1 The site was first recorded by the Solihull Archaeological Group. An extensive mound shows up clearly above the crops. It is about 1.5-2m high and about 15-20m in extent ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow probably dates to the Bronze Age. It is visible as an earthwork.
Site of possible cemetery.
1 Sir William Dugdale, in a letter to Mr Anthony Wood dated 23rd August, 1677, brought to his notice a very recent discovery reported by a late ...
Circumstantial
2 Mound, situated in a stream valley at the foot of a gradual SE facing slope. Overall diameter 38m; maximum height 4.2m. The near-circular level summit is 18m in diameter. ...
The site of a mound, possibly part of a moated site, dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork and is located 200 north of Alderhanger wood.
1 A linear earthwork is marked on an early OS map and the field name ‘Hob Daniels Close’ (centred on SP1471) taken from the Tithe Award map may indicate the ...
A linear earthwork possibly an Iron Age boundary, known as Hobditch. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1924. It is located 600m east of Umberslade Park.
1 A clear linear bank on a similar alignment to the Merryman’s Farm earthwork shows on aerial photographs. In the field the earthwork is under plough, although traces of the ...
A linear earthwork, possibly Iron Age in date, and forming part of Hobditch, a boundary feature. It is visible in parts as an earthwork and is visible on aerial photographs. It is located 900m south east of Umberslade Park.
2 Air photographs indicate an alignment of earthwork and this is visible on the ground. The alignment was examined in the field and the bank appears to survive to a ...
A linear earthwork, possibly an Iron Age boundary, known as Hobditch. It is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs. It is located 800m east of Umberslade Park.
1 Aerial photographs show linear features from SP1468 to SP1569, parallel with the Dean’s Green alignment (MWA1202). Close inspection reveals that one of these features is the boundary of several ...
A linear earthwork is visible on aerial photographs. It possibly dates to the Iron Age and is located 900m north west of Liveridge Hill.
1 A linear earthwork 15m wide and 1m high with a ditch on either side. It runs for about 1.1 km ENE from the hamlet of Dean’s Green to the ...
A linear feature, possibly part of a boundary, known as Hobditch Causeway, is visible as an earthwork. It is probably of Iron age or Roman date. It is located near Dean's Green.
1 From Waterloo Cottages to Pinks Farm this bank is on the boundary of the parishes of Nuthurst and Beaudesert. A section of the bank just N of Pinks Farm ...
A linear feature is visible as an earthwork which forms part of the Hobditch Causeway and dates to the Iron Age. It is probably part of a boundary and is situated north east of Dean's Green.
1 In Mows Hills Coppice is a bank c.80 yards long and 40 wide with two ditches and lying in a direction NNW. Bears a resemblence to Hobditch Causeway.
2 ...
A linear feature of unknown date, which is visible as an earthwork. It is located 350m west of Mows Hill Road.
1 A dam standing in a more or less complete state and the water now flows through what might once have been a sluice gate. The pool created by this ...
The site of an undated dam which forms a possible millpond. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated 600m west of Mows Hill Road.
1 The Earlswood lakes are a most impressive series of reservoirs constructed to serve the Stratford Canal. A tall brick engine house survives, built to house a beam pumping ...
Earlswood Lakes, a series of canal reservoirs, created in the Imperial period to serve the Stratford upon Avon canal. A pumping station survives, but the engine has been removed from the building.
1 A number of hollows of unknown date were observed by Hereford and Worcester County Council Archaeology Service during work in advance of widening of the M42.
Undated hollows are visible as earthworks. They are located 600m north of Wood End railway station.