1 House of Augustin Friars founded by Ralph Lord Basset of Drayton in 1375. Church and buildings took some time to complete; a legacy was given in 1383 towards their ...
The site of Atherstone Friary, an Augustinian Friary that was built during the Medieval period. It was situated 150m south of Friary Road, Atherstone.
1 St.Mary’s Priory was founded in 1832 for nuns of the Order of St. Benedict, with a girl’s school attached. The buildings, which include a church with a bell-tower, are ...
St Mary's Priory which was founded in the Imperial period for an order of Bendictine nuns. The priory is situated to the west of Princethorpe Great Wood.
1 Former Primitive Methodist chapel. A very small building, seating perhaps 25 or 30. Of red brick, with blue brick diaper patterning. Slate roof, prominent carved bargeboards, a small central ...
A Methodist chapel that was built during the Imperial period. The building is no longer in use as a chapel but is situated on Plott Lane, Stretton on Dunsmore.
1 A small alien priory founded by Hubert Boldran between 1086 and 1194. This priory belonged to the Benedictine abbey of St Pierre-sur-Dive. In 1388 the hall, stable, grange and ...
The site of Wolston Priory which was founded during the Medieval period. It is situated 600m north east of St Margaret's Church, Wolston.
1 Methodist chapel dating from 1837.
2 Red brick with a slate roof. Not in use, but in fairly good condition.
Flecknoe Methodist Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is no longer in use as a place of worship, and is situated 100m north east of the church.
1 The Abbey of Radmore was transferred to Stoneleigh in 1154-5. The foundation stone of the church of the new Cistercian Abbey was laid in 1155. In 1241 the monastery ...
The site of Stoneleigh Abbey, a Cistercian monastery that was founded during the Medieval period. Few traces of the abbey buildings survive above the ground except for the gatehouse. The site is located southwest of The National Agricultural Centre.
1 The S aisle of the conventual church partly survives in the N side of the present house. The semicircular arch at the E end was apparently between the aisle ...
Stoneleigh Abbey Church was built during the Medieval period. The church no longer exists in its own right but parts of if have been incorporated into a house that was on the same site. It is located to the east of the abbey remains.
1 A meeting was in existence by 1673 in which year a conventicle held at the barn of John Halford was the cause of George Fox’s last arrest and imprisonment. ...
A former Society of Friends' Quaker Meeting House dating to the Post Medieval period. It is located 200m south of Middle Street, Armscote.
1 A simple stone structure with no distinguishing features or dating evidence other than it conforms in architectural style to other nonconformist chapels of 19th century date.
A Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located in Chapel Lane, Newbold on Stour.
1 Marked on the 1906 2nd edition OS map as the Rectory and as Tall Trees on the 1967 OS map.
2 Now known as The Old Rectory and used as ...
A vicarage known as The Old Rectory which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Ryton Road, Bubbenhall.
1 A Wesleyan Methodist chapel, built in 1880.
A Methodist chapel dating to the Imperial period. It is situated on New Street, Shipston on Stour.
1 Stone built with tiled roof. Lintel stone bears legend: Wesleyan Chapel. The stone is ashlar, although a little crude, and the pointed windows have iron-latticed frames and coloured glass ...
A Methodist Chapel, built in the Imperial period, and now coverted into a house. It is situated off Bank View, Butlers Marston.
1 Legends about the foundation survive and place the foundation at a number of dates between 839 and 1066. A certain amount of the history of the Abbey is known. ...
Polesworth Abbey, a nunnery house governed by an abbess. The Abbey dates to the Early Medieval period and lies 200m east of Bridge Street, Polesworth.
1 The old vicarage, presumably that of the 16th century, was demolished in the middle of the 19th century and the present one built. It is marked as building ...
The site of a vicarage dating from the Post Medieval period, which was demolished and rebuilt during the 19th century. It was situated next to Rowington church.
1 The Methodists came to Bearley when a member of the Snitterfield Chapel moved and opened his house for worship. Before the Chapel was built in Ash Lane in 1863, ...
Bearley Methodist Chapel was built during the Imperial period. The Chapel is now a private house, it lies on Ash Lane Bearley.
Methodist Chapel
1 A Wesleyan Methodist chapel marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905.
A Methodist Wesleyan Chapel, dating from the Imperial period, and shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. It is situated in Henley High Street, north of St John's Church.
1 A Methodist Chapel is marked on the First Edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map.
A Methodist Chapel dating from the Imperial period is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is situated at Yarningale Common.
1 Much altered building, now cottages, refronted in brick. The birthplace of Sir William Dugdale in 1605.
The Old Rectory, a house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated at Church End.
1 Archaeological recording took place at Chapel End Methodist Church prior to the building being sold for refurbishment as a dwelling. Three distinct phases of build were discerned, the original ...
Chapel End Methodist Church, built in 1887. The chapel is located at Chapel End, Nuneaton.
1 The only reference to the Vicarage, presumably built in the 1850’s as it was attached to St John’s Church which was built in 1852, is on the 1886 OS ...
The site of the Vicarage built during the Imperial period and which is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. A housing estate now stands on this site, though when the Vicarage was demolished is not known. It was situated 400m west of the cricket ground, Kenilworth.
1 Sir William de Clinton founded a large chantry or college in 1330. In 1336 he turned it into a priory of Austin canons. The actual charter ...
The remains of Maxstoke Priory, an Augustinian priory of Medieval date. It was dissolved in 1536. The site is 500m northwest of Priory Wood.
1 A Victorian vicarage in good condition and inhabited, although according to locals, any church connection ceased in 1983.
Marton vicarage which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated North Street, Marton.
1 House, formerly rectory. c1830. Flemish bond buff brick with string course to main block, and brick dentil cornice throughout. Late Georgian style. 2 storeys.
2 Building is notable for its ...
Frankton Rectory, a vicarage that was built as during the Imperial period. The building is no longer in use as a vicarage but is situated 100m south east of the church at Frankton.
1 Letter from Rev John Stevinson of St Leonard’s Church, Birdingbury, with some thoughts on his church and its environs and a pamphlet which he has written.
2 House, formerly rectory. ...
The Old Rectory, a vicarage which was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated on Main Street, Birdingbury.