1 Sheep fold marked on the First Edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map.
The site of a sheep fold which was used during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was located 250m east of Stratford Race Course.
1 Clopton Tower. ?Early 19th century. Ashlar. A substantial octagonal tower of three stages, each lighted by one window, with parapet and finger turret.
2 Polygonal, with Tuscan columns and pediment.
3 ...
Clopton Tower, an architectural folly which dates from the Imperial period. It stands 140m north east of Dugdale Avenue, Stratford on Avon.
2 A mill is known to have existed at Alveston since 966 and in the Domesday survey there were three mills. In 1240 there were two mills and a mill ...
Alveston Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the early Medieval period. Derelict by 1886, it was demolished in the 1940s. Only a weir survives. The mill was 400m north east of the church.
1 Warwick Road Nursery, Stratford.
Lovie reports this nursery was owned by John Butcher in 1884. Walks with mixed planting. Site redeveloped at time of Lovie’s report (1996/7).
Nursery with walks and mixed planting. Site redeveloped.
1 Reservoir and pipeline constructed October 1955 cut through `lynchets’. Air photos were taken of these lynchet-like terraces, but no finds were made when cutting pipeline. Despite undisturbed appearance of ...
The site of linear earthworks or lynchets that are visible on aerial photographs. They probably date to the Imperial period. The features are situated on the western edge of Bordon Wood.
1 A nursery is shown on the OS 1st edition 25″ map.
The site of a nursery garden dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1823. The nursery was situated to the west of Sandfield Road, Stratford on Avon.