1 A small brick 19th century house with tiled roof, now part of a social club. The windows have been altered and there are steps up to the door.
A house built in brick with a tiled roof. It was constructed during the Imperial period and is situated in Austrey Road, Warton.
1 House attached to shop with house, both 19th century and constructed in brick with tiled roof and stone lintels. There is also a post office.
Alvecote General Stores, buildings, including two houses, that were constructed during the Imperial period. They are situated at Alvecote.
1 This is a timber framed building which has been rendered with plaster. Some of the beams are still evident inside. There is a central chimney stack. ...
Lowsonford Post Office is a timber framed building which dates from the Post Medieval period. It has been rendered with plaster. It is situated in Lowsonford.
1 The excavation of trial trenches at Abbey Works, Bleachfield Street, Alcester recorded a number of features associated with Roman occupation of the site including a hearth with metalworking slag, ...
A road, hearth, metalworking slag, pits, postholes, gullies, beam slots, ditches,a well, and foundations of stone buildings were recorded during evaluation and subsequent excavation at the former Abbey Works, Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Finds included: pottery, amphora, bone, metal objects including jewellery and glass.
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 Three trial trenches were excavated within the existing car park area in connection with a planning application for a proposed new extension to the hotel. The trial trenches ...
Trial trenching revealed walls associated with a former 19th century kitchen block. The kitchen block was known to have been demolished in the 1920s. The site lay west of the Abbeygate buildings at Coombe Abbey.
1 The watching brief on ground reduction and the excavation of foundation trenches for a new extension to the rear of the Clarendon Arms/Harrington’s Restautant recorded walling and part of ...
19th century walling and part of a modern quarry tile floor were recorded during the construction of a building extension. The walls were likely to have been part of a building shown on the 1905 OS map. The site lay immediately behind 38 Castle Hill, Kenilworth.
1 A watching brief during the reduction of ground level for a new Criminal Justice Centre and associated external facilities recorded four brick-built wells running in a line at ...
Post-medieval walls and wells recorded during the reduction of ground level across the site. These probably belonged to the terrace of houses shown on the First Edition OS map of 1887. The site is located at Wheat Street/Vicarage Street.
1 The excavation of two trial trenches prior to the erection of 23 dwellings recorded the remains of 19th and 20th century buildings overlying a depth of subsoil and natural ...
The remains of 19th and 20th century buildings were recorded during evaluation trenching. The site is located at 50 Coventry Road, Warwick.
1 Archaeological evaluation within the SAM of Tiddington Roman Settlement identified four broad phases of activity.
In Phase 1, the Late Iron Age-early Roman period, a co-axial field system appeared to ...
Evaluation trenching recorded a field system laid out during the Late Iron Age-early Roman period, with a possibly associated building. A second phase of activity dated to the 2nd century AD. The site is located north of Tiddington Road, Tiddington.
1 A brick-built well and wall foundations of 19th century date were recored during archaeoloigicla observation and evaluation work associated with the construction of new houses.
A brick-built well and wall foundations of 19th cenutry date were recorded during archaeological observation and evaluation work at 4-6 Evesham Street, Alcester.
1 1975: Digging of an overflow sump in the back garden of a house on Main Street revealed an area of buried paving at a depth of 1m below the ...
The remains of a floor were found in Main Street, Newbold on Avon. The floor might be associated with a building but no wall foundations were recorded.
1 On the 1886 and 1903 OS maps and on Baker’s map of 1831, a building alongside the canal here is labelled Stretton Wharf. The building is two storey ...
Stretton Wharf, a canal wharf where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods. It dates from the Imperial period, and is located south east of Bloore's Spinney, and is marked on the Ordnance Survey maps of 1886 and 1903.
1 To the west of Bleachfield Street. Clay floors with post holes having a 2.1m spacing were found together with dry stone walling. Below this were traces of C1 ...
During an excavation to the west of Bleachfield Street, Alcester, the remains of a Roman building were found.
1 An isolated rectangular tower of three storeys said to have been the NW of four angle towers of the great house begun by Thomas Spencer (d1630). There are no ...
A tower dating to the Post Medieval period. It may be all that remains of what was once a larger building. The tower is situated 100m north west of Layland Plantation.
1 The roofless remains of two buildings exist S of the church. The smaller is about 4.9m square and 11.4m from the church. It has a W doorway similar ...
The remains of Wroxall Priory, a nunnery founded in the Medieval period. The remains of two buildings exist on the site; the refectory or dining room; and the chapter house, where the nuns met to carry out business transactions. The site is 700m southwest of Wroxall Village.
1 An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. ...
An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. Pottery analysis suggests that the main occupation phase was mid-1st - early 2nd-century AD.
1 Under the wealthy and ostentatious John of Gaunt the castle was first repaired and then, from 1391 onwards, converted from a feudal stronghold into a palace. To this period ...
Phase three of the building of Kenilworth castle included the Great Hall with cellars below, the 'Strong Tower' which housed the treasury, and the 'Saintlow Tower'. This phase of building began in about 1391 and continued into the 1570s.
1 1976: An area of 11m by 17m was excavated in advance of redevelopment. 1m of Post Medieval deposit sealed the site. The latest feature on the site was a ...
The remains of several Medieval buildings were excavated in Bleachfield Street, Alcester. The buildings were indicated by post holes, walls and hearths.
2 The foundations of the College (PRN 1984) cut an earlier pathway. Running E-W under the college was a well-built wall, built with re-used stone and including architectural fragments of ...
Archaeological excavations at St Mary's College revealed Medieval structures including walls, pits, buildings and a well.
1 A building known as the Deer House. It backs onto a small wood. Photographs were taken in 1980 and by 1981 it had collapsed. The building was 19.8 by ...
The site of Deer House, now a ruined building. The house was built during the Imperial Period. It lies close to the southern weir between Goodrest Farm and Fox Covert.
1 A canal cottage is marked on the OS 25″.
Documentary evidence suggests that a canal cottage stood 600m north of Tuttle Hill, Nuneaton, during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1888.
1 Lockhouses marked on early OS map.
2 Inaccessible.
The site of lock houses which date to the Imperial period and are situated 1km north west of Whittington. They are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 Excavation in 1956-8 in the field W of Birch Abbey – a complicated series of post holes, slots and gullies, cut into the levelled natural clay and associated with ...
The remains of post holes and a wall, found during an excavation, suggest that a building existed on this site during the Roman period. A Roman ditch was also found. Finds included pottery and evidence for metal working. The site was located on Chantry Crescent.