1 The possible extent of the medieval settlement based on the OS map of 1884, 36NE.
2 Domesday lists Sambourne in Ferncombe Hundred. The Phillimore edition gives a grid ref of ...
The possible extent of the medieval settlement at Sambourne based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1884.
1 In 1478 Thomas Morgan owned Sambourne manor house, called ‘Taillors’ after a previous tenant. In the C18th/C19th a house called Tailors occupied the site of the now ...
Now occupied by Middletown Farm.
1 Domesday makes no mention of a mill here, but about a century later a mill at Sambourne was let to farm. In 1433 the Abbot of Evesham ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a Medieval watermill in Sambourne. Its exact location is unknown.
1 ‘Penfold’ type letter box, 1852.
2 Photographed in 1978.
A letter box dating to the Imperial period. It is situated 600m east of the Sewage Works.
1 Late Medieval coin of the 14th to 15th centuries reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - one coin dating to the Medieval period was found 200m north of Coughton Court.
1 Truslove’s, a small farmhouse, now two tenements, a little to the NW of Sambourne Hall is the conjectural site of the ancient Sambourne Chapel, but there are no visible ...
The possible site of the Chapel of St Andrew dating to the Medieval period. The chapel is known from documentary evidence. It was situated 300m east of the war memorial, Sambourne.
1 Pottery and building material were found at the above grid reference during field work in 1981. This was followed with a site visit by HMM, PMB and NJP.
2 A ...
The site of a villa dating to the Roman period. The site is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs and is also known from finds of pottery and building material. It is situated 800m north of Coughton Court.
120 Ryknild Street which runs north from the Fosse Way at Bourton on the Water may have been an advanced section of the frontier line supposedly represented by the Fosse ...
Roman Road.
1 2A turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775, part of the Alcester/ Evesham network.
The site of a toll road. During the Imperial period, travellers had to pay to use the road. It ran from Alcester to Lickey and Bromsgrove.
2 Possible trackway shows on aerial photographs.
The line of a possible trackway of unknown date. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The trackway is located 700m north of Coughton Court.
2 Possible trackway and linear features show as crop mark.
The line of a possible trackway that is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs and is undated. It is located of 300m north west of Coughton Court.
1 The grounds of the Grade I Listed house include an avenue, formal garden with circular pond, lawns, kitchen garden, further ponds. New formal gardens have been created since c1990, ...
Gardens and parkland surrounding Coughton Court, with elements dating from the Post Medieval period onwards.
1 In Medieval period known as Icknield Street/ Ryknield Street. Earlier, a Gloucestershire reference records it as Buggildestret (the road of Burghild). Between Studley and Alcester the Medieval route along ...
The line of a road dating to the Medieval period. It follows the route of the Roman road, Icknield or Ryknild Street.
1 Ridgeway referred to as le Ruggeway in Sambourn (t. Ed 3) and the Rigwey in Alcester (1509).
2 Maps showing part of route.
A Medieval ridgeway, a trackway along a ridge of hills. It is known from documentary evidence.
Railway.
1 The Evesham and Redditch Railway was built under powers granted by a Parliametary Act dating to 13th July 1863. The line was opened between Alcester and Redditch on ...
Duplicated record.
1 A map of 1746 shows a farmstead consisting of a group of three buildings c.200m SW of Four Elms Farm.
23 The farmstead appears to be attached to a block ...
The site of a settlement, a former farmstead, dating from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. It is situated 500m south of Studley Common.
1 The railway was opened in 1868 and the station must date to around this time. The 1887 1st ed OS 1:2500 shows the platform, sidings, a ?goods shed, ...
The site of the former Studley and Astwood Bank Railway Station, built during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, together with a shed, sidings, signals and signal boxes
1 Map.
2 Oak Farm is of 3 periods. The original plan of T-shape is built of fairly close-set studding, now mostly plastered, and has one bay of the original roof ...
A house, including outbuildings, of Post Medieval date. It is situated 900m north of Sambourne.
2 Rectilinear cropmark appears on air photographs.
3 Dating narrowed to within the Neolithic and Romano British periods.
45Cropmark is 75mx60m with two opposing entrances to the northwest and southeast sides.
The site of a rectangular enclosure which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is believed to date to the Prehistoric period. It is situated 600m east of Sambourne.
1 Clay pit marked on OS map.
The site of a clay pit, marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is 300m south west of Knottesford Close, Studley.
1 Clay pit marked on OS map.
The site of a clay pit, marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is 600m west of Hamilton Drive, Studley.