1 A 17th century ashlar structure. It resembles an isolated gate pier, but is always called a sundial: there is however no dial. Tall pillar with square base ...
A sundial, constructed from a tall pillar of ashlar, that is Post Medieval in date. It is situated 250m east of Bridge Street, Polesworth.
1 Octagonal ?late 17th century pigeoncote of stone with dressed angles. Old tiled roof rising to moulded wood lantern. Sundial on face.
2 Possibly earlier than the house. ...
Honington Hall Dovecote, a stone building used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. It has a sundial on its south wall. It dates to the Post Medieval period and is situated at Honington.
1 Entrance gate piers to West Meads.
2 17th century stone piers with moulded caps and ball-heads.
The gate piers which were built during the Post Medieval period as the entrance to a Post Medieval house in Butlers Marston. They are constructed of stone with moulded stone caps and ball-heads.
1 C. 1540: Walls mostly of modern brickwork. 19th century: Farm building rebuilt except for the massive stone base to the south chimney. There is some internal 16th ...
Moat House Farm, a house which was built during the Post Medieval period. It has a sundial scratched on the chimney. The house is situated 900m south east of Shustoke.
1 Archaeological evaluation trenching in advance of proposed residential development recorded post-medieval rubbish or quarrying pits. Several tree boles and other small features may have been the remains of 18th ...
Post-medieval quarry or rubbish pits, possible 18th/19th century garden features, and a possible 19th or 20th century formal entrance, were recorded during evaluation trenching of the site. The site is located at Bread and Meat Close, Friars Street, Warwick.
1 An early 18th century wrought iron gateway consisting of a central gate, four square piers, a screen and side gates. Elaborate scrollwork and ornamentation decorates the gateway. Grade 1. ...
A Post Medieval gate way which is situated at Newnham Paddox.
1 A cobble surface found across the excavated area is likely to have been the original courtyard to the existing house when construction started in the early 16th century. ...
Post Medieval features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court. Features included a yard, walls and floors relating to the construction and occupation of the east range and a revetment at the south part of the moat.
For a small village, Church Lawford certainly had its fair share of clock makers, of which Daniel Dalton was one. There is an intriguing record that may explain how the ...