PRN,Site Name,Rec Type,Period,Dates,Summary Desc,NGR 6377,"Quarry, Old Hall Lane",Mon,Early Med-PM,410-1900,"Small quarry S of Barr Beacon & N of Old Hall might be that referred to in a charter of 957 AD. Last worked in 1930s, on SW slope of cliff face",SP 0590 9656 5811,Settlement - Aldridge,Mon,Early Med-Mod,410-2050,"Settlement at Aldridge. Indications that there was a late Saxon and Norman settlement in the area, but the site is uncertain. ",SK 0593 0069 5842,Settlement - Pelsall,Mon,Early Med-Mod,410-2050,"Pelsall is first recorded at the end of the 10th centruy. It began life as a small agricultural hamlet with settlement centred around the Paradise Lane area. Thereafter there was only modest growth until the expoitation of coal and iron in the 19th century saw its growth into an industrial settlement. Nowadays it is largely a residential area. A notable feature of the settlement is the survival of large area of commons, Pelsall Common, to the east of the early settlement area.",SK 0183 0346 9316,"Ryders Hayes Lane, Pelsall",Mon,Early Med,c 410-1065,The origin of this name is uncertain but it is possible that the road may have been the 'hunter's track' referred to in Wulfrun's Charter of 994. 'Rydders Heys' appears in connection with Pelsall boundaries in 1634 and later on the 1843 tithe apportionment; in the 1881 census the form is 'Rider's Ease'. Alternatively the name may reflect ownership by the De Ridder family.,SK 0235 0372 9481,"Ogley Hay, Brownhills",Mon,Early Med-Med,c 410-1539,"Cannock Forest contained a number of ""hays"" or enclosures belonging to the king; Ogley Hay was 1 of 7 such enclosures S of Watling St at the end of the C13. Ogley Hay can be traced back to AD994 when the land was given to Wolverhampton monastery.",SK 0500 0550