2 There was a corn mill here by 1550. In about 1670 it was demolished and an iron forge built by Francis Watts. After about 1730 the mill seems to ...
Clifford Mill, 600m north of the church, for which there is documentary evidence from the late Medieval period. It became a forge in the Post Medieval period, and then reverted to a corn mill. The present building dates from 1853 and a chimney of auxiliary steam power survives.
1 The Statford upon Avon Gas, Light and Coke Company was formed on the 17th March 1834 and opened its first works, in Chapel Lane, in the 1st September ...
Gas Works opened in 1834 and closed three years later when the New Gas Works was opened at 'One Elm'.
1 A magnetometer survey was undertaken in 1979 and produced evidence for a large rectangular enclosure within which was a complex of features.
2 1980. Trial trenching, followed by a major ...
Part excavation in 1980 of a Roman settlement within a large rectangular enclosure. Features and finds date from the first to the fourth century, and include Samian ware pottery. The site is to the west of Tiddington village.
1 Archaeological evaluation of Cox’s Timber Yard, Stratford-upon-Avon gives a history of the timber yard which states that the land was leased to Richard Greaves in 1831 from the Stratford ...
The site of Cox's Timber Yard, which was in operation from the Imperial period until its closure in 1991, is marked as a timber wharf on the 1851 Board of Health Plan. It has been converted into a museum and other attractions and is located to the west of Clopton Bridge, Stratford.
1 In 1670 a corn mill (PRN 1035) was demolished and an iron forge built by Francis Watts. The iron was brought to the mill by barges on the River ...
The site of an iron works dating to the Post Medieval period. It is situated 100m south east of Clifford Chamber's bridge.
1 Shown on the 1905 OS map, on the left hand side of the Birmingham Road on the north bank of the Stratford on Avon Canal.
2 Gas works marked on ...
The site of Corporation Gas Works which was in use from the Imperial period into the 20th century. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. The gas works was situated 150m north east of the football ground, Stratford upon Avon.