1 Stockton. Coins, cup or urn.
2 OS Card.
Findspot - a coin hoard dating to the Roman period was found near Stockton.
1 The moat may surround the site of the manor of Stockton. It encloses a rectangular area on three sides only, the SE side being open. There is ...
A moat, a wide ditch, which may have surrounded the manor house of Stockton. It is visible as an earthwork, though partly overgrown, and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is situated 100m south east of St Michael's Church.
1 Human remains including skull fragments and a section of long bone from The Bungalow, Church Street, Stockton, which were brought to the Museum for identification. They were probably more ...
Human skeletal remains from Church Street, Stockton.
1 A ‘territorial’ boundary ditch dated to the Iron Age by pottery which was uncovered during an evaluation. A small group of undated pits and postholes were identified mainly to ...
A boundary ditch dating to the Iron Age identified during an archaeological evaluation. The site is 900m northwest of Stockton church.
1 A small assemblage of worked flint found during an excavation. One piece was found in an Iron Age ditch and the remaining four in the topsoil.
A small assemblage of flint found during an excavation. The find area is located northwest of Stockton.
1 2 Cropmarks are visible on aerial photographs in fields to the south of Stockton, however it is unclear what these features are or their date.
3 Similar features are spread ...
Some cropmarks show on aerial photographs 500m to the south of Stockton. The function or date of these remain unknown.
1 Romano-British settlement indicated by a sequence of four Romano-British ditches and gullies, a further diagonal gully of the same date and an undated but probable Romano-British small pit or ...
Romano-British settlement indicated by a sequence of four ditches and gullies, a further diagonal gully of the same date, an undated but probable Romano-British small pit or posthole, and pottery finds of Romano-British date.
1 2Two medieval gullies were found during archaeological work. Any associated building was likely to have been truncated when the site was terraced in the early 20th century.
Two medieval gullies probably associated with a medieval building plot were found during archaeological work.
1 “..adjoining Bascote…Saxon spearheads, a javelin or two, and a knife, were found when quarrying for limestone. These relics have passed into the hands of Miss Mathews of Ashby ...
The possible site of an Anglo-Saxon burial dating to the Migration or Early Medieval period. Various finds from the site included spearheads and a knife. The site is located in the area of Tomlow.
1 Villa type grounds with drive, pleasure grounds, boundary planting and coniferous planting. Good period character. Recommended for inclusion on Local List.
2 Shown on OS 1:10560 1886 Sht Warks 34SE.
Villa pleasure gardens created in the Imperial period. The gardens are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, and are situated to the north west of Stockton.Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ map, of 1888, 40NE.
2 Stockton is not listed in the Domesday survey.
3 The first edition map ...
The possible extent of Medieval settlement at Stockton and known from research carried out on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 An evaluation of a site on land adjacent to cropmarks (MWA7253) found traces of a ridge and furrow system, and five Medieval pottery sherds.
Archaeological evaluation uncovered evidence of ridge and furrow cultivation and five pottery sherds dating to the Medieval period. The site is located 100m south west of the church, Stockton.
1 2 Cropmarks of an enclosure and a linear feature comprising two parallel ditches have been plotted from air photographs.
34 Also shows on aerial photographs taken in 1996, described on ...
An enclosure and a linear feature are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Neither their function or the period they date to is known although this may be a banjo enclosure dating to the later prehistoric period (probably Iron Age). They are located 200m south of the church, Stockton.
1 A complex of cropmark features shows as faint traces on air photographs. This comprises several possible rectangular cropmark enclosures and linear features.
Rectangular enclosures and linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Their function and date are unknown. The site is located 1km south west of Stockton.