1 The house started life as a farmhouse. In 1681 John Knight was the possessor of what was described as a manor house surrounded by a 400 acre estate. ...
A house originally built during the Post Medieval period and is surrounded by a park. There were additions and alterations made to the house in the Imperial period. It has recently been renovated and restored and is situated in Ullenhall.
1 Archaeological evaluation revealed the reoccupation of the site (following the site’s abandonment to cultivation in the late medieval period), in the course of the expansion of the town in ...
Features reflecting the 19th century housing developments along Dugdale Street and Chapel Street, as depicted on the 1887 OS map, were recorded at The Ropewalk, Chapel Street, Nuneaton.
1 A watching brief during the excavation of foundation trenches recorded a large quantity of hand-made brick fragments within the northerly sections. The building contractor reported that they had encountered ...
Hand made bricks and cellaring were recorded during building works. The absence of the building on the late 19th century first edition OS map suggested that the cellaring belonged to an earlier, possibly 18th century building. The site is located at 18/20 School Road, Alcester.
1 Archaeological recording took place in April 2005 in the lower cellar of the 18th-century Grade II Listed Building which originally formed part of the public house (The Tilted Wig, ...
Two cellars were recorded at the Listed Building that used to from part of the Tilted Wig, formerly the Green Dragon. Both cellars were cut into the bedrock and associated with the use of the pub in the Imperial period.
1 Large metal wheel found in a back garden. Thought to be associated with Bedworth Charity Colliery. From the description it looks like a component part of a ...
Cog Wheel made of solid metal. 3ft in diameter and 1ft deep with a central hole. Found on the site of the former Bedworth Charity Colliery and is presumably related. Description matches part of a coal tippler.
1 Cowshed or hovel. Queen-post structure probably contemporary with the farm and therefore early 17th century – mid 18th century.
A hovel or cowshed of early 17th- mid 18th century date, contemporary with the Listed farmhouse. Was set to be demolished in 2009.
1 A previously unrecorded down flow filter on the eastern boundary of Hartshill Hayes Country Park. It consists of an open brick pit, an automatic tipping trough and four U-shaped ...
A down flow filter, probably for domestic water filtration. It dates to the late 19th or early 20th century and is located along the eastern boundary of Hartshill Hayes Country Park.
1 Archaeological observations of the foundation trenches for a new public toilet block in Pageant Gardens, behind Jury Street, Warwick, in the centre of the Medieval town, recorded evidence for ...
The remains of 18th century outbuildings and a cellar at Pageant Gardens, Warwick. Earlier archaeological remains may exist below these features.
1 An archaeological evaluation at High Street involving background research and trial trenching found no evidence of surviving Medieval remains, although the site was a ‘burgage plot’ in the centre ...
A wall and cellars dating to the Imperial period were found during archaeological work. The site was located on the High Street, Henley in Arden.
1 Platelayer’s hut probably contemporary with Site 13 (signal box). The site should be photographed, though not in immediate danger from the proposed new bypass.
The site of a building known as a platelayers' hut on the disused railway. It dates to the Imperial period and situated 400m south west of The Rookery.