1 This mill may have stood on the site of the mill at Brandon which is recorded in 1086. The head race to the mill leaves the river opposite the ...
Wolston Mill, a watermill that was built in the Medieval period. It continued to be used until the end of the Imperial period. The mill buildings were later demolished. It was situated 600m south west of St. Margaret's Church, Wolston.
2 Undated but probably Prehistoric pit alignment shows on aerial photographs.
3 Linear features will be Bronze Age to Romano-British.
4 Mapped as part of National Mapping Programme. The north-south pit alignment ...
A Prehistoric linear feature, possibly a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The feature is located 1km south of Bretford.
1 WJ Ford’s map shows cropmarks as being in this field.
2 No other evidence exist. No surface indications.
Several linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 1km north of Knightlow Hill.
2 A number of undated linear features, possibly forming enclosures, show on aerial photographs.
3 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
4 A large number of features are visible on modern aerial photography ...
Several linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 1km east of Wolston.
2 Undated linear crop marks show on aerial photographs.
Linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 400m south east of Bretford.
1 A mound approximately 30m in diameter seen on aerial photographs 200m to the north west of Fosse Farm was mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. ...
A mound approximately 30m in diameter can be seen on aerial photographs 200m to the north west of Fosse Farm.
The Red Lion has recently been demolished, bringing to an end a staple of Wolston’s village centre. A Mr. T. Walton1 recounted his memories in the early 70s, and remembered ...
Almost nothing is known about Wolston Windmill built on Lammas Hill. It was a tower mill with batter, staging and four common sails.
The excavation
A dig on Lammas Hill in 1950 ...
1 An archaeological evaluation of land at the former Wolston High School involved background documentary research, geophysical survey and trial trenching. The work revealed only a single Bronze Age/early Iron ...
Findspot - during archaeological work a Bronze Age or early Iron Age pit, a light scatter of Romano-British pottery and remains of a medieval or post medieval field system were found at Wolston High School.
2 Several possible linear cropmark features can be identified on an air photograph. These may be geological in origin.
3 Reintrepretation of 1 suggests a single linear feature with a ...
Several linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs, representing ?geological features and possibly part of an enclosure. They are situated 1km north east of The Holdings.
This etching of Main Street in the centre of Wolston shows The Beeches and the Red Lion Inn. The Red Lion is no longer a pub, but the building has ...