1 Fishponds marked.
2 The three fishponds are now ornamental lakes in Umberslade Park.
The site of fishponds, used for breeding and storing fish. They are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1921. They survive as ornamental lakes, and are situated at Umberslade Park.
1 Earthworks either side of the River Alne indicate that there was once a large pool here. A map of 1843 records the field to the N of the river ...
The site of a possible fishpond, used for breeding and storing fish. Its date is uncertain but is probably Medieval or Post Medieval.. It was marked on a Tithe Award map of 1843, but is no longer visible as an earthwork. It is situated 200m north of Alderhanger Wood, Tanworth.
1 Earthworks denoting the remains of a fishpond lie just to the NE of the deserted settlement of Nuthurst. The ground is dry at present, but vegetation growth suggests that ...
A fishpond, used for breeding and storing fish, associated with a Medieval deserted settlement. It survives as an earthwork, and is situated at Kemps Green, Tanworth in Arden.
1 It appears that the stream to the SE of Umberslade Hall was once damned across its valley to form two large pools. The pool to the NW is very ...
The site of possible Medieval fishponds, used for the breeding and storage of fish. They are still visible as earthworks, and are situated 200m east of Umberslade Hall.
1 A fishpond to the S of the moat is 36m by 50m and is mainly wet with a maximum depth of 1.7m.
3 There is also a second fishpond to ...
Fishponds, used for the breeding and storage of fish. They were probable associated with a Medieval Manor. They are still visible as earthworks, and are situated at the south of Umberslade Park.
1 This may have been one of the two mills in Tanworth mentioned in 1315. From the 17th century it belonged to the Umberslade Hall estate. Information on ownership ...
The site of a Medieval watermill and its associated building, leat, mill pond and fishpond. The mill pond, leat and fishpond are still visible as earthworks. It is situated 400m north of Botley Hill.
1 A watermill in Tanworth is recorded in the early 13th century and by 1316 there were 2 mills in the manor. In 1627 3 mills existed in the ...
Documentary evidence suggests this is the site of Tanworth Mill, a watermill originally built during the Medieval period. A pond and an overshot waterwheel, dating to the Imperial period, survive. The site is located 600m south east of Danzey Green.
1 Irregularly shaped fishpond apx 10m by 30m, orientated N-S, forming a water management feature associated with moat to N (WA 1079). Probably linked to moat by sluice in SW ...
A Medieval fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1888 and survives as an earthwork. It is situated at the moated site of Salter Street Farm, Hockley Heath.