1 Haseley (adjoining watermill). Built by 1814. Ceased by late C19. Post mill.
2 No obvious siting evidence. The ground is now marshy and unusable and the area seems rather unsuited ...
The possible site of Haseley Windmill which dated to the Imperial period. It was situated 600m east of Birmingham Road.
1 Probable site of ‘The New Windmill’ shown on an early OS 1” map. Built by Choyce, a hatter of Atherstone.
The site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It was situated near South Street, Atherstone.
1 Thurlaston (NE of village). Post mill. Built by 1787. Ceased by early 19th century.
2 There is no trace of this site on the ground.
The site of a post mill, a type of windmill mounted on a post. It was built during the Imperial period. The post mill was situated 500m north east of Thurlaston.
1 1794. Tower mill. Had two pairs of stones, four sails (two common, two shuttered) which came down 1925. Ground floor stones worked by steam engine to 1919. Converted into ...
A tower mill, a type of windmill, that was built during the Imperial period. The mill is still standing but is now in use as a dwelling. It is situated on Main Street, Thurlaston.
1 Photograph of windmill.
2 The photograph shows a conical brick tower, capped with an ‘onion’ dome, with four sails to be covered with canvas. There is no fantail visible, and ...
The site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It was situated on Lammas Hill.
1 ‘Chapel’ marked.
2 Built in the early 19th century as a Wesleyan chapel. Later used briefly as a stable, then as a flour mill with a gas engine (the base ...
A former nonconformist Wesleyan chapel built in the Imperial period and now altered and converted for a house. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is located at Eathorpe.
1 Brick tower mill. Built c1820. Lofty tower with ogee cap and finial; staging four sails and cap gallery with rotating wheel. Worked by steam for a period. Ceased working ...
The site of a tower mill, a type of windmill, which was built during the Imperial period. The windmill was demolished in 1925. It was situated 1km north east of Lower Green.
1 ‘Windmill Close’ marked.
2 Woolscott windmill, recorded by 1668.
3 Windmill Close may be the site of Woolscott windmill (although see also PRN 3017). No trace of the mill was evident ...
The site of a windmill which dates back to at least the Imperial period. It was situated between Woolscott and Grandborough.
1 A watermill once stood on a millrace built between two sides of a bend in the Finham Brook at the above NGR.
2 Nothing can be seen of the mill ...
The site of a watermill which was in use during the Imperial period. The mill race is still visible as an earthwork. It is situated north of Dale House Lane, on the outskirts of Kenilworth.
1 Mr Morris, whose family have been millers at Burton Mill since 1848, said that his father used to refer to the site as a windmill mound. The mound is ...
The site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. It was built during the Imperial period. The post mill is known to have existed from documentary evidence and the mill mound survives as an earthwork. The site is located on Mill Lane, 500m west of Burton Hastings.
1 Brick and stone tower mill. Built before 1783. Tower without sails or cap 1880s; reduced to low stump with slated roof by early C20 and demolished ...
The site of a windmill, built in brick and stone, which was constructed during the Imperial period. It was situated 50m north of Birmingham Road, Coleshill.
1 Mill marked.
2 Marked as ‘Old Mill Field’.
3 Marked as disused.
4 Possibly built 1752, derelict late 18th century. Rebuilt by mid 19th century. Ceased 1913. Demolished 1920s. Post Mill.
5 Only ...
The site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. It was built during the Imperial period. All that remains of the windmill is a mound visible as an earthwork. It was situated 500m north west of Middle Tysoe.
1 ‘Old Windmill Field’ marked.
2 This map shows a mound with a gradual slope leading up to it from the E. The earthworks survive, although less clearly defined, under plough.
The site of a windmill which was in use during the Imperial period. The mound on which it sat is visible as an earthwork. The windmill was situated 1km south west of Upper Tysoe.
1 Built on the N bank of the canal in 1806. It was operated by the firm of Kench and Sons, in conjunction with Rock Mills, until 1961. Excess water ...
Emscote Mill, the site of a watermill built in the Imperial period. After 1850 it was driven by steam, and then by electricity. The site is now under housing.
1 ‘Site of house, stream mill and garden’.
2 ‘Mill House’ marked.
3 Admission refused by tenant.
4 Archival correspondence.
Documentary evidence suggests that a mill was situated 200m south of Ash Spinney, Baxterley. It was built during the Imperial period. It appears to have been a steam driven mill.
1 Built by 1812. Recorded 1829. Ceased by late 18th century (?19th century). Post Mill.
2 Marked as ‘Windmill Ground’.
3 There was probably once a windmill on the hill above Windmill ...
There is documentary evidence to suggest that this is the site of a windmill which was in use during the Imperial period. It stood 2km to the north east of Oxhill.
1 Windmill Hill Ground. Built by 1822. Demolished c1875. Post Mill with (Midland type) round house.
2 No visible trace.
The site of a windmill which was in use during the Imperial period. It was demolished in the late 19th century. It stood 500m north east of Butlers Marston.
1 Formerly steam mill of Messrs Mallaby and Alkin. Grain was brought by canal and by road. Horses were stabled at the back, in the Old Salt House. ...
A steam mill which was built during the Imperial period for the purpose of grinding corn. It was situated on the western side of Market Street, Polesworth.
1 Post mill. Built 1810. Brick and slated roundhouse, two pairs of stones, four common sails, ladder and tailpole with lever. Ceased work 1879. Pulled down with tower mill c1923. ...
The site of a post mill, a type of windmill mounted on a post. It was in use in the Imperial period, and was pulled down in the 1920s together with the adjacent tower mill. It stood 500m north west of the church at Stockton.
Site of windmill.
1 Brick tower mill. Built second half C19. Tower with marked batter. Four storeys, domed cap. Four patent sails and fantail. For sale 1885. Derelict without fantail ...
The site of a brick tower mill, a type of windmill, which was in use in the Imperial period. Documentary sources suggest that earlier windmills may have stood at the site. It was demolished in the 1920s. It stood 500m north west of the church.
1 On the hill above the church is the site of a windmill, no doubt the successor of the one mentioned in 1284, when a man eating his lunch ...
Duplicate of MWA 671
1 Post mill. Mill Lane, large mound. Transferred from Spon End, Coventry, 1776. Ceased 19th century.
2 Mill marked.
3 Mill mound marked.
4 The mound now stands in the garden of the ...
The site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. It dates back to at least the Imperial period. It is marked on an estate map of 1791. The mound on which the windmill stood is visible as an earthwork. The site is located on Miller's Lane, Monks Kirby.
1 ‘…approaching Newbold from the lower end of the village on the road from Rugby, we have the river parallel the width of a field from the road, and here ...
The possible site of a fulling mill, used for beating and cleaning cloth. The mill dated to the Imperial period. It was situated in the area of Newbold Road, Newbold on Avon.
1 ‘Saw Mill’ marked.
2 There is no sign of the building now, a modern house/garden stands on the site.
The site of a saw mill which was in use during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. On the site there now stands a modern house and garden. The mill was located 100m north of the castle.