1 During excavations in 1983 (PRN 2957) the circular platform of a horse engine was uncovered c0.2m below ground level. This was originally connected to a wheel on the adjacent ...
The site of a horse engine, a horse-driven wheel which provided power to drive a threshing machine. The horse engine was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated 200m north east of the church at Baginton.
1 ‘Coal Pit Close’ marked.
2 ‘Coal Pit Close’ marked.
3 No visible traces during site visit.
The possible site of a Post Medieval quarry or coal workings. It is marked on an estate map dating to 1597. The site is located 500m south of Stareton.
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 The site of a quarry and its associated structures observed and noted by the Planning Archaeologist January 1st 2003.
The site of a former quarry and the remains of the associated mineral railway, engine shed, metal barn, brick buildings, concrete buildings, platform, wagon loading and unloading structures. The location is 2km northeast of Harbury.
1 The site is marked on the first edition 6″ map of 1886.
2 The site can be seen as an earthwork from the road.
The site of a quarry and kilns complex visible as an earthwork and identified from documentary evidence. The location is immediately to the southeast of Chesterton Wood.
1 Lime workings marked.
The possible site of a lime kiln or quarry which dates back to the Imperial period. It is marked on a map of 1831. The lime works were situated 800m north east of Long Lawford.
1 A mound at SP33077235 is likely to be the Hundred mound of Motslow.
2On modern OS maps this is shown as a quarry.
The site of a mound which is visible as an earthwork. The mound may have been the Post Medieval meeting place of the hundred of Motslow. It is situated 400m south of Stoneleigh.
1 Limeworks marked. An adjoining long depression is marked as a lime pit.
The site of a lime works where lime was made during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The site is located 800m east of King's Newnham.
1 Site of mine shaft marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of a mine shaft which dates from the Imperial period. It was situated 500m south west of Heath End.
1 Site of Griff Colliery marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of Griff Colliery, where coal was mined. The colliery was in use from the Imperial period and was situated at Heath End.
1 Site of mine shaft marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of a mine shaft known as Old Shaft at Heath End. It was in use during the Imperial period.
1 Site of Nuneaton Colliery marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of Nuneaton Colliery which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated 1km north of Coton Lawn Farm.
1 Site of mine shaft marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of a mine shaft, from which coal was extracted during the Imperial period. It was situated 100m west of Bermuda Road, Chilvers Coton. The mine shaft is marked on the first edition Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 Site of mine shaft marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of a mine shaft which was in use during the Imperial period. The site lies 50m east of Bermuda Road, Chilvers Coton, and is marked on the first edition Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 Site of Haunchwood colliery marked on OS map of 1902.
The site of Haunchwood Colliery where coal was mined during the Imperial period. It was situated 500m south of Galley Common.
1 Site of Stockingford Colliery marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of Stockingford Colliery which was used during the Imperial period for mining coal. It was situated on Nuneaton Common.
1 Site of mine shaft marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of a mine shaft dating from the Imperial period. It was situated 800m north of Coten Lawn, in Stockingford.
1 Site of Nuneaton Colliery marked on OS map of 1913.
The site of Nuneaton Colliery, where coal was mined during the Imperial period. The site is located 1km south east of Nuneaton Common.
1 Originally owned by a firm called ?Alloy Bricks. The kilns were originally coal-fired, the coal coming by canal; c1963 they installed oil-fired German machinery including a linear kiln and ...
The site of Napton Brickworks which are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. They date from the Imperial period through to Modern times, closing down in the 1970s. They were located between the Oxford Canal and the Napton Windmill.
1 Site of Haunchwood Colliery marked on OS map of 1887.
The site of Haunchwood Colliery, where coal was mined, which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated 800m north of Stockingford.
1 Quantities of Roman brick and tile found deeply stratified in 2.4m vertical riverbank. Also an enamelled plate brooch and, 50m to SE, quantities of box flue tile found in ...
The site of a tile kiln and a quarry both dating to the Roman period and known from finds of tile and burnt clay. It was situated 800m north east of Blunt's Green.
1 A colliery is shown on the Poleworth tithe map c.1850
A colliery is shown on the Polesworth tithe map c.1850. The site is situated approximately 65m to the south west of Bull's Head Bridge.
1 Two pits and a group of linear banks seen on aerial photographs to the south of Marston mill were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. ...
Two pits and a group of linear banks can be seen on aerial photographs to the south of Marston Mill.
1 Large metal wheel found in a back garden. Thought to be associated with Bedworth Charity Colliery. From the description it looks like a component part of a ...
Cog Wheel made of solid metal. 3ft in diameter and 1ft deep with a central hole. Found on the site of the former Bedworth Charity Colliery and is presumably related. Description matches part of a coal tippler.