1 As it was built in post medieval period the term ‘coutry house’ is preferred to ‘manor house’.
Wormleighton Manor House, which was built during the Post Medieval period and was altered during the 1600s. It is situated in Wormleighton.
1 Several fields have ‘Windmill’ names.
2 Several fields have ‘Windmill’ names.
3 Site now lost.
The site of a possible Post Medieval windmill. Several fields have 'windmill' names on maps of the Spencer Estate in 1634 and 1734, but no surface evidence is visible. The location is at Windmill Spinney, 1km north west of Wormleighton.
1 ‘An outlying windmill a quarter of a mile to the E’ of Wormleighton church.
3 Thorpe appears to derive his evidence from a map of 1634, but there is no ...
There is possible documentary evidence that there was a windmill at this site in the Post Medieval period. The unconfirmed location was 400m south east of the church at Wormleighton.
1 Scheduling revised.
The site of an enclosure dating to the Post Medieval period which is visible as an earthwork. It is located 500m north of the modern hamlet of Wormleighton.
1 Scheduling information.
The site of an archaeological feature which survives as an earthwork of Post Medieval date. It is located 500m north west of the modern hamlet of Wormleighton.
1 Wormleighton Hall, Wormleighton, Stratford.
Lovie gives no details other than the presence of a garden, state unknown. Hall unlisted.
Garden attached to unlisted Hall.
1 Formal gardens attached to 16th/ 17th century house belonging to Spencers of Althorpe. Remnants of house survive, but little evidence of gardens. Recommended for inclusion on Local List.
2 Site ...
A formal garden which dates to the Post Medieval period and surrounded a 16th or 17th century manor house. The garden is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, though little evidence of it survives. It is situated in Wormleighton.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.