Wrockwardine Wood and Trench is a civil parish in the district of Telford and Wrekin, Shropshire, England. The parish contains four listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. All the listed buildings are designated at Grade II, the lowest of the three grades, which is applied to "buildings of national importance and special interest".[1] The parish is a suburb of the town of Telford, and the listed buildings consist of a former steam mill, a church, a rectory, and public house.
The steam mill was built alongside the Donnington Wood Canal, it was expanded in 1891, and has since closed and been converted into apartments. It is built in brick with dentilledeaves, and has a tile roof with stone copedgable ends and shaped kneelers. The original block has two storeys and an attic and six bays. The windows have cast iron frames, small panes, and segmental-headed openings. The extension has four storeys, and there are two two-storey gabled wings at the rear.[2][3]
A brick house with a dentilledeavescornice and a tile roof. There are two storeys and an attic, three bays, and a two-story one-bay wing recessed at the left. In the centre is a doorway with Tuscan half columns and an entablature. The windows are sashes and there are two gableddormers.[4]
The church is in red brick with a slate roof, and is in Georgian style. The chancel was added in about 1875, and there were later additions. The church consists of a nave, a chancel with a polygonal apse, and a west tower. The tower has three stages, a south doorway, a clock face on the south side and round windows on the other sides, round-headed bell openings, cornices and a parapet with corner obeliskfinials. The windows in the body of the church have round heads, and inside there is a west gallery on cast iron columns.[5][6]
The public house has a front of glazed brick and a tile roof. There are two storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a public house front with pilasters, an entablature, and engraved glass windows, and the upper floor contains bay windows with gables and terracottafinials.[7]