1 There was a toll gate at the bottom of Thurlaston Lane near Hardwick Bridge (now called Thurlaston Bridge). This was erected in the 1790’s but was abolished 1880/1881.
2 ...
The site of a toll gate where travellers would pay a toll to use a toll road. The toll gate was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated 300m north of Kites Hardwick.
1 A Church of England Mission Church is mentioned in VCH.
2 Appears on an OS map of 1905.
3 The church is still in use. It is brick, with a ...
The Church of the Good Sheperd which was built during the Imperial period. It is still in use and is attached to a house. The church is situated 200m north of The Green, Broadwell.
1 Bridge marked.
2 Accounts for the Dunchurch-Southam Turnpike Road mention that the bridge was rebuilt in limestone in 1794.
3 The modern bridge is a single span of red and blue ...
Milholme Bridge, the site of an Imperial limestone bridge marked on a tithe map of 1844. Parts of this bridge may still be incorporated in the present brick and stone structure, probably of 19th century date. It is 500m north of Warsner Spinney.
1 Milestone marked.
2 The milestone has become dislodged and has fallen over.
The site of a milestone dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on a map of 1797. It was situated 300m north east of Millholme Bridge.
1 Rous’ list has a Kyght Herdwyck. Sites with this name exist in both Tysoe and Leamington Hastings. Beresford considered that Rous’ site was probably the Tysoe settlement.
2 In the ...
The Medieval shrunken village of Kites Hardwick. The village is known from documentary evidence and some features are visible as earthworks. The site is located to the south of Kites Hardwick.
1 ‘Brick Kiln Ground’ marked.
2 No traces of a brick/tile works were evident.
The site of possible brickworks marked on an estate map of 1768. They would date to the Post Medieval/Imperial period, and were located 100m south of the cemetery at Leamington Hastings. No surface evidence is visible.
1 A “Dove House Close” appears on a map of 1718.
2 A “Dovehouse Close” appears on a map of 1768, but not on later maps.
3 A modern swimming pool now ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a dovecote, a building for the breeding and housing of doves and pigeons. It would have been used from the Post Medieval to the Imperial period. It was located 100m northwest of the church at Leamington Hastings.
1 Mission Chapel marked.
2 The cross in the vestry of All Saints Church Leamington Hastings ‘stood on the Mission Chapel’ which was pulled down.
3 No trace of the building remains.
The site of a chapel dating to the Imperial period. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887. The chapel was situated in Kites Hardwick.
1 Earthworks and possible house platforms possibly indicative of deserted Medieval settlement.
2 This site requires a site visit.
The possible site of a Medieval shrunken village. The remains are visible as earthworks. The site lies 300m south east of The Green, Broadwell.
1 Three raised mounds were reported at SP455699, but a site visit did not reveal them. These had been reported as the two burial mounds of Twam Low, the ...
Several mounds are visible as earthworks. They are of unknown date and function. They are situated 300m south west of Tomlow Bridge.
1 There was a chapel at Bradwell standing in the memory of man, which was entirely demolished upon the report of its being like to be turned into a Meeting ...
The possible site of a Medieval chapel. Earthworks are visible at the site which lies on the east side of Broadwell.
2 The first Methodist Chapel was built in 1871, single storey, of brick. In 1962 a new chapel was added on to the first.
A Methodist church which was built during the Imperial period. Additions were made to the building in the 1960s. The church is situated 100m north of The Green, Broadwell.
1 The bridge, originally repairable by the owners of certain lands, had been destroyed for the safety of the county in the Civil War. In 1648 it was ordered to ...
Thurlaston Bridge, the site of a Post Medieval bridge which was demolished for reasons of safety during the Civil War. Rubble is still visible in the bed of the Leam. It is 400m northwest of Kites Hardwick.
1 Three story red square brick building with stone dressings, of early 18th Century. It is built against a 16th Century house. The north and east elevations are plain ...
A manor house which was originally built during the Medieval period. Addtions were made to the building during the Post Medieval or Imperial period. The house is situated at Kites Hardwick.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles and porches, and W tower. Built about the middle of the 13th century, it then consisted of chancel, nave and S aisle, and ...
The Parish Church of All Saints. It was built during the Medieval period, with later alterations and additions through to the Imperial period. The church is located in Leamington Hastings.
1 The house is dated 1633, but has been altered. It is two storeys and attic, of stone with 19th century brick restorations. The stone is grey with sandstone ...
A manor house that was built during the Post Medieval period. Additions and alterations were made to the house during the Imperial period. It is situated in Leamington Hastings.
1 The Almshouses are built of coursed square limestone with very thin alternate courses and red sandstone dressings except two which are white. They are in two parts; the ...
Almshouses, houses which were built to house poor people during the Post Medieval period. They are situated in Birdingbury Road, Leamington Hastings. The almshouses were largely restored during the 1980s.
1 There was a mill here in 1086.
2 ‘Upper Mill Field’ and ‘Lower Mill Field’ marked at SP4467.
3 The mill could have been in this approximate area, but no traces ...
The possible site of a watermill. Documentary evidence suggests that the mill dates back to the Medieval period. Its exact location is unknown but it was located somewhere in the vicinity of Leamington Hastings.
1 At approximately this grid reference. Millbank Spinney. Post mill, built by 1675. Ceased by early 19th century.
2 ‘Mill Bank’ marked.
3 There are no visible traces in these fields.
The site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. The mill was built during the Post Medieval period and ceased working during the Imperial period. It was situated 300m north west of Millbank Spinney.
2 Possible but faint enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs. It is not certain that these are archaeological.
3 Field is titled ‘Short sand pits’.
Several linear features and enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 800m south east of Broadwell.
1 The remains of a very small brick surface shelter dating to WW2.
The remains of a very small surface shelter dating from the Second World War, and situated between Hill and Kites Hardwick.
1 The remains of a brick building of the Air Ministry type dating from WW2.
The remains of a temporary brick building of the Air Ministry type, situated between Hill and Kites Hardwick.
1 Ridge and furrow. The information comes from a transcript created in 1995.
The remains of ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Leamington Hastings.
1 The site of a Permanent Starfish, (‘Starfish’ from ‘Special Fires’). Fire based decoys were set up all over the country in November 1940 (following the bombing of Coventry in ...
The site of a fire based bombing decoy installation known as a 'Starfish' from the Second World War. Night time fires were created to confuse the enemy into dropping their bombs away from their real target.