1 Late 16th or early 17th century site of farmhouse-like building. In 1866-8 a new much larger house was built by Henry ?Cluten for Mark Philips
Welcombe House, a Post Medieval period farmhouse-like building. A new larger house was built to replace it in 1866-8. The present house is located is located to the north of Temple Hill.
1 ‘Brick Yard’.
2 Very overgrown, but some traces of quarrying.
The site of brickworks marked on a tithe map of 1846. They were located 100m north of the obelisk in Welcombe House grounds, Stratford-on-Avon. Some traces of quarrying at the site still remain as earthworks.
1 S of Ingon Manor Farm is a complex of pond earthworks that cut the surrounding ridge and furrow. The owner states that this area was landscaped at the beginning ...
Several ponds, which probably date to the beginning of the twentieth century, are visible as earthworks. They are situated 500m south of the reservoir at Ingon.
1 Fishponds.
2 These fishponds were incorporated into a large ornamental lake in the late 19th century.
The site of possible fishponds, used for the breeding and storage fish. They date to the Post Medieval period and are also marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1905. They were situated north west of Ryon Hill House, Hampton Lucy.
1 In 1086 a mill is recorded. References also occur to this mill in the 17th, 19th and 20th centuries. The mill operated until the early 1950s and restoration of ...
Charlecote Mill, a watermill recorded in the Domesday Survey and in written sources from the Post Medieval to the Modern periods. The present building dates to the 18th century, with two undershot water wheels, and two sets of milling machinery. It was restored in 1978.
1 A turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775.
A toll road from Warwick to Stratford upon Avon established during the Imperial period. Travellers would have had to pay to use the road.
1 Mill pond, incorporated into WA1114 (mill).
The dam, sluice, race and pond associated with Charlecote watermill. They date to the Post Medieval period, and are situated to the west of the restored mill, 300m north east of the church at Hampton Lucy.
1 Pleasure grounds with terrace, walks, paddocks. Associated with late 17th/ early 18th century house renovated in the 19th century. Grounds recommended for inclusion on Local List.
2 Visible on OS ...
Pleasure grounds at Hampton Lucy Rectory including terraces, walks and paddocks. The house was originally Post Medieval, and the gardens may be contemporary or later. They lie to the south west of the church.
1 Pleasure grounds on rising ground above the River Avon. Features included walks, lake, boundary planting, glasshouses. Lodge and gates and some planting survive, though house is divided into business ...
Pleasure grounds created in the Imperial period, including a lake, associated with Ryon Hill House. The gardens are marked on the Ordnance Survey maps of 1886 and 1938, and are situated at Ryon Hill, 500m west of Hampton Lucy.
1 Welcombe House (1866-8) replaced earlier house with Gothic facade (c1810). 19th century formal gardens by Nesfield supplemented earlier landscape including Gothic temple on hill. Features include parkland, drives, lodge, ...
The grounds of Welcombe House. This is a series gardens and landscapes laid out around successive versions of Welcombe House during the Imperial period. Additional garden features were added in the 20th century.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
In 1735, the Revd George Hammond of Hampton Lucy ordered that a recipe against ‘the Bite of a Mad Dog’ be registered in the parish register ‘for the Service of ...