1 There were three mills at Tredington in 1086 and at least one of them probably stood on this site. By 1649 only two mills are mentioned. Details of ownership ...
The site of Tredington Mill, a Medieval mill, known from documentary evidence. A later watermill was built on the site during the Imperial period. The site is located 100m south east of the church at Tredington.
1 A mill at Talton is mentioned in 1308. Later in the same century it passed to the Abbey of Evesham. Various owners are known from the 16th to 19th ...
Talton Mill, the remains of a watermill. There is documentary evidence for a mill at this site from the Medieval through to the 20th century. Only a wheel pit, the slots of the angled sluices and a brick plinth survive. It is 400m north east of Crimscote Coppice.
1 A mill at Armscote is mentioned in 1328-9, when Simon de Croome exempted it from a grant of the manor to his son.
2 It may have been situated at ...
The site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period and known from documentary evidence. It was located 600m south of Armscote.
1 In 1240 the Prior of Worcester had a mill at Tredington belonging to the manor of Blackwell. It is mentioned again in 1291 and in 1654 a watermill at ...
The site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period which is known from documentary evidence. It was located near Blackwell.
1 Mentioned in 1299, but nothing else is known of its early history. Details of ownership exist for the mid 19th century onwards. It is not certain when the mill ...
Newbold Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence in the Medieval period, but not again until the Imperial period. The present 19th century building has been converted into housing by 1947. It is 500m east of the church, Newbold on Stour.
1 A Medieval deserted settlement was surveyed after having been ploughed for the second time. A measured but tentative plan was produced. Pottery, much of it 12th and 13th century, ...
The site of an area of Medieval shrunken village at Longdon. It is known from documentary evidence, earthworks of house platforms and trackways revealed on aerial photographs, and from finds of pottery. It is located 600m north west of Longdon Poplars.
1 The mill probably stands on the site of one of the Tredington mills recorded in 1086. Nothing is known of its early history. Details of ownership exist from 1820 ...
The site of Holtom's Mill, a Medieval mill, known from documentary evidence. A watermill was built on this site during the Imperial period. It is located 300m north west of the church, Tredington.
1 Cob walled building recorded in 1978 by Stephen Ball prior to destruction.
Noted as a 3 bay barn with open end gable at the east end. The north and west ...
The site of a cob-walled building probably dating to the early 20th Century. It was located 150m north east of the chapel in Blackwell.
1 Photographic recording of the 18th century barn
18th century barn
12 A series of enclosures, and linear features (probably trackways) are visible on Google Earth imagery, to the south-east of Newbold-on-Stour. There were identified by the AOC Assessment of ...
A series of enclosures, and linear features (probably trackways) are visible on Google Earth imagery, to the south-east of Newbold-on-Stour. Probably of prehistoric date.
1 A Tredington charter of AD 757 (though the relevant boundary clause is of a later date) refers to the rahweg (way of the roe deer). Part of this route ...
The route of a trackway dating to the Migration and Early Medieval periods. It is known from documentary evidence to have been called 'The Way of the Roe Deer'. It is located south west of Darlingscote.
1 Map showing part of Early Medieval routeway from Blackwell to Shipston.
The possible route of an Anglo Saxon trackway dating to the Migration and Early Medieval periods. It leads into Shipston from the north west.
1 A way to a ford on the boundary of Blackwell is referred to in a charter of AD 978. A footpath crosses the stream at this point today.
2 Identified ...
The route of a trackway dating to the Early Medieval period. It is located 900m north east of Darlingscote.
1 A 19th century well was found during the excavation of foundation trenches for an extension at Talton House. 18th and 19th century pottery was found in a large pit ...
A well and fragments of pottery, all dating to the Imperial period, were found during the excavation of foundation trenches for extensions at Talton House.
Thank you for visiting this page, and thank you for taking an interest in this subject or location. As you can see, we don't yet have much content about here as of yet - this is where you come in!