1 In Spernall village Esmond Dyes in 1662 occupied one cottage with a brick kiln and had an adjoining close called ‘claypitts’. This house was almost certainly ‘The Tyle House’ ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of brickworks of Post Medieval date. Some earthworks remain visible at the site, which is 100m north east of the cattle grid at Spernall.
1 c1695 there were at least three separate farms at Upper Spernall. All of these had outbuildings and several other cottages appear to be shown at that date. The largest ...
The site of an area shrunken village at Upper Spernall. Dwellings and farm buildings existed here during the Post Medieval or Imperial periods. The settlement is known from documentary evidence.
1 Seams of gypsum are found within the keuper marls of the area. In 1662 a plaster pit in Spernall Park is recorded, and a ‘plasterer’ is recorded in the ...
The site of a quarry dating to the Post Medieval period. It was situated in Spernall Park.
1 The village consists only of the church and rectory and a few scattered farms and cottages. Depopulation occurred in the Medieval period (PRN 550) and in the 17th century ...
The site of a Post Medieval shrunken village at Spernall. The site is known from documentary evidence and areas of ridge and furrow are visible as earthworks.
1 The chapel of St Giles, which may have been the original church of the Priory, was granted with others of its lands, to Thomas Broke in 1541 and to ...
The site of a Post Medieval manor house. All that remains is a platform, possibly surrounded by a moat. The site can be identified from aerial photographs, and remains visible as an earthwork. It is situated 350m north west of Morgrove Coppice, Spernall.