1 A hollow way and a 19th century house site recorded in 1982.
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Imperial period. A hollow way and a house platform are visible as earthworks. The settlement site is situated 500m east of Coughton Court.
1 The house has many fine timbers, two great hearths and an interesting staircase. Ownership is noted between 1548 to 1665. This is building No.3 on the 1550 ...
A timber framed house which was possibly built in the Post Medieval period and contains two great hearths. It is situated at Holywell.
1 Pitts or Park Farm is of three bays and the house has very large ceiling timbers, well finished. There are two wide hearths, one with a local stone ...
A timber framed house built during the Post Medieval period with a kitchen wing added in the 19th century. It contains two hearths, one with a local stone surround. There is a barn also from the Post Medieval period. It is situated at High Cross, Rowington.
1 The house, described as having five bays in 1606, has a wealth of fine timbers and has been carefully restored. The cross wing appears to have been jettied. ...
A timber framed house which was built in the Post Medieval period with two wide hearths, one with a stone surround and a barn of the same period. It is situated 400m south east of Shrewley Common.
1 The house started life as a farmhouse. In 1681 John Knight was the possessor of what was described as a manor house surrounded by a 400 acre estate. ...
A house originally built during the Post Medieval period and is surrounded by a park. There were additions and alterations made to the house in the Imperial period. It has recently been renovated and restored and is situated in Ullenhall.
1 Archaeological evaluation revealed the reoccupation of the site (following the site’s abandonment to cultivation in the late medieval period), in the course of the expansion of the town in ...
Features reflecting the 19th century housing developments along Dugdale Street and Chapel Street, as depicted on the 1887 OS map, were recorded at The Ropewalk, Chapel Street, Nuneaton.
1 Archaeological observation of the excavation of foundation trenches recorded a large ditch sealed by a medieval ground surface containing 12th/13th century pottery. No dating evidence was found within ...
A large undated ditch, sealed by a medieval ground surface containing 12th/13th century pottery, was recorded during the excavation of foundation trenches at Tredington House, Tredington.
1 A building is shown here on a 1781 Estate map, and two pieces of land immediately adjoining and behind it are called ‘Workhouse Close’ and ‘Workhouse Land’.
2 The South ...
The site of the workhouse which housed the poor of the parish during the Imperial period. A building and two fields called 'Workhouse Close' and 'Workhouse Land' are marked on an Estate Map of 1781. The probable remains of the workhouse were revealed during excavation at The Blundells, Albion Street, Kenilworth.
1 The excavation revealed a series of alluvial layers, a probable palaeochannel, a stone lines drain possibly with an associated sump, three negative features and a stone wall base. ...
Post Medieval features discovered during excavations of the former Potterton Works site.
1 A small round mound, which has recently been disturbed by a tree being uprooted in its centre. No surface indications of date or function.
2 This mound is similar ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval gazebo is marked by mound of earth. Alternatively, this might be the remains of a round barrow. It is situated 200m south of Combe Abbey.
1 Close to Atherstone Hill Farm. ‘At the extreme north-west angle of the Park pale is a curious mound, which may be a tumulus … but it is far more ...
The site of a mound which is possibly the remains of the summerhouse dating to the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1924 and is situated 600m north west of Preston on Stour.
1 A lofty erection (the Rotunda) stood on a mound of earth still remaining to the E of the footpath across the park leading to Atherstone. It had an octagonal ...
A mound is visible as an earthwork within Alscot Park. It has been suggested that an octagonal tower or rotunda of Post Medieval date stood on the mound. It is situated 600m south west of the church at Atherstone on Stour.
1 Excavation of the foundation trenches revealed stone foundations running north from the north-east corner and centre of the north wall to the existing house. The eastern foundation ...
Archaeological work revealed evidence of Post Medieval activity, possibly associated with shoe-making. The remains of a lean-to, a waste tank, a ditch, and a pit containing cobbler's waste were found. The site was on Bottom Street, Northend.
Arch Eval revealed evidence of a short length of 19th or 20th century wall footing. A dump of Post Medieval debris, including 19th and 20th century pottery and glass and ...
Part of a wall footing, and a pit or pond, both of Imperial date, and material from the Post Medieval period onwards werre uncovered at Vicage Road, Flecknoe.
1 Arch Eval revealed two Post Medieval pits and a brick structure. The bricks date from the 18th/19th century, however no building was evident on any maps dating from 1610. ...
During an archaeological excavation two Post Medieval pits and brick walls were identified in the area of Bridge End, Warwick.
1 Watching Brief and Evaluation carried out by OAU, in advance of the construction of new dwelling. An evaluation trench was excavated in November 1995 which revealed a stone-built Victorian ...
Archaeological investigation revealed evidence of settlement dating to the Late Medieval to Imperial period and included a stone built structure, a ditch, pottery and a penny. It is located 100m west of the church, Fenny Compton.
1 Two houses are marked.
2 There is some evidence of earthworks indicating two house platforms in the field to the W of the church.
An estate map from 1813 marks the site of two houses which are now only visible as earthwork house platforms. The site is situated to the west of the church, Harbury.
1 This is the possible site of “Swearing Castle”, which appears on Beightons map of 1725, and it is shown in Dugdale’s History of Warwickshire 1730 as a large house. ...
The possible site of Swearing Castle dating from between the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. The castle is known from documentary evidence. Various finds have been recovered from the site, including a buckle. It is located 800m north east of Willington.
1 An archaeological evaluation at this location involved the excavation of trial trenches either side of the former London Road. An 18th century pit was found to have truncated ...
Excavations revealed a boundary wall dating to the Imperial period. It may be the same wall marked on two maps dated 1788 and 1806. The site is just south of Warwick Castle Old Bridge.
1 At a point 74m NW of Astley Castle is a mound 20m in diameter.
2 The OS have surveyed this and have suggested that it could be a gazebo mound.
The possible site of a gazebo which was built during the Post Medieval period. The site is visible as an earthwork mound and is situated 500m north of Astley Castle.
1 The chapel of St Giles, which may have been the original church of the Priory, was granted with others of its lands, to Thomas Broke in 1541 and to ...
The site of a Post Medieval manor house. All that remains is a platform, possibly surrounded by a moat. The site can be identified from aerial photographs, and remains visible as an earthwork. It is situated 350m north west of Morgrove Coppice, Spernall.