Monument record 962 - Watford Park (Formerly Watford Court, Upper Park & Home Park)
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Summary
Remains of a landscape park and garden to Watford Court, a late 16th century country house, which was demolished in 1974. The landscape park is first documented in a detailed plan of 1740 showing a rigid formal layout which probably included earlier 18th century features. Surviving earthwork features include the principal approach drive which survives as a hollow way up to 2 metres deep; a canal, which was aligned north-south, which had at its northern end a rectangular water feature comprising a moat with a central platform; a double pond with islands; and terraced formal gardens and parterres. A possible mount, filled in ponds, water management features and areas of former planting also survive as either earthworks and parchments. An area of 19th century formal shrubbery to the north of the house has been removed during the redevelopment of the area for modern housing. The garden features partly overlie the shrunken medieval village earthworks of Watford which have been recorded separately.
Map
Type and Period (6)
- LANDSCAPE PARK (Documented 1740, Post Medieval - 1740 AD to 1740 AD)
- DEER PARK? (Post Medieval - 1540 AD? to 1749 AD?)
- ORNAMENTAL CANAL (Documented 1740, Post Medieval - 1740 AD to 1740 AD)
- PARTERRE (Documented 1740, Post Medieval - 1740 AD to 1740 AD)
- TERRACED GARDEN (Documented 1740, Post Medieval - 1740 AD to 1740 AD)
- WATER GARDEN (Documented 1740, Post Medieval - 1740 AD to 1740 AD)
Full Description
{1} Watford inclosures belonging to William Cartwright and surveyed by James Collingridge; shows tenants homes and type of ground, acreage etc.
{2} Watford Park, property of Henry Pilkington. The total is in excess of 415 acres. Note is made on the plan that the estate was purchased by Hon.ld. Henley on 23rd March 1836.
{3} First detailed plan of the park, numbered and with a key, but schematic in presentation. The rigid formal layout appears to be of an earlier period and possibly depicts some of the detail of the early C18th park which survived until then. The Upper Park and Home Park are both indicated. Upper Park contains woods and a brook.
{4} Trees and a grassland area are shown but no name is given; the second edition of 1791 shows an enclosed park noted as belonging to Mrs Clarke.
{5} A large extension was made to the park on either side of the new avenue running northwards of the Kilsby Road.
{6} Map of Watford and Crick fields; no key.
{7} Lord Henley's Watford Estate. 25inch OS map shows the estate shaded green and yellow.
{15} The park still retained its 1740 boundaries into the C19th.
{16} Earthwork remains, centred at SP 601690, of gardens belonging to Watford Court. Early remains lie beyond the west edge of the formal 19th century garden around the house. A broad hollow-way or drive up to 2 metres deep, formerly tree-lined runs west levelled platforms on either side may be garden terraces. A large 3 metre deep depression is an unknown purpose. Possible pond sites exist at the west end of the drive. Map evidence suggests an early 18th century origin for the layout. [RCHM plan and photography].
{17} Four parts in five of the Lordship were inclosed in 1644 by Sir George Clerke, a member of the ancient family from Willoughby in Warwickshire. Clerke was MP for Northamptonshire during the reign of Charles II. He was Lord of The Manor and owned the greater part of the parish. "He hath here an old seat with good gardens and a park of about 200 acres".
{19} Watford new inclosures belonging to William Cartwright and surveyed by James Collingridge.
{20} The earliest record of garden remains, a small-scale map showing the park as occupying the area west of Watford Court, between Park Lane and the Kilsby Road; no internal details are depicted.
{24} Watford is a small shrunken settlement retaining many trees in parkland of the manor house, Watford Court, which was demolished c.1972. There is still much grassland with steep ridge and furrow earthworks.
{29} The landscape park and garden features to Watford Court survive as both parchmarks and earthworks. A landscape park at Watford Court is first documented in a detailed plan of 1740 which depicts a rigid formal layout which probably included earlier 18th century features. Surviving earthwork features include the principal approach drive which survives as a hollow way up to 2 metres deep; a canal, which was aligned north-south, which had at its northern end a rectangular water feature comprising a moat with a central platform; a double pond with islands; and terraced formal gardens and parterres. A possible pond, filled in ponds, water management features and areas of former planting also survive as either earthworks and parchments. An area of 19th century formal shrubbery to the north of the house has been removed during the redevelopment of the area for modern housing.
The garden features partly overlie the shrunken medieval village earthworks of Watford which have been recorded separately.
{3} HISTORY
Watford village lies to the east of Watford Gap on Middle Lias clays and silts. From at least the 13th Century, the parish included three settlements all of which had pre-Domesday origins. Murcott lay to the south-east and Silsworth to the north, both subservient to the township of Watford which lay approximately at the centre of the parish. Silsworth was deserted early and enclosed in the 15th Century. Most of the demesne of Watford formed a block of land next to the manor house which was first enclosed in 1595. The desire to create a park, first mentioned in 1640, resulted in further complex land swaps and enclosure in 1644 with the remaining part of the township surviving until parliamentary enclosure (along with Murcott) in 1771 which related to emparkment.
The site of Watford Park lies on sloping land to the west of the 13th Century Church of St Peter and St Paul (Grade I) and incorporates the earthwork and cropmark remains of two phases of designed landscape of the 18th Century, overlying part of the shrunken medieval village of Watford and its associated ridge and furrow. It is probable that features relating to the mid 17th Century park also survive beneath the 18th Century garden features, but the layout of this earliest designed landscape is unknown. The earthwork evidence for the shrunken village comprises building platforms and enclosures straddling Kilsby Road and a hollow way on its alignment. Further to the south in the parkland, but north of Main Street, there are degraded earthwork remains of houses and gardens shown on a map of 1771.
The designed landscape was associated with Watford Court, a Grade II listed country house of 16th Century origins, enlarged in the 17th Century and 19th Century and demolished with permission in the 1970s. Although the site of the house and the area of 19th Century formal shrubbery to the north have been developed for modern housing, the gate piers to the Court, the enclosure wall, walled kitchen garden and coach house are all listed at Grade II.
Watford Court was sold to Sir George Clerke in the early 17th Century who enclosed much of the Watford Lordship in 1644. The depiction of the estate in a very small scale map in J. Morton's 'Natural history of Northants' of 1712 shows a park west of Watford Court between Park Lane and Kilsby Road. The first detailed plan of the park is of 1740, a survey of the parkland then belonging to Edward Clerke, showing a rigid formal layout which probably includes earlier 18th Century features. The parkland was divided into three areas named the Upper Park, Park Meadow and the Home Park. These areas were united by the western avenue of trees, which before the Grand Union Canal carved off the western boundary, extended to the line of the Roman Road of Watling Street. A gate is shown at its western end on the boundary.
The Upper Park to the west was the largest component of parkland, populated by five plantations and several alignments of trees, most of which have gone. Its western boundary was defined by a belt of trees which survives within arable cultivation west of the canal. Kilsby Road formed the northern boundary, which appears to have been lined with trees, and the eastern boundary with Park Meadow was formed by the brook which runs through the parkland today. The southern boundary of the 1740 park was lost as a result of later park expansion into Watford common field. Park Meadow, in the centre of the landscape, is defined to the east by a canal, fed by the brook through a water course near to the south boundary of the park. Beside the watercourse is a small building aligned east-west. The western avenue of trees lined the main driveway to the house in the 18th Century, crossing over the canal on a bridge. Near to the north boundary, a square water feature, with a central platform, to the west of the canal is fed by it. In Home Park to the east, a double pond with islands within a plantation is fed by the canal and a small rectangular pond lies to the north of the avenue, beside a plantation. Other geometric plantations and tree alignments lie to the north and south of the avenue, which leads through the terraced formal gardens at the west of the Court. These comprise a number of raised platforms, presumably with formal planting originally, and other geometric plantations.
The early 18th Century design is apparent on the 1836 map of the estate, then in the ownership of Henry Pilkington. An avenue of trees to the north has been planted beyond Kilsby Road, which aligns with the entrance to the Court marked by the stone gate piers which are listed at Grade II, and presumably formed an alternative driveway following the construction of the canal to the west. Home Park is largely unchanged and the water features still play an important part, but the Upper Park has been bisected by the canal. The former Park Meadow is renamed Long Park and the rectangular water feature at its north end appears to have been replanted with trees. In 1836 the park was bought by Lord Henley prompting a rapid expansion of the parkland, clearly shown on the 1885 map of the estate. Before the end of the 19th Century, a third avenue was planted leading to the north-east from the Kilsby Road and land to the north and south of the original early-18th Century landscape had been emparked. Lord Henley also constructed a bridge to carry the railway at the north end of the north avenue of trees. Elements of the 18th Century designed landscape remained, however, including the canal and the plantation at its southern end. The double pond to its east appears to have been backfilled and planted with trees. A new less formal approach to the house appears to have been constructed from the south, its entrance marked by a Lodge. A formal shrubbery surrounded Watford Court, enclosed by a stone ha-ha which remains today.
The Park maintains its late 19th Century form and is managed as open space. The construction of the M1 motorway has truncated the area of historic parkland to the west.
DESCRIPTION
Watford Park is defined by the M1 to the west, the Grand Union Canal to the north-west, the railway line to the north and north-east, West Haddon Road and Church Street to the east and Main Street and Station Road to the south. The park is dissected by Kilsby Road which runs approximately through the centre of the park in a south-east to north-west direction. The 18th Century park is located on land sloping from the east to west. The emparked land to the south is generally flat, but to the north of Kilsby Road, the park respects the valley contours of the brook, aligned south-west to north east through the centre of the park, and a stream north of Kilsby Road, which branches off the brook to the north-west.
The principal driveway to Watford Court lay to the west in the 18th Century and is preserved as a parchmark and earthwork; the original tree avenue which lined the route has been felled, but replanted with saplings. Near to the site of the house, the drive survives as a broad hollow-way, up to 2m deep in 1981. The early 19th Century avenue of trees which extends north has also been replanted. The late 19th Century tree-lined avenue to the north-east remains.
The late-19th Century shrubbery no longer survives, but the ha-ha which demarcated it is extant. To the west of it, the buried remains of the 18th Century terraces survive as levelled platforms, bounded by scarps with double scarps on their steep west sides. The filled-in ponds and canals of the 18th Century survive as earthworks or are observed as parchmarks, overlying the building platforms and enclosures of Watford village on the south side of Kilsby Road, enclosed from the 16th Century. Both the area of the 18th Century park and the land emparked in the late 19th Century retain some plantations, clumps of trees and individual specimens. To the north of Kilsby Road, the parkland overlies extensive ridge and furrow predating the enclosures of the 16th Century and 17th Century, comprising several furlongs with headlands and joints.
Watford Court was demolished in the 1970s, but the walled kitchen garden, coach house and other associated structures remain and are listed at Grade II.
ASSESSMENT
Watford Park is an evolved park and garden which retains, at its core, a largely intact early 18th Century landscape represented by earthworks with some cropmarks of structures, deposits and garden features which survive below ground. Earlier features pertaining to the mid 17th Century park may remain beneath. The 18th Century elements include the principal driveway from the west (and presumably the archaeological remains of the bridge over the canal) the canal and ponds of the middle park and terraces and geometric plantations of the formal gardens near to the site of the house.
The expanded park of the later 18th Century and early 19th Century retains both individual and clumps of specimen trees, plantations and important vistas to the north and north-east preserved by the replanting of avenues. Although of later date, and not laid out by a notable designer, the expanded later 19th Century park remains mostly intact. Further interest is added by the documentary evidence for the development of the park, which is extensive and adds to our understanding of the site's evolution from 1712 onwards. The results of RCHME survey and comprehensive records from the Northamptonshire Historic Environment Record attest to the extensive survivial of earthwork and below ground remains pertaining to the early 18th Century designed landscape. Within the park lie the earthwork remains of the shrunken medieval village of Watford and the associated ridge and furrow.
It is unfortunate that Watford Court was demolished in the 1970s as its loss does detract from the interest of the landscape. The continuing survival of the listed enclosure wall, kitchen garden, coach house and gate piers contribute to the setting, and contextualise the design of the park. Although the Court no longer remains, the important vistas from its raised platform on the east side of the park survive, overlooking the 18th Century designed landscape to the west and emparked area to the north. Jacques assessment of the survival and rarity of late 17th Century and early 18th Century parks in England asserts that avenues of trees, features typically of late 17th Century origin, became increasingly rare following the influence of Lancelot 'Capability' Brown from the mid 18th Century onwards. Although replanted, the alignment of three avenues remain at Watford, albeit two date from the early and late 19th Century. The vistas established by these avenues remain from the site of the house; in particular the relationship between the extant gate and the north avenue of trees is particularly significant.
SOURCES
Addison, C. Unpublished Report on Watford Court and Park.
Hall, D. The Open Fields of Northamptonshire -The Case for the Preservation of Ridge and Furrow (1983)
Hall, D. The Open Fields of Northamptonshire (1995)
Hall, D 'Field Systems and Township Structure' in The Rural Settlements of Medieval England;Studies dedicated to Maurice Beresford and John Hurst (1998) eds.Aston, Austin and Dyer, p.196-205
Jacques, D 'Late C17/early C18 Parks; An investigation into their nature, survival and vulnerabilities'. Unpublished and undated PhD thesis, pp13-14
RCHME. An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northampton: Vol III Archaeological Sites in North-West Northamptonshire (1981)
MAPS
John Morton. A Natural History of Northants -map of 1712.
Clement Wilson. A Survey of Watford Park in the County of Northampton belonging to Edward Clerke Esq. 1740 (NRO map 3161).
James Colleridge. An Exact Map of Watford Inclosures in the County of Northampton belonging to William Cartwright Esq. Surveyed 1760 (NRO map 3159)
William Cullingworth. An accurate Plan of the New Inclosures of Watford and Muscott in the County of Northamptonshire surveyed in the year 1771 (NRO map 3158b)
Plan of the Watford Park Estate Situate in the Parish of Watford, The Property of Henry Pilkington Esq, purchased by Lord Henley March 23 1836 (NRO map 3162).
Tithe Map of the Parish of Watford, 1847 (NRO map T41)
Map of the Parishes of Watford and Crick c 1860 (NRO map 3160)
Map showing Lord Henley's Watford Estate, 1885 (NRO map 3217)
<1> 1760, NRO Map 3159, (unchecked) (Map). SNN42162.
<2> 1815, Watford Park; Property of Henry Pilkington (NRO Map 3162), (unchecked) (Map). SNN42165.
<3> Wilson C., 1740, Clement Wilson's Survey of The Park Belonging to Edward Clerke (NRO Map 3161), (unchecked) (Map). SNN42147.
<4> Eyre T. (Revised by Jefferys T.), 1779, Map of the County of Northamptonshire, (unchecked) (Map). SNN1852.
<5> 1840, Watford Tithe Map, (unchecked) (Map). SNN14710.
<6> 1860, Map of Watford & Crick Fields (Map 3160), (unchecked) (Map). SNN42166.
<7> 1885, Lord Henley's Watford Estate (Map 3217), (unchecked) (Map). SNN42045.
<8> 1958, OS 6 INCH MAP, SP66NW (unchecekd) (Map). SNN14706.
<9> 1780, Map of Watford, (unchecked) (Map). SNN54491.
<10> 1764, Map of Watford, (unchecked) (Map). SNN15055.
<11> 1821, NRO Map 3684, (unchecked) (Map). SNN56309.
<12> 1849, Watford Tithe Map (T41), (unchecked) (Map). SNN54918.
<13> 1837, Plan of The Watford Park Estate (Map 3162), (checked) (Map). SNN54916.
<14> Ordnance Survey, 1950, Ordnance Survey 1950s Mapping Series (SP56), (unchecked) (Map). SNN60388.
<15> Ordnance Survey, 1834, First Edition Ordnance Survey 1 Inch Map Series (Sheet 52), (unchecked) (Map). SNN281.
<16> Royal Commission on The Historical Monuments of England, 1981, An Inventory of The Historical Monuments in The County of Northampton, p.192-3 (checked) (Series). SNN77381.
<17> Bridges J., 1791, The History and Antiquities of Northamptonshire, p.585 (unchecked) (Book). SNN77325.
<18> Ordnance Survey, 1950s/1960s, Ordnance Survey Record Cards, SP66NW4 (unchecked) (Index). SNN443.
<19> Collingridge J., 1771, Watford New Inclosures Belonging to William Cartwright (Map 3158b), (unchecked) (Map). SNN42160.
<20> Morton J., 1712, The Natural History of Northamptonshire, (unchecked) (Book). SNN10113.
<21> Ordnance Survey, 1880, First Edition OS 6 Inch Mapping Series (36NE), (unchecked) (Map). SNN42062.
<22> Ordnance Survey, 1880, First Edition OS 6 Inch Mapping Series (36NW), (unchecked) (Map). SNN106632.
<23> Ordnance Survey, 1811-9, First Edition Ordnance Survey Surveyors Drawings, Sheet 253 (Map). SNN104902.
<24> HALL D.N., 1989, The Rural Settlements of Medieval England: Field Systems and Township Structure, (unchecked) (Report). SNN106634.
<25> Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2011, Watford Park, C18 Garden Remains Overlying The Shrunken Medieval Village of Watford and Associated Ridge and Furrow Cultivation, (unchecked) (Schedule). SNN107298.
<26> Richards J., 2013, Rye Hill, Watford Gap: Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment, (unchecked) (Report). SNN109596.
<27> Royal Air Force, Vertical Aerial Photography, A/P (RAF VAP 543/RAF/2337 0377-9) (Photographs). SNN104890.
<28> Aerial Photograph, A/P (CUAP AW168 AWQ18 19) (Photographs). SNN112974.
<29> English Heritage, English Heritage Scheduling Notification, 21-Feb-11 (Report). SNN114848.
<30> English Heritage, Heritage Protection Advisor, Heritage Protection Advisor 06-JUL-2010 (Report). SNN114849.
Sources/Archives (30)
- <1> SNN42162 Map: 1760. NRO Map 3159. MAP 3159. (unchecked).
- <2> SNN42165 Map: 1815. Watford Park; Property of Henry Pilkington (NRO Map 3162). MAP 3162. (unchecked).
- <3> SNN42147 Map: Wilson C.. 1740. Clement Wilson's Survey of The Park Belonging to Edward Clerke (NRO Map 3161). NRO Map 3161. (unchecked).
- <4> SNN1852 Map: Eyre T. (Revised by Jefferys T.). 1779. Map of the County of Northamptonshire. NRO Map 1119. (unchecked).
- <5> SNN14710 Map: 1840. Watford Tithe Map. (unchecked).
- <6> SNN42166 Map: 1860. Map of Watford & Crick Fields (Map 3160). MAP 3160. (unchecked).
- <7> SNN42045 Map: 1885. Lord Henley's Watford Estate (Map 3217). NRO Map 3217. (unchecked).
- <8> SNN14706 Map: 1958. OS 6 INCH MAP. SP66NW. SP66NW (unchecekd).
- <9> SNN54491 Map: 1780. Map of Watford. (unchecked).
- <10> SNN15055 Map: 1764. Map of Watford. (unchecked).
- <11> SNN56309 Map: 1821. NRO Map 3684. MAP 3684. (unchecked).
- <12> SNN54918 Map: 1849. Watford Tithe Map (T41). NRO T41. (unchecked).
- <13> SNN54916 Map: 1837. Plan of The Watford Park Estate (Map 3162). NRO Map 3162. (checked).
- <14> SNN60388 Map: Ordnance Survey. 1950. Ordnance Survey 1950s Mapping Series (SP56). 2.5 inches to 1 mile. SP56. Ordnance Survey. (unchecked).
- <15> SNN281 Map: Ordnance Survey. 1834. First Edition Ordnance Survey 1 Inch Map Series (Sheet 52). 1 Inch to 1 Mile. Sheet 52 (Daventry). Ordnance Survey. (unchecked).
- <16> SNN77381 Series: Royal Commission on The Historical Monuments of England. 1981. An Inventory of The Historical Monuments in The County of Northampton. 3. HMSO. p.192-3 (checked).
- <17> SNN77325 Book: Bridges J.. 1791. The History and Antiquities of Northamptonshire. 1. p.585 (unchecked).
- <18> SNN443 Index: Ordnance Survey. 1950s/1960s. Ordnance Survey Record Cards. Ordnance Survey Record Cards. Ordnance Survey. SP66NW4 (unchecked).
- <19> SNN42160 Map: Collingridge J.. 1771. Watford New Inclosures Belonging to William Cartwright (Map 3158b). NRO Map 3158B. (unchecked).
- <20> SNN10113 Book: Morton J.. 1712. The Natural History of Northamptonshire. (unchecked).
- <21> SNN42062 Map: Ordnance Survey. 1880. First Edition OS 6 Inch Mapping Series (36NE). 6 Inch to 1 Mile. 36NE. Ordnance Survey. (unchecked).
- <22> SNN106632 Map: Ordnance Survey. 1880. First Edition OS 6 Inch Mapping Series (36NW). 6 Inch to 1 Mile. 36NW. Ordnance Survey. (unchecked).
- <23> SNN104902 Map: Ordnance Survey. 1811-9. First Edition Ordnance Survey Surveyors Drawings. 2 Inches to 1 Mile. Ordnance Survey. Sheet 253.
- <24> SNN106634 Report: HALL D.N.. 1989. The Rural Settlements of Medieval England: Field Systems and Township Structure. (unchecked).
- <25> SNN107298 Schedule: Department for Culture, Media and Sport. 2011. Watford Park, C18 Garden Remains Overlying The Shrunken Medieval Village of Watford and Associated Ridge and Furrow Cultivation. MPP 22/AA033126/1. (unchecked).
- <26> SNN109596 Report: Richards J.. 2013. Rye Hill, Watford Gap: Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment. Headland Archaeology Fieldwork Reports. RHWG13. Headland Archaeology. (unchecked).
- <27> SNN104890 Photographs: Royal Air Force. Vertical Aerial Photography. A/P (RAF VAP 543/RAF/2337 0377-9).
- <28> SNN112974 Photographs: Aerial Photograph. A/P (CUAP AW168 AWQ18 19).
- <29> SNN114848 Report: English Heritage. English Heritage Scheduling Notification. English Heritage. 21-Feb-11.
- <30> SNN114849 Report: English Heritage. Heritage Protection Advisor. Heritage Protection Advisor 06-JUL-2010.
Finds (0)
Related Monuments/Buildings (24)
- Parent of: East-West Running Avenue of Trees (Monument) (962/0/1)
- Parent of: Gate Lodge at Southern Entrance (Building) (962/0/15)
- Parent of: North-South Running Avenue of Trees (Monument) (962/0/2)
- Parent of: Ornamental Canal(s) in Home Park (Monument) (962/0/6)
- Parent of: Park Meadow (Monument) (962/0/19)
- Parent of: Possible Early Boundary Ditch & Bank (Monument) (962/0/12)
- Parent of: Possible Large Water Feature (Monument) (962/0/11)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Drain (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/14)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Drain (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/18)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Mound (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/9)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Pond (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/7)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Pond (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/8)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Pond (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/5)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Pond (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/13)
- Parent of: Possible Post Medieval Terraced Walk (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/4)
- Parent of: Post Medieval Hollow Way/Drive (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/3)
- Parent of: Post Medieval Woodland Plantations Within Home Park (Monument) (962/0/22)
- Parent of: Post Medieval Woodland Plantations Within Upper Park (Monument) (962/0/21)
- Parent of: Probable Post Medieval Enclosure (Morphed Aerial Archaeology Interpretation) (Monument) (962/0/17)
- Parent of: Pulpit Bridge (Building) (6947/1/1)
- Parent of: South-West to North-East Running Avenue of Trees (Monument) (962/0/10)
- Parent of: The Hop Yard (Monument) (962/0/20)
- Parent of: Tree Clumps (Monument) (962/0/16)
- Related to: Watford (Monument) (952)
Related Events/Activities (2)
Location
Grid reference | Centred SP 59991 69063 (1555m by 2551m) Approximate |
---|---|
Civil Parish | WATFORD, West Northamptonshire (formerly Daventry District) |
Protected Status/Designation
Other Statuses/References
- NRHE HOB UID: 341724
Record last edited
Feb 3 2025 8:10PM