1 A small one-arched bridge with large stone balls to the piers crosses Sherbourne Brook to the W of the village. The bridge is dated 1800.
2 The date ...
Sherbourne Bridge was built in the Imperial period. The date 1800 is inscribed in the coping. The bridge lies 150m south west of Sherbourne Manor.
1 Chancel, N and S chapels, nave of five bays, with N and S aisles, and NW tower with spire. Erected in 1864 by Miss Ryland at a cost of ...
The Parish Church of All Saints, Sherbourne, on the site of an earlier Medieval church. It was built during the Imperial period, with later alterations in 1882. The church is located 30m south west of the Shelbourne Churchyard Cross.
1 Chancel, nave with clearstorey, N and S aisles, N porch and W tower. 1826 by T Rickman, with E end remodelled in 1858 by Sir Gilbert Scott, who provided ...
The Church of St Peter was built during the Imperial period near the site of the original Medieval church. It is an early example of the Gothic Revivial movement and it stands in Sherbourne.
1 Description: Medieval church, consisting of chancel with S chapel, nave and probably a W tower. Nave and tower rebuilt 1747. The remainder, apparently of 14th century date, ...
The site of the old Church of All Saints which was originally built in the Medieval period. The nave and tower were rebuilt in 1747. It was finally demolished around 1867 when the present church was built. It stood in Sherbourne.
1 Described as site no 79.
3 Trackway shows on aerial photograph. This trackway is associated with an undated settlement (PRN 966) and enclosures (PRN 967).
4 Scheduled as Warwickshire Monument No ...
The course of a trackway, possibly a drove road, of Medieval date. It is located 300m north east of the church, Sherbourne.
1 A turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775.
A toll road from Warwick to Stratford upon Avon established during the Imperial period. Travellers would have had to pay to use the road.
1 Turnpike road, established by Acts of 1779 onwards. Part of a route from Leicester, the original Acts for which were passed in 1753-4, but which proved too unwieldy to ...
A toll road running from Warwick to Paddle Brook. Travellers would have had to pay a toll to use the road during the Imperial period.
1 The church was said by both Rous and in an inquisition of 1478 to have been demolished, though an incumbent was present as late as 1543. It ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of Fulbrooke Medieval Church. The site lies just to the east of the Sherbourne to Hampton Lucy road, 450m from the right-angle bend.
1 At Northbrook was the site of the manor house of the Grants, a centre of Catholic disaffection during the reigns of Elizabeth and James I. This was ...
The site of a manor house dating from the Medieval or Post Medieval period. It is known from documentary evidence. The manor house is situated 300m north west of Northbrook Spinney, Fulbrook.
1 In 1392 the manor house at Fulbrook included a gatehouse with chamber above and stable below outside the moat. The manor house was falling into disrepair and ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of the gatehouse of a Medieval manor house which may now be incorporated into the present farmhouse. It lies 400m south of the right-angle bend on the Sherbourne to Hampton Lucy road.
1 At the bottom of the field adjoining that containing the site of Fulbrook Castle and near Hampton Wood are stone foundations supposed to be the site of the ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this may be the site of a Medieval lodge. It is situated on land just north west of The Forest Hermitage.
1 15th century castle of John, Duke of Bedford. There are no remains above ground, but excavations some years ago are said to have produced brick-lined foundations, and recent ploughing ...
The site of Fulbrook Castle which was built in the 1400s, but is said to have been ruined by 1478. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs and much brick and tile dating to the Medieval period has been found.