The reported site of a prehistoric stone circle and cairns in an area where prehistoric flints and a hammerstone (PRN 0510.00) were found. William Cubbon noted the stone circle on an annotated map, but no further evidence has been recorded in the HER.
The site of a Bronze Age cremation burial where a layer or platform of burnt stones, soil and ashes were found under a flat stone, in the late 19th century.
A group of three cairns or mounds east of the farm house, about 20 metres apart, now gone. They were located at the following locations; A - SC44118066; B - SC44018068; C - SC43988061.
A was ditchless grass-covered bowl barrow with a diameter of 16.0 metres and height to the north of 0.9 metres.
A cist is orientated northeast to southwest and measures internally 1.8 metres by 1.1 metres, and is lined with stone slabs up to 0.8 metres high. It is set on an irregular gorse covered mound with an average diameter of 8.0 metres and height of 0.3 metres. It appears to be a ditchless bowl barrow. In the south and pointing towards the cist with its north edge in line with the south ends of the east and west stones is an erect stone 1.0 metre high, 0.8 metres wide and 0.1 metres thick.
The site of a Watch and Ward beacon has been identified as the hill rising to a point at NGR SC 43297938. The Hill for the Day Watch for Lonan parish was at Sir William's Hill as mentioned in a document (Castle Rushen Papers) dated 1627. Cubbon stated that this hill was on Clay Head (shown at SC 428806 on the 1957 1:10560 scale Ordnance Survey map). There were two Ports for the Night Watch, one at Laxey (SC 4483) and the other at 'Gob Stoell', just south of Garwick, (Gob ny Stowell at SC 438813 on the 1957 1:10560 scale Ordnance Survey map). The majority of the Watch and Ward posts may well have been maintained on the same sites since the Middle Ages.
A Neolithic round-based food jar belonging to the Ronaldsway culture was found here during ploughing, and donated to the Manx Museum in 1955 to 1956. The jar is thought to have been associated with a burial.
Earthwork. This large earthen bank and ditch crosses a ridge between two valleys. It survives as an earthwork features for around 300m, but a cropmark suggests that it may have extended for a further 300m as far as the bottom of the Lherghyrhenny valley to the south. The bank rises to a maximum height of over 2m near the top of the ridge, and a 3-4m wide ditch on the uphill side appears to have provided the necessary material. The bank peters out to the north close to the Tholt y Will stream, and the quarry ditch here has been eroded downwards by surface water run-off. To the south of the apex of the ridge the bank and ditch have been damaged by the construction of a sheepfold, and further south the physical remains of the earthworks have been ploughed down within fields belonging to a nearby farm, which is now abandoned.
The sheer size of the bank and ditch where best preserved has given rise to comparison with Iron Age defences, though their topographical location militates against this. Their most practical use would seem to be as a barrier against animals - grazing stock or perhaps wild deer - and thus it is tempting to see the earthwork as an unusually large example of the 'mountain hedge' which from at least medieval times separated common land from farm land and prevented animals pastured on the uplands during the summer from trampling crops.
A badly worn slab with traces of a Celtic ring cross. It was found in Maughold barn in 1885 and is now kept in the Maughold Cross House. It measures 96.5 centimetres x 51 centimetres x 10 centimetres thick.
The site of a deserted farmstead known as 'The Close' is situated on the high moorland in the northern extremity of Braddan parish. It was the home of a celebrated preacher 'Illiam y Close' or William Cowley, who died in 1848.
The farm was possibly established before 1706 as the earliest date associated with the site is an inscription 'IC:1706' on one of the slate stones of the existing stable. Presumably this refers to a member of the Cowley family who built (or rebuilt) the stable in that year.
The layout of The Close farmstead can be described as scattered, as no attempt was made to group the buildings. 50 metres north of the house, on the left bank of the streamlet which flows from the Flax-dub, are the remains of a corn-drying kiln (PRN 0718.10), which measures 6.4 metres x 3 metres overall (SC 36768927). A lime kiln is located at NGR SC 36578819 (PRN 0718.20). All the buildings of the Close, except the stable, are shown as roofless on the 1870 1:2500 scale Ordnance Survey map. The fields around the farmstead are ridged in long broad butts.