1 There was a chapel at Beausale in the 13th century in honour of St John the Evangelist. It was endowed with the field called Rykenylesbury. It is also recorded ...
The possible site of a Medieval chapel suggested by documentary and place name evidence. The chapel was probably associated with the deserted settlement of Rykmersbury. It was located 2km west of Leek Wootton
1 Chancel, central tower, transepts, nave and aisles. The chancel is 14th century or 15th century but is probably on the foundations of the 12th century chapel of the alien ...
The Church of St. Mary which was originally built during the Medieval period. The nave and chancel were rebuilt during the Imperial period. It is situated on Sheepy Road, Atherstone.
1 There is a sect lately sprung up, and established a meeting house here, called Primitive Methodists, whose numbers are but limited.
2 Chapel marked.
3 According to a local inhabitant the ...
The site of a Methodist chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It was situated 100m south east of the church at Willoughby.
1 A Church of England Mission Church is mentioned in VCH.
2 Appears on an OS map of 1905.
3 The church is still in use. It is brick, with a ...
The Church of the Good Sheperd which was built during the Imperial period. It is still in use and is attached to a house. The church is situated 200m north of The Green, Broadwell.
1 Mission Chapel marked.
2 The cross in the vestry of All Saints Church Leamington Hastings ‘stood on the Mission Chapel’ which was pulled down.
3 No trace of the building remains.
The site of a chapel dating to the Imperial period. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887. The chapel was situated in Kites Hardwick.
1 There was anciently a chapel at Thurlaston dedicated to St Edmund. This was standing in 1360, and is said to have been demolished by the Lord Berkeley’s officers in ...
The site of a Medieval chapel, possibly associated with the Medieval grange that stood in this area. The chapel is known to have existed from documentary evidence. Its exact location is unknown but it probably stood in an area to the west of Thurlaston.
1 Chancel, nave, N vestry, and W tower forming house. Orientated N-S. 1849, by William Butterfield. Built as a chapel-school, to be used as a school during the week and ...
The Church of St Edmund and Church House. The church/school and the church house were built in the Imperial period, and are situated south east of the Manor House, Thurlaston.
1 Chapel marked.
2 The original Baptist Chapel no longer exists. The present one is a modern building of concrete with a brick facade.
The site of a chapel that was built during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The chapel was located on Coventry Road, between Dunchurch and Thurlaston.
1 St.Mary’s Priory was founded in 1832 for nuns of the Order of St. Benedict, with a girl’s school attached. The buildings, which include a church with a bell-tower, are ...
St Mary's Priory which was founded in the Imperial period for an order of Bendictine nuns. The priory is situated to the west of Princethorpe Great Wood.
1 There is within this village a Chapel of All Saints, which had a Chantry therein founded by Thomas de Wolvardynton.
2 There is no mention of a chapel in the ...
The site of a Medieval church. The remains of the church are visible as earthworks. The remains are located in the graveyard of the church at Church Hill, Stretton on Dunsmore.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, W tower, vestry and choir vestry. Completed in 1837 to designs by Rickman and unaltered since, except for the addition of the choir ...
The Parish Church of All Saints which was built in the Imperial period. It probably replaced a Medieval church that had existed on the same site. There have been no major alterations since. The church is situated on Church Hill, Stretton on Dunsmore.
1 Former Primitive Methodist chapel. A very small building, seating perhaps 25 or 30. Of red brick, with blue brick diaper patterning. Slate roof, prominent carved bargeboards, a small central ...
A Methodist chapel that was built during the Imperial period. The building is no longer in use as a chapel but is situated on Plott Lane, Stretton on Dunsmore.
1 Chancel, N and S transepts, N and S aisles, nave, central tower, and modern vestry. Dates from the 12th century, when it probably consisted of chancel, nave and S ...
The Parish Church of St Margaret which was originally built during the Medieval period. The church was later restored during the Imperial period. It is situated 200m south east of Brandon Castle at Wolston.
1 ‘Chapel’ marked.
2 Built in the early 19th century as a Wesleyan chapel. Later used briefly as a stable, then as a flour mill with a gas engine (the base ...
A former nonconformist Wesleyan chapel built in the Imperial period and now altered and converted for a house. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is located at Eathorpe.
1 The site of the chapel St Giles at Ditchford Frary deserted Medieval settlement. This church was a chapel of the church of Wolford. It is recorded in 1439. In ...
The site of a Medieval chapel for which there is documentary and earthwork evidence. It was situated east of Lower Ditchford. The chapel would have served the Medieval deserted settlement of Ditchford Frary.
1 Chancel with S vestry, nave (15.2m long), and a W porch and bell-turret.
2 1841 by Thomas Johnson. Aisleless, with a thin W tower with octagonal top and spire. Hammerbeam ...
The Parish Church of St Peter which was built during the Imperial period and which replaced a Medieval church. The church is located to the east of Stretton on Fosse.
1 Chancel, nave, N chapel, N and S aisles, tower and S porch. The present church was built in the 14th century, the tower in the W end of the ...
The Church of St Peter which was built during the Medieval period. It is situated 100m south east of Wolfhampcote Hall.
1 Methodist chapel dating from 1837.
2 Red brick with a slate roof. Not in use, but in fairly good condition.
Flecknoe Methodist Chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is no longer in use as a place of worship, and is situated 100m north east of the church.
1 The church of St. Mark is a small rectangular building of red and blue brick with a concrete floor and a slated roof with small timber bell-cote at the ...
The Church of St Mark which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated at the east end of Bush Hill Lane, Flecknoe.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles and porches, and W tower. Built at the beginning of the 16th century, the tower being the last part to be completed. Tower ...
The Church of St Nicholas which was originally built during the Medieval period. Alterations were made to the building during the Imperial period. The church is located in Willoughby.
1 There was a chapel at Bradwell standing in the memory of man, which was entirely demolished upon the report of its being like to be turned into a Meeting ...
The possible site of a Medieval chapel. Earthworks are visible at the site which lies on the east side of Broadwell.
2 The first Methodist Chapel was built in 1871, single storey, of brick. In 1962 a new chapel was added on to the first.
A Methodist church which was built during the Imperial period. Additions were made to the building in the 1960s. The church is situated 100m north of The Green, Broadwell.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles and porches, and W tower. Built about the middle of the 13th century, it then consisted of chancel, nave and S aisle, and ...
The Parish Church of All Saints. It was built during the Medieval period, with later alterations and additions through to the Imperial period. The church is located in Leamington Hastings.
1 The S aisle of the conventual church partly survives in the N side of the present house. The semicircular arch at the E end was apparently between the aisle ...
Stoneleigh Abbey Church was built during the Medieval period. The church no longer exists in its own right but parts of if have been incorporated into a house that was on the same site. It is located to the east of the abbey remains.