1 Pound marked.
2 1977: Renovated by local youth service.
3 Walls intact and standing to original height although there are large cracks. The gate was off its hinges and resting against ...
A pound which was used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. It is situated at Haseley Green.
1 A small square area labelled ‘pound’ by the side of the track.
2 No surviving trace on the ground.
The site of a pound dating back to the Imperial period, when it was used for penning livestock. The site lies on the south side of Rising Lane, Baddesley Clinton.
1 `The Lunt’ is an almost vertical wooded escarpment above the River Sowe. An ideal location for a Roman fort. In 1960-1 an excavation on the E and W slopes ...
The Lunt, a fort that was rebuilt several times throughout the Roman period. A section of the defences, the barracks and a granary have been found from the earliest phase of fort during archaeological excavations. The Roman fort is situated north of Coventry Road, Baginton.
1 Pound marked.
2 Pound marked.
3 The only remains of the pound now is a 1.2m high, 4.6m long stone to the E of the smithy. This could originally have been ...
The site of a pound which was used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. The pound is marked on the Ordnance Survey maps of 1886 and 1905. It was situated 200m south east of Oak Farm.
1 There was a mill in Kingsbury in 1086, valued at 9s 4d. In the 12th century it was granted to Polesworth Abbey and remained a possession of the Abbey ...
The remains of Hemlingford Watermill. Documentary evidence indicates that it was built in the Medieval period and went out of use during the Imperial period. The site lies 150m south east of Hemlingford Bridge.
1 Stoneleigh village pound was here, between river and road. The fence survived in 1941. JMM February 1951.
2 No trace visible when the site was visited.
The site of a pound, used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. It was located to the south of Stoneleigh Bridge.
1 This is a stone range of three bays of the early 17th century – older than the present house.
2 The central bay has a steep gable containing a round-headed ...
Honington Hall Stables, a stable range dating to the Post Medieval period, but older than the present house. The building is located 400m north west of Honington.
1 17th century Farmhouse, L-shaped plan, rubble stone walls with stone dressings. The central stone chimney has a Tudor fireplace. Deep stone lintels on doors and windows.
3 Appeared ...
A Post Medieval farmhouse which is situated in Meadow Way, Pillerton Priors.
1 Probably middle 18th century. Stone ashlar plinth; red brick in Flemish bond; old plain-tile hipped roof; various brick stacks. L-shaped plan. 2-storey, 7-bay main range, with ...
A stable block which was built during the Imperial period which is 'L' shaped in plan. The building is situated 700m east of Newbold Comyn Park.
1 The present house appears Victorian, but remains of a smaller, older house are seen incorporated into outbuildings indicating this is an old site. This site is marked as ...
The present house dates to the Imperial period but an older house has been incorporated into the standing outbuildings. It is situated at Back Lane, High Cross.
1 Windmill House is said to be a 19th century brick building, but may incorporate part of an older house. The outbuildings are late 16th century timber framed. ...
A brick house built during the Imperial period but which may contain the remains of an older house. There is also a Post Medieval timber framed outbuilding. It is situated 950m south east of Kingswood Brook.
1 A Manor House appears to have existed on the site of the present Rowington Hall at an early date and may have been built by Adeliza, wife of Roger ...
A manor house was first built on the site of the present Rowington Hall in the Medieval period, but documentary records suggest it was rebuilt in the early Post Medieval period. During the Imperial period it was altered and refaced in stone. It stands opposite Rowington church.
1 Bearley Mill started as the Milk Marketing Board’s grass drying centre in 1948, the dried grass being returned to other farms in bales for animal feed. This was in ...
Bearley Mill. A modern building which began as the Milk Marketing Board's grass drying centre in 1948. It is now a country shop. The building lies on Snitterfield Road, Bearley
A pound is marked on the 6″ Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
The site of a pound which was used in the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was situated at Little Morrell.
1 A pound marked on the first edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map
A pound which was in use during the Imperial period is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was situated in Fenny Compton.
1 A wooden stable block of a military pattern dating perhaps to the 1890s and constructed during World War 1. It was probably rebuilt at its present site, possibly during ...
A wooden stable block of a military pattern dating from the Imperial period.
1 A small building is shown on late 19th/early 20th century OS maps. This area once formed part of the property to the north-west. An aerial photograph taken in 1964 ...
A small building shown on late 19th/early 20th century OS maps which was replaced or extended in the 20th century. Archaeological observation during topsoil stripping recorded the remains of this replacement outbuilding. The site is located at Stoneside, Binton.
1 In 1478 Thomas Morgan owned Sambourne manor house, called ‘Taillors’ after a previous tenant. In the C18th/C19th a house called Tailors occupied the site of the now ...
Now occupied by Middletown Farm.
Remains of the water mill of Maxstoke priory.
1 Fragments of a granary, &c, to the NW of the Abbey precinct.
6 At the extreme W end of the Precinct wall two ...
The site of Maxstoke Priory corn mill and granary. The buildings were constructed during the medieval period and the site is located 200m west of the church in Maxtoke.
1 Pound marked in 1905.
Site of a pound which would have been used for penning animals in the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. The pound was located on School Street, Wolston.
1 Here was the ‘Castle End’ pound. It was triangular in shape and part of the two N walls survive flanking the entrance path to a house in Borrow Well ...
The site of a pound used for penning livestock in the Imperial period. It was situated 50m north of the Police station, on the site of a modern hotel.
1 Kenilworth had two pounds (see PRN 3253). This one was on the S side of the High Street.
2 The pound is still standing. Set back off the front of ...
A pound which was used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. It is located on the south side of the High Street in Kenilworth.
1 Birdingbury Manor, also known as Birdingbury Hall, is described by Pevsner as a “large symmetrical essentially neo-Jacobean mansion”, but he fails to date it more precisely.
2 The 1962 sale ...
Birdingbury Hall, a manor house which was built during the Post Medieval period. Minor alterations have been made to the building in subsequent years but it remains largely in its original form. It is situated on the north side of Birdingbury.
1 Pound marked.
2 There is now no evidence. The ground is stony and covered in nettles, suggesting that the pound has been demolished.
Site of a pound which was used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. The pound was situated 600m south east of Fall's Bridge.