1 Windmill Hill, Woodloes Farm (Earl Brook estate 1788 and Warwick: St Nicholas tithe map 1848). Medieval (or later). Post Mill.
2 The field now lies beneath the Woodloes Estate and ...
There is documentary evidence to suggest that this was the site of a windmill dating from the Medieval/Post Medieval period. It stood in the Kettlewell Close area of the Woodloes Estate, Warwick.
1 Estimated grid reference SP2865. This mill stood to the N of the Priory Ponds and may have been near Priory Cottage marked on the 1886 OS 1:10560 map. In ...
The site of Priory Mill, a watermill dating from the Post Medieval period. It was still in use in the early 1850s. It was located west of the Lyttelton Road, Warwick.
1 Built on the N bank of the canal in 1806. It was operated by the firm of Kench and Sons, in conjunction with Rock Mills, until 1961. Excess water ...
Emscote Mill, the site of a watermill built in the Imperial period. After 1850 it was driven by steam, and then by electricity. The site is now under housing.
1 The mill existed in the early 18th century when there were two mills under one roof. One was known as Frog Mill and one as Priory Mill. The mill ...
The site of Old Waterhouse Mill, a watermill which was in use from the Post Medieval to the Imperial period. On the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 it was marked as a saw mill. Its location was 50m south west of Warwick Station.
1 The earliest reference to mills attached to the castle is in 1150. These stood about 100m downstream from the present site and were totally destroyed by floods in the ...
Castle Mill, the site of several watermills dating from the Medieval to the Imperial period. The present building dates from the 18th century. The main waterwheel survives at the southern end of Mill Street, Warwick, but no machinery is left.
1 A good group of 2 and 3 storey late 18th century buildings formerly a gelatine mill. A fine house at the west end of the side is enscripted ...
Emscote Mills, a gelatine mill which was served by a canal wharf, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods. The mill was in use during the Imperial period. It is located to the east of Wharf Street, Warwick.
1 Cotton mill erected at the lower end of Wallace Street by the Parkes Firm et al, circa 1795. Housing for workers led to the rise of Parkes/Crompton/Brookhouse Streets ...
The site of a cotton mill which was built in the Imperial period. The site was just north west of Sainsbury's supermarket, Warwick.
1 Origin of use of site as tannery not known, but possible that 19th century works following old tradition in area, as tanneries commonly located in Medieval suburbs. The area ...
Documentary evidence and the results of an excavation show that there was a tannery on land just off West Street, Warwick. The tannery existed at the site during the Imperial period.