1 still standing on First Edition Ordnance Survey map, 1:2500.
Kiln shown on 1st Edition Ordnance Survey map
1 Brick kiln marked on Ordnance Survey 1st edition 6 inch map of 1886. The kiln is located in a field called Brick Field on the same map.
2 The ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a brick kiln where bricks were made during the Imperial period. The location is 1.5km north east of Fenny Compton.
1 A pound marked on the first edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map
A pound which was in use during the Imperial period is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was situated in Fenny Compton.
1 Railway Station marked on the 1st edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map.
The site of Fenny Compton Railway Station which was built in the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was situated 1.25km north east of Fenny Compton.
1 A brewery is marked on the First Edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map
The site of a brewery which was in operation during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was located at Fenny Compton Wharf.
1 The site of a brick and tile works which is marked on the 1st Edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map.
The site of a Brick and Tile Works which was in operation during the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was located 1.1km east of Mill Hill.
1 A turnpike established between 1750 and 1775. First Act 1754-5.
A toll road running from Ryton Bridge to Banbury, via Southam. Travellers would have paid to use the road during the Imperial period.
1 A narrow frontage, barely exposed between two houses. Stone wall rendered above the entrance with a round-arched upper window and a tablet dated 1838. Rear walls of brick with ...
A Wesleyan Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located in the High Street, Fenny Compton.
1 Former Primitive Methodist. SW of the Wesleyan Chapel (PRN 2444). Three-bay front dated ?1843.
A former Primitive Methodist Chapel built in the Imperial period, and located in Fenny Compton.
1 A charter of AD 956 refers to the ‘straete’. This is the Banbury-Southam road running along the Wormleighton parish boundary.
An Early Medieval road or trackway which is referred to in a 10th century charter. It now forms the Banbury to Southam road and runs along the parish boundary of Wormleighton.
1 An evaluation (1994) of two proposed building plots on the north side of the Northend Road was carried out. Remains of a house, associated with 12th to 15th century ...
An archaeological investigation uncovered evidence of settlement dating to the Medieval period. Two houses, yards and pottery were found. The site is situated 400m north of the church, Fenny Compton.
1 Canal bridge of the late 18th century made of red English bond brick with flared brick string course band, and brick coped parapet. Slightly skew basket arch.
2 Photograph ...
Fenny Compton Canal Bridge, built in the Imperial period of red brick. It crosses the Oxford Canal at Fenny Compton Wharf.
1 19th century brick kiln adjacent to the canal. Warwickshire Industrial Archaeology Society have carried out extensive documentary research.
2 A brickyard was built here to exploit the clay produced ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this the site of a kiln used for making bricks during the Imperial period. The site is east of the tunnel, 1.8km east of Fenny Compton.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, N porch, and W tower with spire. The earliest features are the chancel arch and part of the N arcading, dating ...
The church of St Peter and St Clare was built during the Medieval period and was restored in 1879. It is situated in Fenny Compton.
1 Much pottery (Samian, pelves, grey-blue common ware, etc) was found in 1881 in draining the ‘Great Grounds’, a field about half a mile S of the village on ...
Documentary evidence, together with concentrations of pottery debris on the ground, suggest that there was a Roman kiln in this area, 1km south east of Fenny Compton.
1 Immediately E of the church, and 33m above it, a windmill occupies what was no doubt the site of the windmill mentioned in 1655 as attached to the ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of one or possibly two windmills first mentioned in 1655 and shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1834. The site is located on Mill Hill.
1 Earthworks are visible in Hall Yard, Middle Field and Ladbrook Meadow. In Hall Yard, they are overlain by later landscaping. Definite holloways can be traced, but ...
The site of a possible shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. The remains of several holloways are visible as earthworks. A Post Medieval house also existed on the site. It is located 400m south east of Fenny Compton.