is at the west end of Mill Lane, Cubbington.
1 Nursery, Sandy Lane/Leicester Lane, Cubbington, Warwick
Triangular site with conierous planting, large range of glass.
Lovie reports that site recently developed at time of his report (1996/7).
Part of site survives as ...
Triangular site, developed. Part of site survives.
1 An area of well surviving ridge and furrow earthworks were recorded during a site visit by Ed Wilson at Cubbington Primary School, including a headland and river channel earthwork. ...
An area of ridge and furrow cultivation which survives as extant earthworks around Cubbington Primary School.
1 The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the OS first edition 6″ map of 1887, 33NE.
2 Domesday has 3 entries for Cubbington in Stoneleigh Hundred. The Phillimore ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 The first vicarage was a 14th century house situated towards the SW corner of the churchyard. A description and plan are given. These are copied from reference 2.
2 A ...
The site of a vicarage which was built in the Medieval period. A plan of the house was drawn up in 1721. It is situated to the west of the church.
1 Site of the turnpike gate. Junction of the Kenilworth Road and the Rugby Road.
2 Photo shows site of the gate.
The site of a toll gate, where travellers paid a toll to use a toll road during the Imperial period. It stood on the junction of Kenilworth Road and Rugby Road.
1 Built in 1821 at a cost of £1,200. Red brick with low pitched slate roof with hipped ends and wide projecting eaves. Two storeys. Square on plan but with ...
A two storey vicarage which was built during the Imperial period of red brick. It is situated 150m north of the church, Cubbington.
1 Cubbington (Abbot of Stoneleigh as tenant). Built by 1355. Recorded 1430. Post Mill.
2 The exact grid reference is not known.
The site of a Medieval windmill. Documentary evidence suggests that it was already built by 1355. Its exact location is unknown.