1 Foxcote is a large 18th century house. Attached to it is a chapel used for two centuries by the Roman Catholics of the district until the construction of the ...
A Roman Catholic chapel dating to the Post Medieval period. This was the private chapel attached to Foxcote House. It is located 500m south west of Windmill Hill Plantation.
1 A meeting was in existence by 1673 in which year a conventicle held at the barn of John Halford was the cause of George Fox’s last arrest and imprisonment. ...
A former Society of Friends' Quaker Meeting House dating to the Post Medieval period. It is located 200m south of Middle Street, Armscote.
1 Chancel with N vestry, N aisle, S aisle, N porch and W tower. The remains of the Saxon church consist of the range of windows above the nave arcades, ...
The Church of St Gregory, which was built during the Early Medieval period, around 800 AD. The church underwent various alterations in later centuries. It is located 275m south east of the Tredington Post Office.
1 Mainly C14-C15. Chancel, nave, N and S aisles and porches, and W tower with spire. Rich in detail but severely restored 1868. Important monuments and C12 font.
2 There was ...
The Medieval parish church of St. Peter and St. Paul which is located 100m east of High Street, Coleshill.
1 The construction of a Roman Catholic chapel in the Saltisford is recorded in 1687. This may have been the demolished ‘Papists’ Chapel’ near the Saltisford almshouses mentioned in 1737.
There is documentary evidence for a Roman Catholic chapel built in the Post Medieval period. The site was in the Saltisford area of Warwick.
1 Chancel, nave with W bellcote, S aisle, and N porch.
2 The drawing of c1820 in the Aylesford collection shows a short nave and bell-turret in rudimentary classical style, with ...
The Church of St John the Baptist. Built in the 18th century, it replaced a Medieval church. The church was largely rebuilt during the Imperial period. It is situated 150m south south west of the Wasperton Post Office.
1 The old vicarage, presumably that of the 16th century, was demolished in the middle of the 19th century and the present one built. It is marked as building ...
The site of a vicarage dating from the Post Medieval period, which was demolished and rebuilt during the 19th century. It was situated next to Rowington church.
1 Much altered building, now cottages, refronted in brick. The birthplace of Sir William Dugdale in 1605.
The Old Rectory, a house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated at Church End.
1 Originally the villagers used the parish church of Bromwick, but in 1346 having built their own church they received a licence from the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield for ...
The site of the Medieval church of St. Peter and St. Paul. The site is located on Old Church Road, Water Orton.
1 Letter from Rev John Stevinson of St Leonard’s Church, Birdingbury, with some thoughts on his church and its environs and a pamphlet which he has written.
2 House, formerly rectory. ...
The Old Rectory, a vicarage which was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated on Main Street, Birdingbury.
1 The chapel which stood to the E of Kingston Manor Farm was pulled down several years ago when the key was hung on the branch of an apple tree ...
The site of a chapel of possible Post Medieval date. Some earthworks are still visible in dry conditions, and the site is located 1km south east of Chesterton church.
1 Chancel, central tower, S chapel, nave, S aisle, and N and S porches. Lower three fifths of the tower is probably of the first half of the 11th ...
The Church of St Peter which was founded as a minster during the Early Medieval period. Alterations were made to the church in the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. It is situated on Stratford Road, Wootton Wawen.
1 In 1542 the house at Offchurch Bury included a chapel.
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a Post Medieval chapel at Offchurch Bury.
1 Morton Bagot Manor has replaced the old parsonage. A glebe terrier of 1714 describes the former parsonage as having four small low bays and a barn of three bays, ...
The site of a vicarage dating to the Post Medieval period and known from documentary evidence. It is located at Morton Bagot.
1 A Particular Baptist church was in existence at Alcester in 1655. A meeting house was registered in 1737 and enlarged in 1817. A new chapel contiguous with the last ...
A Nonconformist chapel of Post Medieval and later date which is situated on Meeting House Lane, Alcester.
1 Built in 1721 to replace a meeting house in use by 1693. Presbyterian, became Unitarian by the C19. Closed c1900 and the building sold 1901. Derelict by 1947 and ...
The site of nonconformist chapel originally built during the Post Medieval period. It was situated in Bull's Head Yard, Alcester.
1 A Presbyterian meeting which existed from the late 17th century built a meeting house in Long Street in 1725 where by the 19th century. Unitarian preaching prevailed. Demolished c1970 ...
The site of a Post Medieval nonconformist meeting house. It was situated 200m north west of Rawnhill Bridge, Atherstone.
1 The old vicarage was pulled down in 1824.
2 Part of this building is contained in the new one which was built in 1824. This is a regular 3 ...
The site of a vicarage probably dating to the Post Medieval period. It was later pulled down and rebuilt in the Imperial Period. The building is now a private residence at Wootton Paddox, close to All Saint's Church.
1 A rectory is shown in close proximity to the church on an estate map from 1766.
2 According to the Anot. map a stone built rectory was pulled down around ...
The site of a vicarage which probably dates to the Post Medieval period. It is marked on an estate map of 1766. The vicarage was demolished in 1851. It was situated to the north of the church at Ashow.
1 Friends’ Meeting House. Built by Nathaniel Newton the younger c1729. Extended in the early 19th century, closed in 1846 and has since been used as a workshop. Brick with ...
The site of a former Society of Friends' Quaker Meeting House of Post Medieval date which was situated on Long Street, Atherstone.
1 A meeting-house given to the Quakers in 1669 was superceded by one on the present site in 1722. This building, which records suggest may have been rebuilt c1768, stands ...
A Methodist chapel dating to the Post Medieval period stood on this site until it was replaced by a later building during the Imperial period. The site is located on Keys Hill, Baddesley Ensor.
1 Built for a Presbyterian, later Congregational church (now United Reformed Church) formed in 1686, for which the first known meeting house was registered in 1705. The present building was ...
The Old Meeting House, a meeting house which was originally built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated off Chapel Street, Bedworth.
1 Rendered front with tall round-arched windows and pedimental gable. Built in 1840 to replace a chapel of 1807-8.
2 Photographed in the early 1900s. The photograph shows the Chapel ...
A Congregational chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Coleshill Road, Chapel End.
1 Built 1740 to replace a meeting house of 1720 which had been destroyed by rioters; a new meeting house was erected nearby c1972 and the former building has been ...
A Society of Friends' Meeting House, which was originally built in the Post Medieval period. It was later converted into a house. It is situated at Hartshill Green.