Hampshire Treasures
Volume 6 ( East Hampshire)
Page 229 - Newton Valence
|
|
Next page (Volume 6, Page 230) |
| Description and Date | Remarks | Protection | Grid Ref. and Punchcard No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group A - Natural Features | ||||
| Dene Hole |
East northeast of Headmoor Farm. 45 ft. deep shaft, opening into dome shaped chamber 18 ft. high, 20 ft. in diameter. Ref: P.H.F.C., Vol. 16, Part 2, p. 193. | N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 689 341 1614 12 |
|
| Site of Ecological Interest |
Noar Hill. Area of chalk grassland rich in flora on former chalk workings, and structurally diverse beech hanger on westerly facing scarp. Nature reserve managed by Hampshire and l.O.W. Naturalist Trust. | N.P. Act S.S.S.I. A.O.N.B. |
SU 744 317 1614 13 |
|
| Sarsen Stone No. 49A |
At junction leading to St. Marys Church. | N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 723 327 1614 14 |
|
| Trees |
On land adjoining the Manor House. A group of three horse chestnut, a group of three sycamore, and a single horse chestnut. | T.P.O. No. 68 E.H.D. N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 724 328 1614 15 |
|
| Group B - Archaeological Sites and Remains | ||||
| Bronze Age | ||||
| Bowl Barrow |
North-east of Lodge Farm. 36.0 m. in diameter and 1.8 m. high. No visual ditch. Damaged by ploughing. O.S.A. No. SU73 SW2. Ref: P.H.F.C., Vol. 14, 1938-40, p.354. | N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 704 333 1614 09 |
|
| Iron Age | ||||
| Field System |
Southern edge of Goldridge Plantation. Series of three contour lynchets extending for nearly a mile. Probable Celtic fields. O.S.A. No. SU73 SW5. | N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 722 339 1614 10 |
|
| Field System |
South-west of village. Series of parallel lynchets extending for over half a mile. Probable Celtic fields. O.S.A. No. SU73 SW7. | N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 720 325 1614 11 |
|
| Group D - Buildings, Monuments and Engineering Works | ||||
| Church C.13/14 |
St. Mary. Restored 1871. Nave and chancel early English, west tower, early English with C.19 brick top. Large Norman font and two piscinas. O.S.A. No. SU73 SW9. Ref: Buildings of England; Hants. and I.O.W., (Pevsner & Lloyd), p.353. | T. & C.P. Act N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 724 328 1614 08 |
|
| House C.17/18 |
The Manor House. Long irregular building. Oldest portion, 2 storeys, coursed stone blocks with brick dressings, plinth and band and long ridge slate roof. Red brick Georgian portion with parapet and hipped tile roof. Victorian wing, 2 storeys, yellow brick, low pitched slate roof and sash windows. | T. & C.P. Act N.P. Act A.O.N.B. |
SU 724 328 1614 07 |
|
|
|
Next page (Volume 6, Page 230) |
