2 There was a fulling mill here in 1232. The mill is marked on 18th century maps, and appears on the OS 1″ map of the 1830s. It is not ...
The site of Great Wolford Mill, a Medieval watermill used as a fulling mill. It was situated 350m west of Great Wolford and exists as an earthwork. It appears on the Ordnance Survey map of 1830.
1 Aerial photograph.
2 Earthworks of enclosures and probable sunken ways show on air photographs. These appear to indicate the site of a shrunken Medieval village. Place names Nethercote, Nethercote Bridge ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs and is located 750m east of Great Wolford.
1 Possible enclosures and linear features identified on air photographs.
2Linear features and enclosures visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The earliest ...
Linear features and enclosures that are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The features are undated but are situated west of Little Wolford.
1 Terraces and village earthworks.
2 Hollow ways and house platforms clearly visible.
3 Air photograph
4Terraces, hollow ways and house platforms visible as earthworks on aerial photographs were mapped as part ...
The site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork and on aerial photographs The site is located to the east and south east of Great Wolford.
1 The village, well-placed on a triangle of land above the junction of two little streams, was formerly defended by entrenchments running all round it; these probably enclosed an area ...
A linear feature is visible as an earthwork at Great Wolford. It probably dates to the Medieval period.
1 House of early 16th century origin, restored after 1840 and in 1930s. Gardens and pleasure grounds probably date from 1930s, though they contain a 19th century wellhead. Recommended for ...
A garden at Little Wolford Manor, dating to the 20th century. It is located 700m south west of Clay Bank Coppice.