1 Chancel, nave with W bellcote, S aisle, and N porch.
2 The drawing of c1820 in the Aylesford collection shows a short nave and bell-turret in rudimentary classical style, with ...
The Church of St John the Baptist. Built in the 18th century, it replaced a Medieval church. The church was largely rebuilt during the Imperial period. It is situated 150m south south west of the Wasperton Post Office.
1 Well Close is marked.
2 The field had been subdivided and was known as Middle and Further Well Close.
3 The site is under crop and there is no trace of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a well dating from the Post Medieval period. No trace now survives. The location is 1.5km north west of Ashorne.
1 Dovehouse Piece appears on the 1686 Rowlinson Estate Map by James Fish.
2 Dovehouse Piece appears on the 1839 Tithe Map.
3 The site was visited but the dovehouse no longer ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a dovecote, a building used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. The location is 500m north of Rushy Close Spinney, Wasperton. The dovecote would have been of Post Medieval date.
1 A dovecote existed to the east of the Manor House. It was hexagonal (or octagonal) with a tiled roof and square lantern. It measured 11 feet accross ...
The site of a Post Medieval dovecote, a building used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. It was situated 100m north west of the church at Wasperton and was demolished in 1969.
1 A watching brief carried out on the installation of a sewage tank at the Village Hall in 1990 located a ditch and two pits. The features probably date to ...
Two pits and a ditch, which dated to the Post Medieval period and later, were recorded at the Village Hall at Wasperton.