1 An enclosure and a number of linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The features are all of unknown date. They are located to ...
An enclosure and a number of linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The features are all of unknown date. They are located to the west of Hampton Lucy.
1 Late 16th or early 17th century site of farmhouse-like building. In 1866-8 a new much larger house was built by Henry ?Cluten for Mark Philips
Welcombe House, a Post Medieval period farmhouse-like building. A new larger house was built to replace it in 1866-8. The present house is located is located to the north of Temple Hill.
1 There are tantalising references to the wood of the bishops of Worcester from c.1170, but never in enough detail to explain the relationship between the wood, the square league ...
Remnant of Medieval Woodland
1 There was a mill at Hampton in 1086. It is also recorded in 1182 and 1299. Four mills are mentioned in a conveyance of the manor in 1678; these ...
A watermill was recorded at Hampton Lucy in the Domesday survey, and later documents refer to up to four mills. The present mill on a site, which may date back to the Medieval period, is still in use and is situated just above the bridge.
1 Alveston ford was the ‘Doddanford’ of the charters and was a continuation of the trackway on the E side of Alveston Pasture called ‘Hryaveg’ (Ridgeway) in the bounds of ...
The second of two possible sites for the Early Medieval Dodda's Ford, a shallow part of the river where animals, people and vehicles would have crossed. It is referred to in a 10th century charter. The site lies 500 m north of Alveston.
1 Complex cropmark site.
4 Air photographs show a complex of enclosures including at least three rectangular/subrectangular enclosures, a number of scatters of pits, penannular gullies, other possible enclosures and linear ...
Aerial photographs show a complex of various enclosures, pits, gullies and linear features. Their date is uncertain, but they may be Iron Age or Roman and they may represent the remains of a settlement. They are located at Hatton Rock.
1 Pit-alignment (approx N-S).
2 Air photograph.
3 No sign of this pit alignment is evident on air photographs in Warwick Museum.
4 Re-examination of the air photographs in Warwick Museum confirmed that ...
A pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is probably of Prehistoric date. It is located 300m east of Mount Pleasant.
1 Large conjoined rectangular enclosures extending into at least three modern fields with traces of smaller features and a drove road (?).
2 Various Aerial Photographs
3 Undated, but on morphological grounds ...
The site of a possible settlement dating to the Roman period known from enclosures, linear features and a possible trackway. The features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site is located 700m north west of Hampton Lucy church.
1 Two ring ditches show as cropmarks.
2 One of the ring ditches has internal pits and looks like the Neolithic/Bronze Age hengiform structure at Barford (PRN 718).
3 Noted.
Two possible ring ditches, which date to the Neolithic and Bronze Age, are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 900m north west of Charlecote House.
1 Two adjacent enclosures, each with entrance to W.
3 One large and one small subrectangular enclosure. These are associated with a couple of small pennanular enclosures and a possible undated ...
The site of two rectangular enclosures of unknown date. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 800m north east of Alveston.
1 Various air photographs.
2 Possible Saxon palace site of 2-3 ha in extent on the S end of a spur overlooking the Avon. Two charters of 781 exist. Information on ...
Linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Subsequent excavation and radiocarbon dating have confirmed that this is an Anglo Saxon settlement, possibly a palace, dating to the Migration period. It is situated 500m north east of Boscobel.
1 The possible site of a burnt mound. Burnt stone was observed coming out of the river bank.
2 Evidence for a burnt mound consists of numerous pot boiler-tyoe “burnt” quartzite ...
The possible site of a burnt mound situated to the northeast of Ryon Hill House.
1 The site of the depopulated village of Hatton, now occupied by two farms, lies about one mile W of Hampton Lucy village.
2 In the 1332 lay subsidy there were ...
The deserted settlement of Hatton on Avon. Documentary evidence suggests that 17 people lived here during the Medieval period. The site is located 500m east of Alveston.
1 ‘Brick Yard’.
2 Very overgrown, but some traces of quarrying.
The site of brickworks marked on a tithe map of 1846. They were located 100m north of the obelisk in Welcombe House grounds, Stratford-on-Avon. Some traces of quarrying at the site still remain as earthworks.
1 The lane beyond Copdock Hill leads off the Fulbrook road to Grove Field Farm where it forks to continue as two field tracks. The northern track ends at ...
A trackway is visible as an earthwork which leads to the site of a ford across the river Avon, both are of unknown date. A modern footpath follows the route of the trackway though the river is no longer crossable. The site is located 850m north of Wasperton.
1 In 1299 a fishery is mentioned. In 1667 the fishery was said to extend ‘from a stone in the Ham to Hatton’s stile in the parish of Hampton Lucy’. ...
There is early documentary evidence for a Medieval fishpond here, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It survives as an earthwork and is situated 500m north east of Packsaddle Bridge, Hampton Lucy.
1 S of Ingon Manor Farm is a complex of pond earthworks that cut the surrounding ridge and furrow. The owner states that this area was landscaped at the beginning ...
Several ponds, which probably date to the beginning of the twentieth century, are visible as earthworks. They are situated 500m south of the reservoir at Ingon.
1 There was a priest at Hampton in 1086. The Medieval church, which stood ‘not exactly on the same site’ as the present building (PRN 5124), was completely demolished in ...
The site of the Medieval church of St Peter which was demolished in 1826. Documentary evidence records its earliest history. The site is located in Hampton Lucy.
1 S of Ingon Manor Farm at above grid reference. Possible site of Medieval hamlet.
2 The field was under crop and no surface indications of the site were to be ...
The possible site of the Medieval deserted settlement at Ingon. The site lies 200m west of Ingon.
1 In the winter of 1947-8 human bones and a skull were found between Hampton Lucy village and Tile Barn Farm.
2 All records regarding finds have been destroyed.
Findspot - a burial of unknown date was found near Hampton Lucy.
1 Fishponds.
2 These fishponds were incorporated into a large ornamental lake in the late 19th century.
The site of possible fishponds, used for the breeding and storage fish. They date to the Post Medieval period and are also marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. They were situated north west of Ryon Hill House, Hampton Lucy.
1 In 1086 a mill is recorded. References also occur to this mill in the 17th, 19th and 20th centuries. The mill operated until the early 1950s and restoration of ...
Charlecote Mill, a watermill recorded in the Domesday Survey and in written sources from the Post Medieval to the Modern periods. The present building dates to the 18th century, with two undershot water wheels, and two sets of milling machinery. It was restored in 1978.
1 Pers Comm from the land owners (April 2007).
2 Earthworks visible on LiDAR imagery, c.2008.
Traces of ridge and furrow visible from the gound as earthworks.