1 A probable mill dam was found at the above grid reference.
2 Bank up to 2.1m high on NE side and 2.4m on SW side.
3 A large earthwork straddling the ...
The possible site of a mill dam dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. It is located 300m west of Rouncil Lane.
1 ‘Ford/Foot Bridge’ marked.
2 There is now no indication of a ford.
Site of an undated ford, a shallow point in a river where people, animals and vehicles would have crossed the Inchford Brook. It was located where Kites Nest Lane, Beausale, crosses the brook.
1 In 1545 Francis Goodere owned ‘Netherwalke myll’ at Baginton situated ‘below the place where the castle once stood’. A fulling mill is recorded in 1656. It continued as a ...
Baginton Fulling Mill, a watermill that was in use from the Post Medieval period onwards. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks. The mill was situated 1km south west of Baginton.
1 ‘Stepping stones’ marked.
2 Also recorded with three stones drawn on a sketch map of Wappenbury dated 1830.
3 No stones now visible, though there may be when the water level ...
The site of a ford of uncertain date but the spot is marked as 'Stepping Stones' on the Ordnance Survey map of 1906. Traces of the track leading down to the ford are still visible on both sides of the river. It was situated 200m south east of the church, Wappenbury.
1 This was probably on the site of at least one of the two mills in Stoneleigh recorded in the Domesday Survey. By the 16th century there were six mills ...
The site of Stoneleigh Mill, a watermill which dates back to the Medieval period. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks. The site lies to the north of Stoneleigh.
1 There were two mills at Stoneleigh in 1086. By 1291 there were other mills at Stareton and Cryfield.
2 It is likely that the mill at Stareton was situated at ...
The possible site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period. The mill is known to have existed from documentary evidence. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks and are situated to the west of Stareton.
1 This is called “Washford Meadow” on an 18th century map, but no fording place is shown.
2 It is also called “Wahsforde” on the annotated map, but no reference is ...
The possible site of a ford dating to the Imperial period. The site lies 1km south west of Stoneleigh.
1 A greenway runs from Husbandman’s End eastward to the River Stour. The ancient track crossed the river by Neal’s Ford of which there is now no trace since the ...
The site of Neal's Ford, a shallow point in a river where people, animals and vehicles would have crossed. It dates back to the Early Medieval period and is known from documentary evidence. It was located 400m north east of the Post Office, Shipston on Stour.
1 One of two probable mill sites in Offchurch. Three mills are recorded in 1279. In 1585 two mills are mentioned but one of them had disappeared by 1702. Traces ...
Offchurch Bury Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period, and which was probably still in use in the Post Medieval period. A grooved sluice and traces of watercourses survive. The location is to the south of Floodgate Spinney.
1 A weir marked on the First Edition Ordnance Survey map.
A weir is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and is located on the River Avon at Bidford Grange.
1 Field work suggests a mill and mill pond existed, being triangular in shape, to the east of Rowington Church and west of Foxbrook Farm, in the valley bottom. ...
The site of a watermill, mill pond and dam which were in use during the Medieval period, though it probably ceased to be used during either the 1400s or 1500s. It was located 250m east of the church, Rowington.
1 Alveston ford was the ‘Doddanford’ of the charters and was a continuation of the trackway on the E side of Alveston Pasture called ‘Hryaveg’ (Ridgeway) in the bounds of ...
The second of two possible sites for the Early Medieval Dodda's Ford, a shallow part of the river where animals, people and vehicles would have crossed. It is referred to in a 10th century charter. The site lies 500 m north of Alveston.
1 There is no actual date for the instigation of the ford, but certainly it has existed for a couple of hundred years (and possibly it goes back to Medieval ...
The site of a ford which has been in use since at least the Imperial period and may date back to the Medieval period. The ford is still in use and a tarmac road runs through it, although the stone walls either side are much older. It is situated 200m east of Kenilworth Castle.
1 Opposite Cliffe Cottage is the probable site of Welcombe Ford, referred to in 1570.
The probable site of Welcombe Ford, a Post Medieval ford for which there is documentary evidence from the 16th century. It crossed the Avon 700m north west of the church at Alveston.
1 A trackway on the eastern side of Alveston Pasture is called Hryewg (ridgeway) in the bounds of an Alveston Charter and this is possibly of pre-Roman origin. It ...
The site of a ford which may date to pre Roman times. It lies on an ancient trackway crossing the Avon 500m north west of Tiddington.
1 A trackway on the eastern side of Alveston Pasture is possibly of Roman origin and is mentioned in an Alveston Charter. The route continues to the fords at ...
A ford across the River Avon. At one stage it carried the Roman road from Alcester (hence Straet-Ford) but it was in use both before and after this period. It was located in the area of the present Clopton Bridge.
1 There is an Anglo Saxon charter reference to the Herpath which crosses the river at Cliff Ford.
2 Clifforda referred to in charter of AD 922. The name probably means ...
The site of a ford across the River Stour which was probably in use from the Early Medieval period. It is situated at Clifford Chambers bridge.
2 A mill is known to have existed at Alveston since 966 and in the Domesday survey there were three mills. In 1240 there were two mills and a mill ...
Alveston Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the early Medieval period. Derelict by 1886, it was demolished in the 1940s. Only a weir survives. The mill was 400m north east of the church.
1 Along the S side of the grounds an old packhorse road known as Warwick Lane runs down to a ford across the Arrow, beyond which the old road from ...
The site of a ford, a shallow point in a river where people, vehicles and animals would have crossed. The ford is undated but is still in use. It is situated 500m east of Coughton Cross.
1 The dredging of a deep channel resulted in the discovery of an area of compact gravel, which when cut into by the bucket of the drag-line, was seen ...
The site of a ford, a shallow point used by people, animals and vehicles for crossing the River Avon. The ford dates back to the Roman period and was found during an archaeological excavation. It is situated 100m east of Bidford Bridge.
1 A possible causeway, noted during trenching by contractors for sewers, immediately west of the Bridge. The “causeway” was overlaid by up to 2 metres of post medieval material ...
The site of a ford, a shallow point used by people, animals and vehicles for crossing the River Avon. It dates to the Roman period and is situated 50m west of Bidford Bridge.
1 The Ryknild Street crossed the Avon by the ford at Bidford ‘where the original pavement still exists under the turf in the meadow adjoining the river.’
2 Severn River Board ...
The possible site of a ford, a shallow point in a river where people and vehicles crossed. The ford would have served the Roman Ryknield Street, known in the Early Medieval period as Byda's Ford. The site was located south of the church at Bidford on Avon.
1 A modern bridge carrying the road to Dunnington crosses the Arrow at Broom Mills. This replaced a ford.
2 This is shown as a ford on an undated, probably 19th ...
The site of a ford, a shallow point where people, animals and vehicles would cross the River Arrow west of Broom. The ford is of unknown date and has now been replaced by a road bridge.
1 Until the beginning of the last century there was a second and more important crossing about half a mile to the S, near Broom Court.
The site of an undated ford, a shallow point where people, animals and vehicles would have rossed the River Arrow. The ford was situated 300m north of The Rookery.