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 2 Site of Anchor inn, 1 Bridge street, Stratford upon Avon
Site of historic inn recorded in F White & Co.’s and Pigot’s databases. The latter shows it in existence ...
Site of historic inn situated on the south side of Bridge street at the junction with Waterside.
1 2 Falcon Commercial hotel, 1-3 Chapel street, Stratford upon Avon
Historic inn now hotel recorded in F White & Co.’s and Pigot’s databases. The latter gives a date of 1828.
Situated ...
Historic inn now an hotel situated on the west side of Chapel street at the junction with Scholars lane.
1 2 Old Thatch tavern, Greenhill street, Stratford upon Avon
Historic public house recorded on F White & Co.’s, and Pigot’s databases. The latter shows it in existence in 1828.
Situated on ...
Historic public house situated on the south side of Greenhill Street at the junction with Rother Street.
1 2 3 Shakespeare hotel and posting establishment, 17 Chapel street, Stratford upon Avon
Historic inn/hotel recorded on F White & Co.’s, and Pigot’s databases. The latter shows it in existence ...
Historic inn/hotel situated on the east side of Chapel street.
1A coppice wood of 20.8 ha. Almost certainly recorded in the 1279 Hundred Rolls, the wood can probably be identified with one of the two woods recorded in Domesday Book ...
Piles Coppice, a Medieval (and probably earlier) managed woodland. The woodland comprises: wood banks, a deer park bank and evidence of ancient coppicing.
1 A 4.1 ha remnant of a larger coppice wood, mostly cleared in the mid-20th century for housing. Despite ambiguities in the record, this is probaby one of the ...
Binley Common Wood, a Medieval (and probably earlier) managed woodland; former grazed common wood. The woodland comprises: woodbanks; a possible Medieval "trench"; an area of ridge and furrow and evidence of ancient coppicing.