1 The site is marked on the first edition 6″ map of 1886.
2 The site can be seen as an earthwork from the road.
The site of a quarry and kilns complex visible as an earthwork and identified from documentary evidence. The location is immediately to the southeast of Chesterton Wood.
1 Lime workings marked.
The possible site of a lime kiln or quarry which dates back to the Imperial period. It is marked on a map of 1831. The lime works were situated 800m north east of Long Lawford.
1 Limeworks marked. An adjoining long depression is marked as a lime pit.
The site of a lime works where lime was made during the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The site is located 800m east of King's Newnham.
1 Originally owned by a firm called ?Alloy Bricks. The kilns were originally coal-fired, the coal coming by canal; c1963 they installed oil-fired German machinery including a linear kiln and ...
The site of Napton Brickworks which are marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. They date from the Imperial period through to Modern times, closing down in the 1970s. They were located between the Oxford Canal and the Napton Windmill.
1 Quantities of Roman brick and tile found deeply stratified in 2.4m vertical riverbank. Also an enamelled plate brooch and, 50m to SE, quantities of box flue tile found in ...
The site of a tile kiln and a quarry both dating to the Roman period and known from finds of tile and burnt clay. It was situated 800m north east of Blunt's Green.
1 Marked as ‘Lime Kiln Close’.
2 Earthworks throughout the field suggest that a great deal of quarrying must have taken place.
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a lime kiln dating to the Imperial period. There is extensive evidence of quarrying within the field, which is located 100m north of the church at Ufton.
1 Two limekilns located in a field named ‘Two Quarry Close’.
2 Incomplete information.
The site of two lime kilns, used for making lime, of Post Medieval date. They were situated 100m north of The Rough.