Probable mill leat.
1 An artificial watercourse extends SW from SP21046460 and ends in what was apparently a pool situated at SP20906442.
2 The remains of the mill race for WA 946 ...
The site of a possible mill leat dating from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. The leat is situated 200m north east of Claverdon Station.
1 A number of earthworks survive, the most siginificant of which may represent the remains of a medieval watermill. There are a number of possible mill pools linked to a ...
A series of earthworks indicate the presence of a watermill. Documentary evidence suggests that the mill may date to the Medieval Period. The site lies 600m south of the National Agricultural Centre.
1 There was a mill at Preston Bagot in 1086. Two mills are recorded in 1200 and 1291 and the mills are recorded at the beginning of the 17th century. ...
A mill was recorded in the Domesday survey and two mills in later Medieval documents. This watermill fell into disuse in the early 17th century. The mill pond and vestiges of a leat still survive. Its location was 200m north of Warwick Road Bridge, Preston Bagot.
1 This may have been one of the two mills in Tanworth mentioned in 1315. From the 17th century it belonged to the Umberslade Hall estate. Information on ownership ...
The site of a Medieval watermill and its associated building, leat, mill pond and fishpond. The mill pond, leat and fishpond are still visible as earthworks. It is situated 400m north of Botley Hill.
1 A wide depression, that is possibly the remains of a leat associated with Marston Mill, seen on aerial photographs was mapped as part of the English Heritage National ...
A wide depression that is possibly the remains of a leat associated with Marston Mill can be seen on aerial photographs.
1 The River Stour has been diverted between SP2050 and SP2050, to form a water course for Atherstone Mill (WA1345). The channelling of the river is almost certainly contemporary ...
The site of a watercourse associated with the Medieval/Post Medieval watermill at Atherstone on Stour. The watercourse is still visible as an earthwork. It is situated 300m north west of Lion's Pond.
1 The earthwork is a leat feeding the moat, running north-east from the Small Brook; the overflow ran across the road then through the village.
The remains of a Medieval leat survive as an earthwork at the southern end of Admington village. The leat fed water from the Small Brook in to a moat at this lcoation.
1 In 1185 ‘the mill at Henlea’ was granted to Wootton Priory by Henry de Montford. There were two mills at Henley in 1296 and three were mentioned in 1326. ...
Henley Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period onwards. At some time in the Imperial period it was powered by a steam engine. All the machinery has gone. The building survives, east of Johnson Place.