1 Earthwork called Old Sand Pit shown at this NGR on 1886 map.
2 The feature is included on the 1905 map (without its label) but not on the more recent ...
The site of a possible quarry, with a trackway, dating to the Imperial period. It is marked as a sand pit on the 1905 Ordnance Survey map. It is still visible as an earthwork and is situated near Fernhill Oldhouse Barn.
1 A hollow way and a 19th century house site recorded in 1982.
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Imperial period. A hollow way and a house platform are visible as earthworks. The settlement site is situated 500m east of Coughton Court.
1 An early 19th century map shows an area of settlement at Lower Green, where there has been no occupation for at least 100 years. Earthworks indicate a small settlement ...
The site of a deserted settlement at Lower Green dating to the Imperial period . The site covers the area south of Old Milverton down to the River Avon. The remains of the settlement, including house platforms and hollow ways, are visible as earthworks.
1 Quarry marked on OS map of 1886.
The site of a gravel pit from which gravel was extracted during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The gravel pit was situated 100m west of the church in Stretton Under Fosse.
1 It is reported that this Deserted Medieval Village which he discovered and planned in 1967 was levelled and ploughed in 1968.
2 This plan shows a number of possible hollow ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Imperial period. It lies 200m north west of Chapel Farm.
1 A road runs across the S part of the parish from Warnap E towards Henley. It was known as Colliers’s Lane, apparently referring to the activity of charcoal burners ...
The site of a road dating to the Imperial period, called Collier's Lane. It forms a hollow way at its western end and runs from Warnap towards Henley.
1 Marked on the OS 1st edition as a trackway or hollow way, it appears to be cutting rather than a simple trackway. The line leads from another trackway ...
Earthwork marked on OS 1st edition 1880's as a trackway or hollow way just to the east of Print Woods.
1 A ‘salt maere’ (pool, possibly providing refreshment for pack animals) is referred to on the boundary of Alveston in a charter of AD 985. The fishpond in Goldicote Park ...
There is Early Medieval documentary evidence for the existence of a 'salt mere' at this site, associated with a trackway. The present fishpond in Goldicote Park, 300m south west of Long Coppice, may be its descendant.
1 Excavations (EWA3238) carried out in advance of the laying of a sewage pipe across the remains of Bascote shrunken Medieval settlement (WMA 1702) also found the remains of 18th ...
Archaeological excavation uncovered a well, a cobbled trackway and pottery dating to the Imperial period. This may be a settlement site, perhaps linked to work being carried out in the area in the 1700s either on the canal or at the quarries. It is situated 100m north of Bascote.