1 In 1545 Francis Goodere owned ‘Netherwalke myll’ at Baginton situated ‘below the place where the castle once stood’. A fulling mill is recorded in 1656. It continued as a ...
Baginton Fulling Mill, a watermill that was in use from the Post Medieval period onwards. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks. The mill was situated 1km south west of Baginton.
1 1968: Rescue excavation of a ring ditch (PRN 6079) in advance of bypass construction revealed traces of a Post Medieval barn. The site is on a gently rising hillock ...
The site of a Post Medieval barn. The remains of the barn were found during an archaeological excavation, 300m north east of Baginton Mill.
1 Baginton Hall, a Georgian building standing 137m to the N of the church, was destroyed by fire in 1889 and never rebuilt. It was erected by William Bromley, Speaker ...
The site of Baginton Hall, a country house that was built during the Post Medieval period. The house was destroyed by fire in 1889. It was situated 150m north of the church at Baginton.
1 A watching brief carried out when the weir was demolished in February 2012 revealed remains of a 20th century weir and dam. Concrete wingwalls were uncovered which appear ...
Early 20th century mill weir with remains of 19th century or earlier wooden sluice. Associated with the water management features for Baginton Mill.
1 Late 17th/ early 18th century with more recent additions. A plain, but somehow attractive house of stone with stone gable ends, and a projecting gabled wing surmounted by ...
A vicarage that was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated in Church Road, Baginton.
1 Pigeon-cote west of castle. Late 17th century or early 18th century. A small square stone structure of two storeys. Roofless and derelict. It belonged to Baginton Hall.
2 Dovecote. Square ...
The site of a dovecote, a building in which doves or pigeons were housed. It was in use from the Post Medieval period onwards and was associated with Baginton Hall. The dovecote was situated at Baginton Castle.
1 A house was built in 1618 and had been destroyed by fire in 1706. A new Georgian house (PRN 5354) replaced the earlier one. It was always assumed that ...
The site of Baginton Hall, a country house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It burnt down in 1706 and was rebuilt on a slightly different site. The house was situated 100m north west of the church at Baginton.