1 Usher reports the existence of a lime kiln at this point, recorded on the OS 1st Edition.
2 The 1905 25″ records buildings at this point but does not record ...
The site of a lime kiln dating to the Imperial period. It was located 400m north west of Southam Holt.
1 Limeworks shown. Five kilns are marked.
2 All of these features have disappeared.
The site of five lime kilns from the Imperial period. They are marked on a map of 1775. They were located 350m west of Myer Bridge.
1 Smithy marked on 1885 map.
The site of a blacksmiths workshop which was in use during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1885. It was situated 250m south east of the church, Southam.
1 Gas works marked on 1885 map.
2 Some buildings, converted into a house, survive. The site is on the bank of the river on the Priors Marston (?Welsh) Road. ...
The site of gas works, where gas was produced during the Imperial period. Some of the buildings survive, now converted into a house. The site is in the area of Priors Meadow, Southam.
1 Derelict truncated red brick tower cemented over, in poor condition, empty. Three storey. Dates from c1800. Rebuilt after fire in 1849. Had four storeys, four patent sails and three ...
Southam 'Old Mill', the derelict remains of a windmill built in the Imperial period. Documentary sources suggest that a windmill may have stood at the site during the Medieval period. The site is located to the north of Mill Road, Southam.
1 Southam New Mill. 1775: Not marked on Earl of Craven’s Estate Map. 1830: West’s Directory gives three millers. c1834: FirstEdition OS map gives both Old Mill and New Mill. ...
Southam 'New Mill', the site of a windmill in use in the Imperial period. It was marked on the first edition Ordnance Survey map, and it stood 125m north east east of Stoneton Close.
1 In a field known as Mill Pits, the River Itchen makes a sharp loop. The loop has been cut by what appears to be an artificial leet, thus creating ...
This may be the site of the watermill at Southam recorded in the Domesday survey. The mill did not survive the Medieval period, but a possible watercourse is still visible as an earthwork. The site lies 200m north east of Thorpe Bridge.
1 Widening of the Warwick Street bridge over the River Stowe in 1969 involved the destruction of a building which had been used as a tannery. In the Warwickshire County ...
The site of a tannery which may have been established in the Medieval period. The tannery burned down in 1657 and was replaced in 1659. It ceased as a tannery in 1830 and an excavation in 1969 uncovered cattle horns. It was situated on Warwick Street, Southam.