Modern chapel.
The Ordnance Survey 1:2500 First edition mapping shows a chapel at this location, annotated as a Primitive Methodist chapel.
The site was acquired for its construction in 1833.
The chapel was closed in 1949, though it continued in use as a Sunday school until 1975. Its seats, pulpit and choir pews transferred to Ballafesson and it was sold in 1980.
It is now used as a store.
Modern chapel.
The Ordnance Survey 1:2500 First edition mapping shows a chapel at this location, annotated as a Wesleyan Methodist chapel.
The chapel dates from 1797. It was replaced by a larger chapel on a new site 70m to the south in 1893.
It is now used as a young men's club.
The site of a post-medieval horse engine, recorded as a one-horse machine, with the threshing machine itself substantially intact but the building in a ruinous condition.
The site of a ditchless, grass covered bowl barrow which was opened in 1885. It measured circa 15.9 metres in diameter by 0.4 metres high when recorded in 1957. It has since been lost as a surface feature.
A Bronze Age collared urn was found here, of Longworth Secondary Series Form Iron Age, measuring 42.5cm high with a decorated collar and internal rim bevel. (Manx Museum, Accession No. 1954-0596b).
A crop mark of unknown signficance seen on aerial photographs.
The site is also the findspot of a prehistoric flint scatter which included worked flints, scrapers and flakes.
The findspot of a Mesolithic flint scatter. It included worked flints of probable Heavy-blade or Bann type, 11 blades, flakes, an assymetrical 'missile head' and 2 worked slates.
Prehistoric burial cist.
The Ordnance Survey 1:2500 First Edition mapping of 1867-8 records this site, together with the annotation, 'Stone Cist found hereabouts'.
Kermode (1930) records its discovery prior to 1867 without further comment.
No further finds are recorded.
The site of a post-medieval horse engine. The circular horsewalk is shown on the 1870 1:2500 scale Ordnance Survey map, located to the northern side of a farm outbuilding to the northwest side of the farmyard.
The findspot of a scatter of worked flints of early prehistoric date, including four scrapers and a piece of utilised slate which had one face smoothed by wear.
The site of a Bronze Age bowl barrow. It survives as a ditchless mound, with no visible stones on the surface. It has a diameter of 11.0 metres and is up to 1.6 metres high. Historic ploughing appears to have eroded the base of the mound around its circumference.
The findspot of a Mesolithic Heavy-blade or Bann type flint scatter which included a flint flake, a serrated blade and two further flakes from same field as coin hoard PRN 0707.00.
The site of a possible shieling mound. However, a quarry magazine and trackway lie close by and the feature may have been created by quarrying activity further to the east. The mound is shown on the 1869 1:2500 scale Ordnance Survey map.
Modern horsewalk.
The Ordnance Survey 1:2500 First Edition mapping of 1869 shows a horsewalk at this location. The horsewalk, together with the barn to which it is attached, still survive.