1 Chapel marked.
2 The original Baptist Chapel no longer exists. The present one is a modern building of concrete with a brick facade.
The site of a chapel that was built during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The chapel was located on Coventry Road, between Dunchurch and Thurlaston.
1 The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the first edition OS 6″ map of 1886, 28SW.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting of the parish.
3 Domesday lists Dunchurch ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Dunchurch based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the OS map of 1886, 28SW.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting of the parish.
3 Domesday lists Thurlaston in Marton Hundred. ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and on aerial photographs.
1 A silver dagger chape with a scalloped upper edge and engraving on both faces of the chape was discovered within the ploughsoil. The site is on a north ...
1 Find of a sixpence of William III at Laurel Farm in, or before, 1991. The method of recovery was unrecorded.
Find of two post medieval coins in the area of Laurel Farm, Dunchurch.
1 Find of a forged shilling of George III in, or before, 1991, at Laurel Farm. The method of recovery was not recorded.
Find of a forged coin of the Imperial period in the Laurel Farm area of Dunchurch.
1 Stage1 works. Carried out during the construction of a small housing development. Three areas stripped and features rapidly sampled and recorded. A series of undated ditches were aligned at ...
A series of undated ditches, aligned at right angles to medieval street pattern were revealed during archaeological recording at Springfields, Daventry Road, Dunchurch.
1 AP.
2 Undated rectangular enclosure shows on air photographs.
3 Type could be either later Prehistoric or Romano British in date. However, area context indicates Iron Age more likely date.
An enclosure of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 300m south west of Cawston Spinney.
1 AP.
2 Undated linear features show on aerial photographs.
3 Contains elements which might be of later Prehistoric or RB date. Area context indicates that an Iron Age date is most ...
Linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 300m north of Northampton Lane.
2 Undated linear crop marks show on aerial photographs.
Linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 700m north of London Road.
1 AP
2 Undated circular enclosure (?ring ditch) shows on aerial photographs.
3 Possible enclosure lies in the centre of a Neolithic flint scatter (WA 7306) and may be associated with it. ...
A circular enclosure of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 500m west of Cawston Spinney.
1 A late Neolithic end scraper found on the surface of ploughed field at this location.
2 Sketch in FI file.
Findspot - a Neolithic flint artefact, a scraper, was found 100m north of Northampton Lane.
1 A middle bronze age copper alloy palstave found in pipe trench.
2 Drawing in FI file.
3 Dating given as Middle Bronze Age.
Findspot - a Bronze Age axehead, a palstave, was found on the north side of Northampton Lane, near Dunchurch.
1 In the grounds of Cawston Hall are some remains of a moat which probably encompassed Cawston Grange.
2 The moat was not found.
The site of a possible moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It would have been of Medieval date. The site is located 200m northeast of the Fox Covert at Cawston.
2 A number of small rectangular and subrectangular enclosures show on aerial photographs.
A group of enclosures of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 800m south west of Boat House Spinney.
2 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
The remains of ridge and furrow cultivation of Medieval and later date in the parishes of Dunchurch and Thurlaston. In some areas the ridge and furrow is visible as an earthwork. Elsewhere, the remains are can be seen on aerial photographs.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, N chancel aisle, W tower and vestry. Almost entirely rebuilt late in the 14th century and the tower added probably early in the ...
The Church of St Peter which was originally built during the Medieval period. The church was largely restored during the Imperial period. It is situated in Vicarage Lane, Dunchurch.
1 In front of the Dun Cow Hotel the stocks are still in existence, last used in 1866.
2 The stocks are completely restored.
3 Date indeterminate, but possibly 18th century. Timber. ...
Dunchurch village stocks, a wooden structure in which the feet and/or hands of criminals would have been locked as a punishment. The stocks were used during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. They were situated in Market Place, Dunchurch.
1 Thomas Newcomb the younger, gave by his last Will, dated March 2nd 1690, 600 pounds for the building of an almshouse, and the maintenance of six poor men or ...
A row of almshouses, houses that were built for poor people to live during the Post Medieval period. They are situated on Rugby Road, Dunchurch.
1 The present Inn is built on the site of an earlier 17th century coaching inn. The building is 18th century with 19th century alterations. It is two ...
The Dun Cow, an inn that was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated on Rugby Road, Dunchurch.
1 2 houses, formerly the Lion Inn. 16th century, and 20th century alterations and additions. Timber framed with plaster infilling, an old tile roof and large chimney with four diagonal ...
Guy Fawkes House, formerly an inn dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The Warwickshire conspirators are said to have waited here to hear the results of the Gunpowder Plot in 1605. The house is situated on Daventry Road, Dunchurch.
1 An OS map of 1886 shows a dovecote beside the remains of a moat.
2 A modern dwelling now covers the site. No other references could be found on ...
The site of a Post Medieval dovecote, a building used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and was situated south east of the church at Dunchurch.
1 In the gardens of Springfields, S of the churchyard wall, are the remains of a moat.
2 Note that the 1972 guide to the same church and in the same ...
The site of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. It was marked on a map of 1717, and remains partially visible as an earthwork. It is situated 100m southeast of the Church of St Peter, Dunchurch.
1 In 1266 there were at Cawston two common ovens baking for Pipewell Abbey tenants in Dunchurch, Rugby, Lawford and Newbold…, one oven baking 16 quarters weekly and the other ...
Medieval bread ovens used to bake bread for the monks of Pipewell Abbey. The exact location of the ovens is not known but they may have been situated at Cawston Grange.