Kineton
Kineton maps (2 available)
Map of Warwickshire
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Kineton books (11 available)
Kineton memories
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Warwickshire memories
My Family
The Bull family, we used to live at 4 Duffus Hill. We used to go to the stud where my father worked, back in 1974. We used to go to the village hall for Brownies. We went to the school. We went to Sunday School down Middle Town Lane. We have got loads of memories of Moreton Morrell.
A memory of contributed by jenny dixon
My Banbury gran's village.
My grandmother's name was Amelia Gough and she lived in the second cottage on the right at the bottom of the green on the road to Mollington, water was collected by bucket over the road from a tap in the vicarage wall. She had two children Arthur and Mary, my mother. We lived in Oxford and visited every two weeks arriving Saturday and going back to Oxford Sunday. We went by train to Banbury stopping at every village on the way, then caught a little yellow and green bus to Warmington. I made a lot of friends with the local children, we spent most of the time roaming round the fields, helping on the farm just below the cottages with a ...read more here
A memory of Warmington contributed by Michael Bennett
mini fishing
I remember fishing here with our mini bottles. Catching minows with wine bottles with the bottom knocked out ( hard to find ). Remember once being trapped under these arches with the river rising and being surrounded by the cows that came down from the field. Very fond memories - shame kids don't get the chance these days to experience such things.
A memory of Shipston-On-Stour contributed by Michael Bailey
Markham's of Bascote
My husbands family were from Bascote. His ancestor Edwin Markham moved there as an ag labourer in the 1870s. His wife Maria died shortly after, and he married again. He had very many children, and used to drink at the Fox and Hen pub - the landlords were witnesses at his wedding! Sadly his cottage, by the pub, has been demolished, but his children all stayed local to Bascote when they grew up; one of his sons died in the Great War, and is named on the Bascote Heath memorial.
A memory of contributed by rebekah markham
Extracts From Kineton & Warwickshire books
For centuries Kineton
was a market town,
but the market ceased
in 1890 and now it
is just a large village.
The war memorial
stands on a tiny green
close to the Swan
Hotel (the white-
painted building,
centre) which dates
from 1668. Kineton
has several attractive
cottages, some
of them with the
distinctive chequered
brickwork seen in
those on the right of
this photograph.
An extract from from"Warwickshire Revisited Photographic Memories".
An extract from from"Leamington Spa Town and City Memories".
Mrs Hitchman, widow of Dr
Hitchman, donated the site for this
church together with a large sum of
money. St Mary’s was built between
1877 and 1878 by John Cundall in
brick with a prominent steeple. The
interior is brick-lined. The tower
was a mere 75 feet high and has
been cemented over. In 1875 the old
three-decker pulpit was removed and
the font re-located. The horse and
carriage gives a tranquil atmosphere
on a road which now leads to an
industrial estate.
An extract from from"Leamington Spa Town and City Memories".
The River Leam and All Saints’ Church
from the suspension bridge. On the left, the
high walls at the rear of the gardens give an
indication of the flood problems associated
with living on a river.
An extract from from"Leamington Spa Town and City Memories".
Another recreation ground
available to Rugbeians was the
Whitehall Recreation Ground on
Hillmorton Road, which housed a
28-ton, armoured First World War
tank presented to the town in 1919,
in recognition of contributions to
National War Savings. In 1940 the
tank was sold for scrap as part of a
new war effort.
Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee
was celebrated not only with the
Clock Tower, but also with an
extensive tree-planting project along
selected roads leading into Rugby
(see Clifton Road overleaf).
Dunchurch, 4 miles to the south-
west of Rugby, is a small village of
thatched cottages and popular public
houses and restaurants. The village
green boasts a two-seater set of stocks
(last used in 1866) and a thatched bus
shelter. At the cross-roads stands the
market cross on a stepped, medieval
base, the cross itself replaced in 1813
by a milestone.
An extract from from"Rugby Town and City Memories".






