1 Finds of quantities of flint, perhaps indicating a working or occupation site. The finds were approximately 600 yds NE of Springpools. Shotton illustrates and lists the following artefact types ...
Prehistoric flint scatter including a barbed and tanged arrowhead, cores and scrapers, which may indicate a settlement or working site, were found 300m south of Warren Farm.
1 Dispersed coin hoard reported to have been found by a metal detectorist, (unnamed; probably without permission from the landowner), at SP247840.
Dispersed Romano British coin hoard reported to have been found 300m northeast of Keatley's Pool.
1 An unusual two-storied sandstone structure that spans the deep and narrow valley of a tiny brook. May be associted with PRN9556 of similar building materials.
2 Photograph
A sandstone bridge lies under undergrowth 50m north of Close Wood.
1 The well interior is cicular and made of brick whilst the lane frontage is of stone whose alignment does not match the interior. May be associated with PRN9555 – ...
Site of and undated well. The well lies 50m north of Close Wood
1 Find of a personal lead seal matrix in, or before, 1987. The grid reference given was SP21608305, but the method of recovery was not recorded.
Find of a seal matrix from the medieval period in the area of Stonebridge Island, Great Packington
1 Microlith, part of a larger collection of prehistoric flint.
2 Drawing.
Findspot - a Mesolithic flint artefact found 300m south of Warren Farm.
2 Mesolithic finds at the above grid reference. 63 cores, 433 unretouched flakes and blades, 31 scrapers, 3 gravers, 5 microliths, 41 other flints.
Findspot - a scatter of flint artefacts dating from the Mesolithic period were found 250m north east of Butlers End.
1 Medieval finds from the 14th and 15th century comprising a decorated spindle whorl and a seal matrix reported by metal detectorists. A post medieval button was also recovered.
2 ...
Findspot - various finds, including a medieval spindle whorl and a Post Medieval button were found in Packington Park, 500m south of Packington Hall.
1 A token from the 17th century reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - a Post Medieval token was found 100m south of Old Hall Farm.
1 15th century and 16th century pottery including Derbyshire Ware.
Findspot - sherds of Medieval and Post-Medieval pottery were found 300m south of Daniels Wood.
1 RB sherds 3rd and early 4th century and some possible 2nd and a little Samian.
Findspot - sherds of Roman pottery were found 300m south of Daniels Wood.
1 Site of butts marked on OS map of 1886.
The site of butts, structures on which an archery or artillary target was mounted. The site dates from the Imperial period and is situated 300m south of Daniels Wood.
1 A stone spindlewhorl found in 1951.
Findspot - a stone spindlewhorl, a weight used in the process of hand spinning, was found 400m north of Packington Hall. It dated to the Roman period.
1 Packington Old Hall is a C17 building probably incorporating a much older house. Whether the house was moated or not is uncertain, but there is a long ...
A moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, surviving as an earthwork. It is medieval in date and is situated 500m north of St. James' Church, Great Packington.
1 Built in 1789. Architect Joseph Bonomi. Rectangular with a tower at each angle. Red brick and stone dressing. Each face is identical, having an ...
The Church of St. James, which as built during the Imperial period in red brick with stone dressing. It is situated 800m north east of Packington Hall.
1 1679: A rectangular brick house of two storeys, and attics, probably embodying an earlier timber framed structure. It comprises two parallel gabled ranges with a porch wing on ...
Packington Old Hall, a manor house built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated 500m north of St. James' Church.
1 Behind the house is an oblong brick dovecote, with well over 1000 nesting places.
2 It has gables and a tiled roof with a lantern. The nesting boxes are ...
A dovecote used for housing doves and pigeons. It was built in the Post Medieval period and was situated 500m north of St. James' Church. 17th century.
1 To the SW of Packington Old Hall is a C18 venison-house with blocked round-headed openings and a tiled pyramidal roof.
2 This is now used as a garage.
3 Photographed in ...
A building that was used as a game-house or game larder and which was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated 500m north of St. James' Church.
1 Seat of the Earl of Aylesford. Dated by inscriptions on the lead roof – built 1693, enlarged 1772. The original house was of brick, but, except for ...
Packington Hall, a house built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated 800m north east of Mill Farm.
1 Four sherds of one rim of ‘Legionary Ware’.
2 Excavation investigated spreads of Roman pottery which had been discovered in arable land threatened by motorway construction. Extensive trial trenching ...
Findspot - several sherds of Roman pottery were found 250m south of Quarry Wood.
1 Stable block, now office. 1762-66. Buff sandstone ashlar to the front range and stucco to the rear. Low pitch slate roof with pyramidal roofs to the corner towers. Moulded ...
Stables associated with Packington Hall. They were built during the Post Medieval period and are situated 900m north east of Mill Farm.
1 Imparked by Sir Clement Fisher in the reign of James I ‘out of the outwood and some other grounds here’ (Dugdale). It is at present a park of ...
The site of a deer park where deer were kept for hunting. It dated to the Post Medieval period and was situated north east of Packington Hall.
1 This field has yielded worked flint. An excavation was undertaken in advance of the construction of the M6. Fragments of worked flint were found, but not in sufficient numbers ...
Findspot - flint flakes of Prehistoric date were found 300m west of Daniels Wood.
1 Discovered during field investigation, the remains of a homestead moat. The site is overgrown and there is no definite evidence of a building. The enclosed area ...
A moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, survives as an earthwork. It is of Medieval date and is situated 300m north east of Diddington Farm.