1 Honiley (three quarters of a mile NW of church). Built by 1725. Post mill.
2 Windmill marked on Beighton’s map.
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a Post Medieval windmill. Its location was 1.2km north west of the church.
1 Site of windmill marked on 1746 map.
2 The only ‘remnant’ is a house named ‘Mill View’.
The site of a windmill which was Post Medieval in date. The site lies on the north side of South Street, Atherstone.
1 There was a mill at Haseley in 1086 and there were two watermills by 1632. Information on ownership exists for the C19 and the mill closed c1900. The mill ...
The site of Haseley Mill, a watermill which was in use from the Medieval period until the Imperial period. The mill pond is still visible as an earthwork. The site is located 500m north of the church at Haseley.
1 At approximately the above grid reference. Haseley Green (Windmill Field 1728 and Haseley Tithe map 1841). Medieval (or later). Post mill.
2 No recognisable surface features.
The site of a windmill, possibly of Medieval or later date. The windmill is marked on maps of 1728 and 1841. The site is located 400m south of Haseley Green.
1 Haseley (adjoining watermill). Built by 1814. Ceased by late C19. Post mill.
2 No obvious siting evidence. The ground is now marshy and unusable and the area seems rather unsuited ...
The possible site of Haseley Windmill which dated to the Imperial period. It was situated 600m east of Birmingham Road.
1 Probable site of ‘The New Windmill’ shown on an early OS 1” map. Built by Choyce, a hatter of Atherstone.
The site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It was situated near South Street, Atherstone.
1 A field centred at this grid reference is called ‘Mill Field’.
2 Still called ‘Mill Field.’
3 No surface indication could be found. The field is at the top to an ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a Post Medieval windmill. Its location was 700m west of Wroxall Abbey.
1 Windmill marked.
3 There is no trace of the mill in the field.
The probable site of a windmill dating to the Post Medieval period. The site lies 350m south of Fieldon Bridge.
1 Field centred on SP1971 is labelled Mill Meadow and a field centred on SP1971 is labelled Mill Field.
2 A mill probably existed in this vicinity, although no surface indications ...
Documentary and place name evidence suggest that this is the site of a watermill dating to the Post Medieval period. It was located 100m southwest of Baddesley Clinton Hall.
1 A probable mill dam was found at the above grid reference.
2 Bank up to 2.1m high on NE side and 2.4m on SW side.
3 A large earthwork straddling the ...
The possible site of a mill dam dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. It is located 300m west of Rouncil Lane.
1 There was a mill in Atherstone in 1633 and it may have stood on this site. Various owners are recorded in the 19th century and 20th century. In 1849 ...
The site of Alder Mill, a Post Medieval watermill which was situated 120m south of Fieldon Bridge.
1 In 1545 Francis Goodere owned ‘Netherwalke myll’ at Baginton situated ‘below the place where the castle once stood’. A fulling mill is recorded in 1656. It continued as a ...
Baginton Fulling Mill, a watermill that was in use from the Post Medieval period onwards. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks. The mill was situated 1km south west of Baginton.
1 Post Mill, 16th century, at the above grid reference.
2 Windmill?
3 No trace found when site was visited, or any other reference found.
Documentary evidence suggests that this was the site of a Post Medieval post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. The possible site lies north west of Westley Bridge.
1 Lower Old Baginton Windmill. 16th century? post mill.
2 ‘Lower Old Baginton Windmill (P).
3 No trace of remains of the windmill.
Some documentary evidence exists to suggest that this was the site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. It would have been in use during the Post Medieval period. Its likely location was 400m northwest of Chantry Heath Wood.
1 Thurlaston (NE of village). Post mill. Built by 1787. Ceased by early 19th century.
2 There is no trace of this site on the ground.
The site of a post mill, a type of windmill mounted on a post. It was built during the Imperial period. The post mill was situated 500m north east of Thurlaston.
1 1794. Tower mill. Had two pairs of stones, four sails (two common, two shuttered) which came down 1925. Ground floor stones worked by steam engine to 1919. Converted into ...
A tower mill, a type of windmill, that was built during the Imperial period. The mill is still standing but is now in use as a dwelling. It is situated on Main Street, Thurlaston.
1 In 1580 the appurtenances to the manor of Princethorpe included two mills and a fishery in the Leam.
Documentary evidence from the Post Medieval period records two mills at Princethorpe. This is a possible site of one of the mills.
1 This mill may have stood on the site of the mill at Brandon which is recorded in 1086. The head race to the mill leaves the river opposite the ...
Wolston Mill, a watermill that was built in the Medieval period. It continued to be used until the end of the Imperial period. The mill buildings were later demolished. It was situated 600m south west of St. Margaret's Church, Wolston.
1 Photograph of windmill.
2 The photograph shows a conical brick tower, capped with an ‘onion’ dome, with four sails to be covered with canvas. There is no fantail visible, and ...
The site of a windmill dating to the Imperial period. It was situated on Lammas Hill.
1 Little is known of the early history of this mill, except that John Tew was the miller in 1670. It is marked on Yates’ map of 1787-9, and again ...
Earthorpe Mill, a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Post Medieval to the Imperial period. Only the mill building survives and this has been converted for office use. It is located at the north of Eathorpe.
1 ‘Chapel’ marked.
2 Built in the early 19th century as a Wesleyan chapel. Later used briefly as a stable, then as a flour mill with a gas engine (the base ...
A former nonconformist Wesleyan chapel built in the Imperial period and now altered and converted for a house. It was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is located at Eathorpe.
1 Brick tower mill. Built c1820. Lofty tower with ogee cap and finial; staging four sails and cap gallery with rotating wheel. Worked by steam for a period. Ceased working ...
The site of a tower mill, a type of windmill, which was built during the Imperial period. The windmill was demolished in 1925. It was situated 1km north east of Lower Green.
1 ‘Windmill Hill’.
2 Post Mill. Built by 1725. Ceased by late 18th century.
3 The site could not be investigated in detail, but there is a slight ‘unnatural’ rise which may ...
The site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. It was built towards the end of the Post Medieval period. The windmill is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1834. It was situated 1km north west of Grandborough.
1 Windmill marked on the 1849 Tithe Map. Medieval (or later). Post mill. A mill at Woolscott is recorded in 1668 and may be the same mill (but see PRN ...
The site of a post mill, a windmill mounted on a post. It was in use during the Imperial period and is marked on a tithe map of 1849, although it may have been built before this. The post mill was situated 600m north east of Lower Green.