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newsletter-387-june-2003

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 7 : 2000 - 2004 | No Comments

Newsletter
Page 1

HADAS DIARY

Tuesday 10 June ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 8pm prompt in the drawing room, ground floor, of Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley, N3

Saturday 14 June OUTING TO WHEATHAMPSTEAD AND ELY with Micky Watkins At Wheathampstead Simon West will show us his excavation which will be in progress in June — a rare opportunity. At Ely we can visit Cromwell’s House, the local museum, the Stained Glass Museum as well as the Cathedral. (Application form enclosed)

Till 15 June – DON’T MISS ! The two exhibitions currently at the Church Farm Museum have been extended to 15 June by popular demand! For details please see the April 2003 Newsletter — ‘Hendon’s Hidden History: finds made by HADAS at Church End Hendon area over the last forty years’, and ‘Weird and Wonderful Contraptions: everyday gadgets 1800-1950.’ Admission to the Museum is free. It is open Monday-Thursday 10-12.30 and 1.30-5, Saturdays 10-1 and 2-5.30 and Sundays 2-5.30. It is closed on Fridays.

Saturday 26 July OUTING TO READING AND SILCHESTER with Tessa Smith and Sheila Woodward. (Did anyone happen to tape the ‘Meet the Ancestors’ programme on Silchester? It would he very useful before the Silchester outing. If you can help please contact Tessa)

Thursday September 11 — Sunday September 14th LONG WEEKEND TO WORCESTERSHIRE, HEREFORDSHIRE AND GLOUCESTERSHIRE. Please contact Jackie Brookes to check if there are any places left or cancellations
The Museum in Docklands opened on 24 May in one of London’s oldest warehouses

It will illustrate the story of London’s river, port and people from Roman times to the present.No.1 Warehouse, West India Quay, Hertsmere Road, E14 4AL (0870 444 3856)Open 7 days 10am — 6pm
Victor Jones’s Legacy by Don Cooper

As recorded in the January 2003 Newsletter, Victor left £1,000 to HADAS for use towards providing more archaeological information to the schools in the Borough. The Museum of London run a scheme whereby boxes of artefacts from their vast collection are provided to schools to use as a teaching aid. Each box contains pieces of Roman pottery and other suitable objects to interest children. Ideally, every school should have one, but money… The Museum of London have agreed to provide Barnet with up to 22 new boxes using Victor’s generous gesture. The boxes will record his donation and will include a HADAS leaflet. I am sure Victor would be delighted to know that his legacy has been put to such good use.
Roman Southwark by Harvey Sheldon Don Cooper

In the last lecture of this year’s series, Harvey Sheldon, our current HADAS President, introduced one of his favourite subjects, that of Roman Southwark. He sets the scene by showing some fascinating slides of the development of North Southwark since the Second World War. These were mostly slides of ghastly high-rise tower blocks, which not only spoilt the skyline; but also as a result of the deep foundations they required, destroyed the archaeology. He outlined the search for the Romans in Southwark by archaeologists over the years, from the early finds by antiquarians, through the work of Mortimer Wheeler and especially the good work done on five sites by Kathleen Kenyon after the war, while W.F.Grimes was excavating in the City. Again he showed some fascinating slides of those early excavations. Southwark on the South side of the river is topographically lower than the North side, and in pre-Roman times, was not a contiguous river hank but a series of islands surrounded by marshes and water channels. Evidence of the prehistoric occupation of the Southwark area comes from plough (ard) marks from a number of sites as well as fragments of Beaker pottery. However, it seems that the area was occupied by small farmsteads rather than there being a settlement. It was clear from aerial views of the Thames estuary why the Romans chose the area around what is now London Bridge, at what was near the first achievable crossing point with good estuarine access for shipping. The Roman roads in Southwark took advantage of the high ground of the islands in the river. Watling Street ran along the line of what is now Borough High Street; somewhere along the way it was joined by Stane Street, the Roman road to the Wealden industries. There is a third, very substantial road, which may go between the main Roman crossing point and perhaps an earlier crossing from Lambeth, over Thorney Island (where the Houses of Parliament now are) and on to the North side of the river. As well as the northern part of the Roman city being destroyed during the Boudican revolt, it has now been established that the settlement in Southwark was also destroyed. Evidence of the status of Roman Southwark is indicated by the excavations at Winchester Palace by Southwark Cathedral, where a large Roman masonry building was found with hypocausts and high quality wall paintings. It is possible that this was a military building. Recent excavations at Tabard Street and Long Lane have uncovered a complex of Roman masonry buildings, including one, which is similar in shape to a Romano-Celtic temple. A dedicatory plaque was found nearby, apparently by a trader from Gaul, which might also indicate a temple in the vicinity. Other evidence comes from the large cemetery recently discovered and not yet fully analysed. Harvey emphasised that there is still lots of work to be done in Southwark and he promised to come back again soon to tell us more.


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LAMAS CONFERENCE Eric Morgan

Once again HADAS was represented, though fewer of us could attend due to the unfortunate restriction in numbers allowed this year. We had our stand and managed to sell some hooks. Overall the conference seemed to go down very well. The morning session started with the presentation of the Ralph Merrifield award by our President Harvey Sheldon to the joint inventors of the ingenious full-sized reconstruction of the water-lifting machine, which they kindly demonstrated during the lunch break. The rest of the morning session reviewed recent work in progress, including a Paleolithic site at Lower Kingswood in Surrey; another at Canons Farm, Banstead nearby, which is thought to have been occupied by Homo Heidelbergensis. The work was done by the PAD MAC Unit of Oxford University and the Plateau Group. This was followed amongst others, by a review of a Roman building at Carshalton; of the excavations at Southwark by Pre-Construct Archaeology; of which we heard recently; and on developing a framework for London archaeology. The afternoon session was devoted to London’s prehistory. It started with an introduction by Jan Cotton of the Museum of London on their new gallery, ‘London before London’. This was followed by a review of the prehistoric landscapes at Perry Oaks, Heathrow, the work was done by Framework Archaeology; then of the Bronze Age political economies along the river Thames; of prehistory in the City; and finally of London in the Iron Age.
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Daisy Hill remembered

Dorothy Newbury writes: Last week I received a letter from a friend of Daisy Hill, one of our Vice Presidents. She regularly received and enjoyed our Newsletters, and I spoke to her last year, hoping she could send us some interesting memories of our early years. Sadly she did not do so. John Enderby, our only remaining founder member, who was on the committee with her in the 60’s, has kindly sent us some memories of her. John Enderby: We are very sad to report the death of Daisy, a Vice President of the Society and a very early member, at her home in Chesterfield on 16 April after a massive heart attack at the age of 86. She will be remembered as a Hendonian with a deep knowledge of the area who contributed to HADAS in many ways. Before her retirement from a long-standing position with a coal merchant in Hendon in 1982 and her move to Chesterfield, she was a hard working Secretary of HADAS for several years. In 1969 she published its first Newsletter; the first since the Society’s foundation in I961. It was fulfilling a long wanted need. She was then living in Prince of Wales Road spending much time tending her garden, which was a delight to see — an interest that occupied her retirement in Chesterfield. Daisy will be remembered as a private person but a valuable committee member’ who worked closely with Ted Sammes and Bridget Grafton Green in particular on many archaeological ventures. She was never afraid to express herself strongly if she felt it necessary, but her opinions always had a sound factual basis. R.I.P. P.S. Dorothy Newbury… Many members will remember a day trip in 1998 to Shaftesbury and to the delightful village of Fontmell Magna where John now lives after retiring as Principal of the Hampstead Garden Suburb Institute for 31 years. I am hoping we can twist his arm for a “repeat performance” next year — he says there are more things to show us.
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Training Excavation in Lewisham: The Roman Road-Lewes Road 9 June-11 July 2003

Applications are invited for this year’s Birkbecks summer training excavation at a site in the Bellingham-Bell Green area between Catford and Lower Sydenham. Attendance must be for a minimum of one week and for a maximum of two. Each week will provide training in surveying, excavation and recording techniques, initial finds processing and other aspects of archaeological investigation. This is a non-residential project costing £155 per week. The course organisers are Harvey Sheldon and Louise Rayner. (Contact: Phil Jefferies, Birkbeck College (020 7631 6627)
Enrich UK net

A new portal has been launched providing free access to some 150 digitalised collections in Britain’s libraries, museums and galleries, including some voluntary and community organisations and small local museums. (CILIP Update April 2003)
Tudor Self Catering

Christopher and Juliet Hawkins of The Hall, Milden, Lavenham, Suffolk, will make one of their early 16c.barns available for self catering in Tudor style with access to herbs from a Tudor garden and many foods grown or imported in Tudor times. Christopher is a keen amateur historian and local parish recorder, and collects and catalogues Roman and medieval pottery. This year, for the first time, the Hall is also part of the Suffolk Historic Houses Invitation to View, in which 18 houses not open regularly to the general public will admit visitors for special tours. Tours will be held on June I0 and 30, and July 15 and September 10. (The Times 1 May 2003)
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OTHER SOCIETIES EVENTS by Eric Morgan

Thursday 5 June 7.30pm London Canal Museum, 12-13 New Wharf Road, Kings Cross, NI.Waltham Abbey/Gunpowder Canals. Talk by Richard Thomas (HADAS visited in 2001)

Saturday 7 June 10.30 – 4pm LAARC Open Day: Life in Islington and Hackney. Mortimer Wheeler House, 46 Eagle Wharf Road, N1

Sunday 8 June 2 – 4pm Friern Barnet and District Local History Society. Meet by statute near Friern Barnet Lane, N11. Cost £1.00. Friary Park and St. James’s Church. Circular walk with Oliver Natelson. (Includes ancient cemetery where HADAS did a survey)

Wednesday 11 June 8pm Barnet and District Local History Society, Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Road, Barnet. London in the 1880 ies. Talk by Jeff Page

Wednesday 11 June 8pm Homsey Historical Society. Union Church Hall, corner Ferme Park Road, Weston Park, N8. The Two Remarkable Stephens. (of Avenue House) Talk by Norman Burgess.

Sunday 22 June 2pm Friem Barnet and District Local History Society. Meet by forecourt of Friern Barnet Town Hall. Tour of Colney Hatch and St. John’s Church with Oliver Natelson. Lasting 1-2 hours. Cost £1.00

Tuesday 24 June 8pm. Friern Barnet and District Local History Society. Old fire station next to Town Hall, Friern Barnet Lane, N11. New Southgate revisited. Talk by Colin Barratt. Cost £1.00

Thursday 26 June 8pm. The Finchley Society. Drawing room, Avenue House, East End Road, N3 AGM followed by talk by Laurie Chivers. Trading: small businesses in East Finchley and the effects of supermarkets.

Sunday 29 June 1-6pm Cricklewood Festival. Clitterhouse playing fields, Claremont Road, NW2(HADAS will have a stand and would welcome offers of help on the day or part of it)

Sunday 29 June 2 – 4pm Friern Barnet and District Local History Society. Meet at entrance to Homebase, Station. Tour of New Southgate with Colin Barratt. (Includes 90 year old gasholder, former cattle byre and dairy, 100 year old postal sorting office) Cost £1.00

newsletter-386-may-2003

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 7 : 2000 - 2004 | No Comments

Newsletter
Page 1

HADAS Diary

Tuesday 12th May ROMAN SOUTHWARK Harvey Sheldon

Tuesday 10th June ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING (Details enclosed)

All lectures start at 8.00 p.m. prompt in the drawing room on the ground floor of Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley N3, and are followed by question time and coffee. We close promptly at 10.00
Outings

Saturday 14th June OUTING to WHEATHAMPSTEAD AND ELY with Micky W. and Dorothy. At Wheathampstead, Simon West will show us his excavation which will be in progress in June – a rare opportunity. At Ely we can visit Cromwell’s House, the local museum. the Stained Glass Museum as well as the Cathedral.

Saturday 6th July READING and SILCHESTER, with Tessa Smith and Sheila Woodward. (Did anyone happen to tape the ‘Meet the Ancestors’ programme on Silchester? It would be very useful before the Silchester outing. If you can help, please contact Tessa on 020 8958 9159.)

Application forms for outings are sent out with the Newsletter the month prior to the event.
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The Great Well Hunt at Avenue House by Andrew Coulson

“Inky” Stephens did more than invent inks. He set about enlarging Avenue House and landscaping its grounds, and he paid special attention to the water supply. He developed systems for collecting and storing the run-off water from the roofs of the House by means of drains and sumps. Some of these are thought to be under the asphalt on the terrace outside the Garden Room. One such sump, capped with a man¬hole cover in the year 2000, is about six feet in diameter and some twenty-five feet deep. Avenue House management suspected that there might be more sumps under the terrace and asked HADAS to look for them. The lack of ground water in the asphalt and its impenetrability rendered our resistivity meter unworkable. The team considered dowsing, bosing, or metal detection (we assumed that any well-cap would contain some metal). Dowsing was not tried because we had no rods (wrong – it seems some are available!) and it was feared it would look silly and un-scientific. Perhaps, but one wonders if it works, and if so how well? Maybe we will find out some day. Stephen experimented with his metal detector which, according to its manual, could detect a 10 pence coin under 6 of soil, and an iron man-hole cover under 4 or 5 feet, and which would indicate what sort of metal was involved. We found, however, – that experience is needed to fine-tune the equipment and to interpret its signals. The experts Stephen consulted stated that detection through the estimated 5″ of asphalt was quite feasible, though they did have some reservations as to the capacity of the equipment to do this. On tests in flower beds. it worked well. We tried echo-location or “basing”. This involves dropping an object and listening to the sound made. If the sound changes, then the subterranean structures have also changed providing, of course, you have dropped the same object in the same way. It helps, we found, to have a “listener” as well as a “dropper”. We found a mattock handle in the stores with a rounded “big end”. This is useful because a “squared off end is less likely to achieve a constant angle of impact. Hold the mattock handle at its point of balance pointing downwards and at about waist height. As you pace slowly forwards, release your grip, and the handle will fall, hit the asphalt, and bounce back to your hand. Repeat ad infinitum. Note the harmonic vibrations emitted by the handle and ignore them; they are not what you are after. Listen to the sound of the impact. Ignore constant similar sounds; they are mere background. Only when, for example, “BONG” becomes a strident “BOING”, do you sit up and take notice. With the chalk in your other hand, you mark an X, or whatever, and add your “listener’s” interpretation. We used three; “hard”, “soft”, and “It’s different, but I can’t say how”, recorded on the grid as “h”, “s”, and ‘7’. We found it best for the “listener” to decide which type it was_ Does it work? We now have a grid plan of the terrace showing spots and areas which produce sounds which are distinctly different from those obtained in adjacent places. This difference would, perhaps, be more easily quantified by using an oscilloscope or a D.I.Y. seismometer. One supposes that a solid (concrete) substructure will produce a solid or hard sound, whilst any sort of cavity will make a soft or hollow response. Indeed, the plan shows lines of similar noise which could be caused by drains, except that these are usually “hard” when they ought, if they are indeed drains, to be “soft”! It is a puzzle. To find the answer the asphalt will have to go. Avenue House, egged on by English Heritage, have schemes to do just that. There is also the chance of a prize for the most accurate “guess” at what is where. Who said archaeology doesn’t pay? With grateful thanks to Christiane, Eric, Stephen, Bill and all the other Bosers.
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Clapham Junction Peter Pickering

Not, I can assure members, in South London, but in Malta. There, in many places on the bare limestone, are pairs of grooves in the rock, of varying depth, up to 60 centimetres in places. The grooves in each pair are some 1.41 metres apart (though there is not absolute uniformity). 1.41 metres is 4ft 7in – remarkably close to the standard railway gauge. The grooves fork, or cut across each other, for all the world like railway tracks – hence the popular name for one particular concentration of them, which we visited with the Royal Archaeological Institute just before Easter. The date and purpose of these grooves are alike enigmatic. Dating might feasible when the grooves encounter another feature, such as a tomb, but no robust conclusions have yet been reached. The grooves have, naturally, attracted the lunatic fringe, who ascribe them to aliens or the citizens of Atlantis, drawing attention to places where they seem to run beneath the sea. But sober archaeologists cannot choose amongst three possible purposes: transport, irrigation and quarrying. T o each of these there are objections: the grooves might have been worn by wheels or the runners of sledges, but one would have expected the animal pulling the vehicle to have left some trace; no association of the grooves with water sources has been found; and the length of some of the grooves (more than a kilometre in places, uphill and down) is hard to reconcile with quarrying. By the way, there was a railway in Malta, running from Valletta to the ancient capital Mdina, but it closed in 1931, though traces of it are visible to the enthusiast.
The villa of Tiberius Claudius Severus Tessa Smith

We were very pleased to welcome Roy Friendship-Taylor for our April lecture, as several of us met him last year on the site of his dig at Piddington. Set against this background, the excavation was vividly brought to life for us by our lecturer. Originally the Viatores had traced a Roman road to Piddington, and later air photos seemed to show the corner of a Roman fort. More recently a local vicar with a metal detector had dug up an iron key, Roman tile and tesserae, and it was at this point that the Upper Nene Archaeological Society were called in to excavate. They have now been digging there for 24 years. Last summer, they found a timber villa dated A.D.70, associated with a huge spread of iron slag and many lengths of cauldron chain, indicating an iron-age smelting industry_ Previous years’ excavations have uncovered a large nine-roomed Roman villa which had an amazingly colourful tiled roof, cream tegulae overlaid by sky blue imbrex, and bright red tiles with drops of red paint applied, Over 80 very fancy white and red ‘chimneys’ have been found, which could have been bird feeders, but definitely went on the roof of the villa. The floors were tiled in herringbone, ears of wheat pattern, and 2nd century heart-shaped mosaics were found, as well as key and swastika designs. Low limestone wails were plastered in red, topped by highly decorated supporting columns, and a formalized courtyard garden was edged with pillars. A very rare and prestigious find is a tile inscribed TIBERIUS CLAUDIUS VERI, meaning ‘the estate of Tiberius Claudius’, which identifies very neatly who owned the property at that time, In the corner of the villa, a hypocaust and stoking room heated the bath house which had box-flue tiles with internal lead piping found in situ. Two stone seats were situated in one corner. Water was fed to the villa by means of a wooden pipeline and although the wooden pipe has not been found, its iron collar has, thus giving the diameter of the pipe. One of the largest stone-lined wells in Roman Britain, over 8 metres deep and 2 across, contained over 25,000 oyster shells and whelks, (the original “fishy water”?) Pots, jugs and a decorative bucket-hook were found at the bottom. Amphorae, two Brockley Hill carmated bowls, four huge mortana over 1 metre in diameter, made in the 2nd century by the potter Viliarcus, army horse harness and scale armour show that it was a site of the Roman army, It will be very interesting when they- excavate the area where the aerial photos indicated the corner of a Roman fort to be. Several medical instruments have been found, scalpels, traction hook, needles. Silver spoons, a gladiator penknife, 18 brooches stamped with the maker’s name, and the head of a Mercury statuette from a dining bowl (which is one of only three found in Britain) and a large collection of Samian indicate a superior lifestyle at that time, In the 3rd century, the villa was burnt down and refurbished more than once, and a detached bathhouse suite of rooms was built. In the 4th century, squatters moved in and pig bones, bird bones and a horse’s head were found in the ruins. In spite of a rather squalid ending to the villa, the latest news is very exciting. Partly due to a lottery grant, partly due to a bequest, and a lot to do with Roy Friendship-Taylor, a new museum will be opened to the public later on this year, showing all the finds. A conservation area, education area, library and photographic section will all be available. What a wonderful event in the ongoing excavation at Piddington, and the Estate of Tiberius Claudius.
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Other Societies’ Events

Saturday and Sunday 3rd and 4th May 10.00-5.00 Family History Fair, Royal Horticultural Society, New Hall and Conference Centre, Greycoat Street, Westminster, SWI. Society of Genealogists event to launch Local History month

Sunday 4 May 2.30 pm Heath and Hampstead Society, Burgh House, New End Square, NW3. “Historic Features”. Walk led by Brian Senddon. £1.00 donation.

Sunday 4th May 10.00-5.00 7th May 5.00 Hampstead Antiques and Collectors Fair, Community Centre, 78 High Street, NW3. Admission 20p. Postcards, photos, prints, watercolours, maps etc. British Archaeological Association Society of Antiquaries, Burlington House, Piccadilly, W1. “According to Function? Decorum in English Architecture of 12tm-13’th centuries. Talk by Peter Draper. Church End Festival, Avenue House grounds, East End Road, Finchley, N3. HADAS will have a display stand here. We welcome any offers of help on the day or part of it.

Wednesday 14th May 6.30 pm London and Middlesex Archaeological Society, Interpretation Unit, Museum of London, 150 London Wally, EC2. From Flints to fire Engines: Work of the conservation Department at MoL. Talk by Helen Ganiarus.

Wednesday 14th May 8.00 pm Barnet and District Local History Society, Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Road, Barnet. “Medieval Armour”. Talk by Christopher Gravett.

Wednesday 14th May 8.00 pm Hornsey Historical Society, Union Church Hall, corner of Ferne Park Road and Weston Park, N8. “History and Operation of the New River”. Talk by John Cunningham. £1 entrance fee.

Thursday 15th May 8.00 pm Enfield Preservation Society, Jubilee Hall, junction of Chase Side and Parsonage Lane, Enfield. ‘Church Farm, Hendon”. Talk by Gerrard Roots (Museum Curator and HADAS member) May is also Museums and Galleries month. City of London Archaeological Society, St. Olave’s Church Hall, Mark Lane, EC3. “Understanding and Recording Standing Buildings in London”. Talk by Andrew Westman (MOLAS)

newsletter-385-april-2003

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 7 : 2000 - 2004 | No Comments

Newsletter
Page 1


HADAS DIARY

Tuesday April 8th LECTURE “The Villa of Tiberius Claudius Severus: a peep into the past” by Roy Friendship-Taylor. This is the Piddington Roman Villa, which HADAS visited in August last year The visit was written up in the November newsletter.

Tuesday May 13th Lecture by Harvey Sheldon (our President) on Roman Southwark. Tuesday June 10th ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING.

Saturday 14 June Outing to Wheathampstead with Micky Watkins. At Wheathampstead Simon West, whose lecture at our March meeting is reported below, will show us his excavation in progress. In Ely we can visit Cromwell’s House, the local museum, and the Stained Glass Museum as well as the Cathedral.

Saturday July 26th Outing to Reading and Silchester with Tessa Smith and Sheila Woodward.

Thursday September 11th to Sunday September 14th Long Weekend to Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire (including Hereford Cathedral, its Mappa Mundi and chained library, Stokesay Castle and the ruins of Witley Court). There may still be one or two places available. Contact Jackie Brookes

Lectures start at 8pm in the Drawing Room (ground floor) of Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley N3. Buses including the 82, 143, 260 and 326 pass close by, and it is a five to ten minute walk. from Finchley Central Tube Station.
A MUST-VISIT: CHURCH FARMHOUSE MUSEUM

All members should visit the exhibitions now on at the Church Farmhouse Museum, and continuing until 1st June 2003. Besides Hendon’s Hidden History, which curator Gerrard Roots describes below, there is an exhibition of ‘Weird and Wonderful Contraptions Everyday Gadgets 1800-1950’. This collection, gathered together by Barnet resident Morris Collins over the last 30 years, includes a hundred-year-old clock that makes tea, a kettle that turns into an iron and an implement to massage your eyes. The display focuses on items that were used in everyday life and have been developed into products that can still be bought in the shops today. Admission to the Museum is free. It is open Monday-Thursday: 10-12.30 and 1.30-5; Saturday:10-1 and 2-5.30; and Sunday: 2-5.30. It is closed on Friday.
HENDON’S HIDDEN HISTORY Gerrard Roots

Hendon’s Hidden History, one of two current exhibitions at Church Farmhouse Museum, displays finds made by HADAS in the Church End Hendon area over the past forty years. Highlights of the show include the Saxon pin from the Church Terrace excavation and the astonishing number of fragments of bird- pots from the Church End farm site. l am particularly pleased that material uncovered during the two excavations in the Church Farmhouse Museum garden is at last displayed in quantity. I am only sorry that my cat, Henry, who died last year, was not present at the private view for the exhibitions on 16th March, Henry was adopted by HADAS as their site supervisor during the Church Farm digs — a role Henry carried out with great authority. Henry even received an acknowledgement in the excavation report in the HADAS journal! I am very pleased that the ongoing happy relationship between HADAS and the Museum is highlighted by our exhibition. Please come and see it.

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CBA Winter Meeting Peter Pickering

The Winter General Meeting of the Council for British Archaeology was held on February 27th in the elegant rooms of the British Academy in Carlton House Terrace. The talks were linked, sometimes loosely, by the theme ‘The Value of Development-led Archaeology’, and everybody was awaiting the appearance of the consultation draft of PPG15, which will combine and update PPG15, which deals with standing historic buildings, and PPG16, which deals with archaeology. Many of the talks focussed on the need to involve and inform the public, on which the current PPG16 was not thought adequate, and which some people feared did not sit well with developer-funded archaeology and competitive tendering; they tended to believe that a general tax on developers and area franchising of the right to conduct archaeological investigations in advance of development would be preferable. But others were more optimistic that developers could see publicity for archaeological discoveries on their sites as being good publicity for them, and that the problems of health and safety and confidentiality could be overcome and really successful open days arranged. Kim Stabler of English Heritage produced statistics to show the increase over the last ten years not only in planning applications and archaeological interventions in Greater London but also in the number of requests made for access to the Sites and Monuments Records. She admitted that it was difficult to enforce the conditions requiring publication that had been imposed on planning applications, since a development might well be complete and a building open before it was apparent that publication would not be adequate, but on at least one occasion a condition had been enforced and an opening delayed. Natalie Cohen of the Museum of London Archaeology Service (MoLAS) described the problems of archiving the material found in developer-funded digs, which the contractors would scarcely want to store indefinitely. It became clear that the position in London, with the excellent new Archaeological Archive and Research Centre, is much better than that in most of the rest of the country. Digital archiving had great potential, but the problem of obsolescence must not be forgotten. One interesting paper separate from the main theme was by David Jamieson of MoLAS. He described an attempt to produce a computer topographic model of the prehistoric and early Roman land surfaces within the City of London. Using the available data for every archaeological intervention, he fed into the computer the levels above Ordnance Datum at which ‘natural’ and early Roman brickearth had been encountered, and then interpolated between the reference points so as to get a contour map. He freely admitted to problems with the accuracy of the data, and with the way in which the computer calculated interpolations, particularly at the edges of the map. But the results he has already obtained were suggestive, especially in the demonstration of Roman terracing on the river front, and he has ideas for solving the problems, for instance by using data from geological bore-holes, and so improving the results.
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The Mackerye Burials

Our March lecture was by Simon West, the Field Archaeologist for St Albans Museum Service, a man of quite infectious enthusiasm. He has, actually, a lot to be enthusiastic about. Mackerye End Farm is near Wheathampstead. In March last year metal detectorists who had been working a field there for some time without great success found several bronze objects from suspected cremations. They reported this to the St Albans Museums Service, who immediately started digging. Close to the cist burial found by the detectorists, there was another rather less rich one close by. The ‘Main’ burial was accompanied by eight bronze objects, the other by three., most striking were two bronze jugs with Medusa heads and bulls or tritons on the handles; they were of a type made in Campania in the late republic or early years of the Roman empire, the wear on them showing that they had been in use for some considerable time before they were deposited. There were also two silver brooches, great quantities of Roman glass, and, between the two burials, a complete dinner service for four people of undecorated Samian pottery, made before 140AD. Simon was most enthusiastic about a mass of heavily corroded iron objects which after conservation proved to he hunter’s set of 25 arrow heads, of three different types — bolts for large game, barbed arrows for medium-sized game, and leaf-shaped ones for duck, hares and the like. These finds led to a geophysical survey of the whole field, and the excavation of three large trenches. Though the deposits had been truncated by ploughing there were ditches, pits and postholes. One set of postholes may indicate an Iron Age hall; or a Roman barn; or a Saxon hall. A series of walls may indicate a tower-tomb, or a temple mausoleum. Two of the pits may have had a ritual use — in one of them there was a vessel surrounded by burnt clay which had in it unburnt gravelly soil. Previously, two other pits had produced coin pellet moulds, usually associated with Iron Age royalty. Were the burials perhaps of a rich Roman couple in the second century AD whose estate had been owned by, and were perhaps even descended from, royalty from before the Roman conquest? The circumstances of the investigations were nearly as interesting as the finds themselves. Unlike so many nowadays, the excavations were not developer-funded and carried out by a professional contractor. This was not a well-known or scheduled ancient monument, though of course it is in an area where there are many Iron Age and Romano-British sites. The discovery was not the outcome of a research assessment. Metal detectorists found it in a field being inexorably eroded by ploughing; they very responsibly told the Museums Service what they had found (though not before their understandable enthusiasm had led to some damage and loss of context for the larger burial.) Because funding was short, much of the work was undertaken not by paid archaeologists but by volunteers from the Manshead Archaeological Society of -Dunstable. Simon and the St Albans museum are very keen on informing local people and involving them; they had a Young Archaeologists’ Club working through spoil heaps, and held an open day which attracted over 1000 visitors. The BBC have become very interested, are putting some money into the excavation and are planning a programme about it in September this year. Simon intends to have another campaign to find out more. Very fortunately, HADAS will be able to visit Mackerye End on the way to Ely on 14th June while the excavation ‘is going on, and Simon should be able to show us it.
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On the trail of HADAS finds Don Cooper

I appealed in the January newsletter for information on the whereabouts of any documents and/or artefacts that might be from the 1961-66 excavations at Church End Farm, Hendon. I have not as yet had anything relating to that particular dig, but I have received a box containing a large number of clay-pipe fragments (some with very interesting stamps on them) and a very few small pieces of pottery, almost but not quite all of which are recorded as coming from the dig which HADAS carried out from February 6th to March 6th 1982 at the Old Bull Arts Centre in Barnet in advance of the building of a new theatre. The excavation was reported on by Philip yenning in the newsletter of October 1982. I wonder where the other finds from this dig are? And what other important finds are lurking elsewhere in the garages and attics, or even under the beds, of HADAS members of longer-standing. Please look urgently, and do not wait for the better weather. Let me know what you find; my address is 59 Potters Road, Barnet ENS 5HS, and my e-mail address is atdcooper@msn.com. If it would help you, I would gladly come and collect.
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Nostalgia Audree Price-Davies

Looking through some of the back numbers of the Newsletter has been a reminder of the early years of the society. The original members had far-reaching enthusiasm and the number of excavations is inspiring. The society was started by Mr. Constantides who wanted to prove that Hendon had a Saxon foundation. The original meetings in 1961 were held in Church End House. The committee consisted of Dorothy Newbury, Daphne Lorimer, Sheila Woodward, Ted Sammes, George Ingram, and Brian Jarman. Two of the members, Dorothy and Sheila, are still active in the society to-day and Daphne Lorimer is active in the Orkney society and has recently been awarded the O.B.E. for her work in this field. Excavations were conducted at Church End Farm from 1961-66; the Birkbeck College course is currently well on with producing a report. The 1974 committee was larger and included Brian Jarman as chairman, Edward Sammes as Vice- chairman, Brigid Grafton-Green as Secretary and Jeremy Clynes as Treasurer. Committee members were:

Christine Arnott, Dorothy Newbury, Michael Bird, Nell Penny, G.M.T. Corlet, Anne Trewick, John Enderby, Joanna Wade, Eric Grant, Freda Wilkinson, Elizabeth Holliday, E.E. Wookey and Daphne Lorimer. Anne Trewick organised day trips and the society was organised into groups to cover research, Industrial Archaeology and Documentary Archaeology. Numbers grew significantly and at the Church Terrace dig from 1971-1974 there were 85 members on site in total. In 1974, Paddy Musgrove reported on hedgerow dating and Percy Reboul reported on churchyard surveys; the Church Terrace dig was on-going. In 1976 there were exhibitions of West Heath by Daphne Lorimer, and of Finchley by Percy Reboul and Vincent de Paul Foster at St Mary’s Junior School. The main dig was at West Heath; there was also the Church Terrace dig and activity at Brockley Hill. In 1977, the exhibition “Archaeology in Action” got off to a flying start at Church Farm House when the Mayor of Barnet, Mr. Andrew Pares, came on February 19th to open it. Several Vice-Presidents were present: Mrs Rosa Freedman, Mrs. Daisy Hill and Mr_ Andrew Saunders, the Borough Librarian. In 1977 the current projects included:- A Parish Boundary Survey with Paddy Musgrove in charge. Edgware, a study of the district, both from documentary sources and in the field; Sheila Woodward was in charge. St. James the Great, Friern Barnet. The rector, Canon Norman Gilmore – a member of HADAS readily agreed that the society should record the tombstones. This project was expected to take several years to complete. Anne Trewick was in charge. History of Non-conformist Churches in the Borough. George Ingram had been steadily amassing information including, where they existed, copies of church guides. Dissenters Burial Ground Totteridge. Here HADAS has already recorded and photographed the graves but researchers were needed to dig out from libraries and other sources information about the families or individuals who were buried there. The co-ordinator was Daphne Lorimer. Resistivity Survey. Raymond Lowe was directing operations for the society. Industrial Archaeology — Bill Firth. Farm Building Survey – Nigel Harvey Parish Boundary Survey – Peter Griffiths. In March 1974 there were 234 members, in 1975 200, and in 1976 294. In 1977 there were 400 members and in November 1977 there were 120 members at a lecture. In 1978 a mound in the grounds of St. Joseph’s Convent Hendon was excavated. Speculation as to its purpose was:- a brick kiln, a priest’s secret passage, or an ice house. It proved to be an ice-house. In 1978 there were 100 members present at a lecture on Bridewell Palace and in 1979 digging continued at West Heath, co-ordinated by Daphne Lorimer, and at Church Crescent Finchley, monitored by Paddy Musgrove. The recording of graves in St. James the Great, Friern Barnet, co-ordinated by Anne Trewick, was also continuing. These are impressive achievements and have helped the society to its present position. Present members owe these early members a great deal and I hope that these events have stirred some memories.
Transport Corner Andy Simpson

Bill Bass advises me that in mid-February a contractor’s trench across the old Great North Road at High Barnet revealed the tram lines still in situ about a foot beneath the present road surface. This on a route converted to trollevbuses in 1938. This was at a point virtually opposite the present entrance to High Barnet Tube station on Barnet Hill, a few hundred yards short of the former terminus at Barnet church. This time last year, similar roadworks at the foot of the hill just north of the Northern Line bridge also revealed the tram lines to be in situ. Some 15-20 years ago, road surface stripping allowed a colleague from the London County Council Tramways Trust restoration group to view double tram track right up Barnet Hill! As always, I would be delighted to hear of any other such sightings from around the Borough.

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Rescue meeting Peter Pickering

On 8th March RESCUE, the British Archaeological Trust (which our President, Harvey Sheldon, chairs), held its Annual General Meeting at the Museum of London, followed by an open meeting. The open meeting was on ‘Buried Boats: Rescuing and Safeguarding Marine Archaeology’. The most interesting talk was about the Newport Ship, on which Andy Simpson reported in the last Newsletter. The others were about the new Marine Team which English Heritage have set up to implement the powers they have recently been given over archaeology between low-water mark and the twelve-mile limit, and about the survey Wessex Archaeology are carrying out on the salt-marshes of North Kent, finding many abandoned Thames barges, wooden minesweepers and concrete lighters (which had been used to carry ammunition and fuel during the Second World War); what about preserving some of the minesweepers and lighters (there are probably enough Thames barges preserved in maritime museums up and down the country)? Reports at the AGM itself focussed on four of the most difficult cases of the past year. One was the Newport Ship, saved (though there are still unresolved issues) following a major campaign, which reminded one of the Rose Theatre saga, and an enormous display of public support, which persuaded Welsh politicians to find a substantial sum of money. Another was the St Pancras cemetery, where the Channel Tunnel Rail Link contractors suddenly ordered the archaeologists off the site and prepared to dig the graves out themselves using excavation machinery and were only persuaded by a campaign from archaeologists and the Church to treat the human remains with dignity and respect and allow proper archaeological work to continue. Third was a road-widening near Southend where there is now to be reasonable protection for a Saxon cemetery. Finally, the serious problem of deep ploughing of the unexcavated parts of Verulamium has not been resolved, and there is no permanent voluntary agreement in sight. Indeed, after the expiry of the voluntary moratorium of two years the Earl of Verulamium estates could start ploughing again very soon. It is amazing that scheduling of this enormously important monument cannot guarantee its protection. It is to be hoped that the Government will act, and that resolving Verulamium will lead to a more general solution to the problem of plough damage to important sites unhindered by the planning controls because of what are known as Class Consents.
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Walking on Water Part 2 Andrew Coulson

As is becoming customary, I would like to begin with an apology. In last month’s Newsletter I stated that Vanessa Bunton, our Community Archaeologist, was employed by MoLAS. This is quite wrong. In fact she operates under the aegis of MoL. MoLAS is the Museum of London Archaeological Services a commercial organisation — whilst MoL is, of course, the Museum of London. I wish to apologise for any confusion I may have caused. I would also like to apologise for the postponement, or maybe cancellation, of the survey and river walk intended for March 23rd. Unhappily I had neglected to obtain the land-owner’s permission. Events must wait, therefore, until this is done. But all is not lost. Whilst it is impossible to disappear a full survey team in an instant, and hard to explain one away, much use can be made of tourists. Ours reported back that the ford (not, alas, the fort, as reported previously) was indeed a ford but only for deer, to judge by the hoof prints. They did not think it involved human activity because the banks were not scarped down to the water level, the ‘track’ was much less than one cart’s width, and the gravel bed was not a continuous firm surface from bank to bank. They did not feel it was worth a survey at this stage. Stream walking, however, is still a possibility. It is very apparent that seasons when there is no leaf cover and visibility is best are the times to go. At the least we will be able to take photographs without needing to use flash! It is impossible to be entirely up to date in a monthly newsletter. The latest information is distributed on the E-mail list — hadas@hadas.org.uk.
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Other Societies’ Events Compiled by Eric Morgan

Tuesday and Wednesday 8th and 9th April. The Family Records Centre 1 Myddleton Street EC1 ‘Meet the Neighbours’ fair with stalls from twenty archive services in London and Home Counties including Camden Local Studies and Archives with Islington Local History Centre on the 8th.

Wednesday 9th April 8pm Barnet and District Local History Society. Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Road Barnet ‘Women I have Married’. Talk by Richard Selby.

Wednesday 9th April 8pm Hornsey Historical Society Union Church Hall, corner of Ferme Park Road and Weston Park, N8 `Muswell Hill to Hornsey’. Talk by Hugh Garnsworthy. £1 entrance fee.

Friday llth April 8pm Enfield Archaeological Society. Jubilee Hall, junction of Chase Side and 2 Parsonage Lane Enfield. Reports of fieldwork, excavations, research and other activities 2002, preceded by AGM Entrance fee £1.

Sunday 13th April llam Battlefields Trust (Barnet branch) meet at Ye Olde Monken Holt for site walk of Battle of Barnet. Adjourn to Barnet Museum 1pm.

Tuesday 15th April 8pm. National Trust Barnet Association. St. Mary Magdalen Hall, Athenaeum Road, Whetstone. ‘The Sutton Hoo Ship Burial’. Talk by Charlotte Edwards.

Wednesday 16th April 6.30 pm London and Middlesex Archaeological Society. Interpretation Unit, Museum of London, 150 London Wall EC2. ‘Recent Discoveries at Saxon Lundenwic’. Talk by Gordon Malcolm (MoLAS).

Tuesday 22nd April 8pm Friern Barnet and District Local History Society. Old Fire Station (next to Town hall) Friern Barnet Lane ‘The World of Second-hand Books’ Talk by Martin Gladman £2.

Thursday 24th April 1pm Finchley Society. Drawing Room Avenue House East End Road N3 ‘History of Post Boxes in the Finchley Area’. Talk by Stephen R Krause.

Friday 25th April 6.30 pm City of London Archaeological Society St Olave’s Church Hall, Mark Lane EC3. `Excavations at Paternoster Square’. Talk by Sadie Watson (MoLAS)

Saturday 26th April 2.15 pm Enfield Preservation Society Meet at front door of Forty Hall Mansion for 3 hour circular walk led by Colin Davies.

newsletter-384-march-2003

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Newsletter
Page 1

HADAS DIARY

Tuesday 11 March – The Mackerye Burials – lecture by Simon West (Field Archaeologist for St Albans Museum Service). The burials, at a site off Marshalls Heath Lane near Wheathampstead, are in a zone of dense occupation and activity from the Later Iron Age through possibly to early Saxon (c. 600 AD).

Tuesday 8th April – The Villa of Tiberius Claudius Severus – lecture by Roy Friendship-Taylor. (Villa at Piddington, near Northampton – HADAS outing, August 2002).

Saturday 14 June – Ely – outing (Micky Watkins).

Saturday 26 July – Reading and Silchester – outing (Tessa Smith and Sheila Woodward).

Thursday 11-Sunday 14 September 2003 – HADAS Long Weekend (Jackie Brookes) to Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire (including Hereford Cathedral, its Mappa Mundi and chained library, Stokesay Castle, and the ruins of Whitley Court). A few further places are available. Please contact Jackie Brookes

Lectures start at 8 pm in the drawing room (ground floor) of Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley, N3. Buses including the 82, 143, 260 and 326 pass close by along Ballards Lane, a five to ten minute walk from Finchley Central Tube Station.


Page 2

KITCHEN CROCKS TO SUNDAY BEST – CERAMICS IN THE HOME FROM HENRY VIII TO VICTORIA – the February 11 Lecture by Jacqui Pearce

Jacqui introduced the lecture with a series of snapshots of items from Tudor to Victorian times, to demonstrate both the type of ceramics used at any period, and, by comparing the snapshots, to indicate the way in which they had both changed and stayed the same through the ages. She said she would demonstrate that the function of identifying pottery was not just to allocate dates to it, but to provide a picture of everyday life as it happened in the past. Jacqui started by providing a contemporary focus, with a slide showing the type of wares to be found in any 21st century household, comprising items in glass, plastic, metal and ceramic materials. Only a very small proportion was ceramic She then went on to cover each period in turn, starting with the Tudor period from Henry VIII to Edward VI, for which there were two snapshots, of items dating from 1531 and 1588; the early 17th century – James I, Charles 1, Oliver Cromwell, the mid-18th century comprising the first two King Georges, the turn of the 18th century to the 19th century, a snapshot in 1803 in Napoleon Bonaparte’s time; and finally, the death of Prince Albert. For each of these periods, she showed representative groupings of the ceramics in everyday use, and as evidence included pictures painted of the lifestyle of the period, illustrating the ceramics in use. Some of the domestic ware – cooking pots, kitchen bowls and chamberpots – hardly changed throughout all the periods. This was because they were functional rather than decorative But the decorative wares were a different matter. The impetus for change came from greater individual wealth and hence buying power, which in turn led to a desire to demonstrate this wealth by having high- status tableware. First imported pottery, then locally made pottery, fulfilled this need. Another catalyst for high-quality ware was the start of tea and coffee consumption, combined with much greater availability of porcelain, initially from China. This changed over time as tea and coffee prices dropped and they became available to everyone. Jacqui concluded her lecture by showing slides of the large collections of pottery that have come from excavations in the City, which demonstrate what the households of the period were using in the kitchen and dining areas of their houses. Jacqui, perhaps the country’s foremost expert on post-medieval pottery, demonstrated her great enthusiasm for her subject and the pleasure she gets from sharing her “beauties” with her audiences. by Liz Gapp (Jacqui Pearce also runs the Ted Sammes post excavation course).
Page 3

LAMAS CONFERENCE (40TH ANNUAL) – 22 MARCH 2002

Harvey Sheldon, President of HADAS, is to present the Ralph Merrifield Award at the 40th Annual LAMAS Conference. HADAS will also have a stand at the Conference, to be held from 11 am to 5.30 pm on Saturday 22nd March at the Museum of London. Topics include “Excavations in Southwark” (Pre-construct archaeology); “Developing a Research Framework for London Archaeology” (Peter Rowsome, MOLAS); “An Introduction to London Before London” (Jon Cotton, MOL); “Bronze Age Political Economies along the River Thames” (David Yates, Reading University); “Prehistory in the City” (Nick Holder, MOLAS) and “London in the Iron Age” (J.D. Hill, British Museum). Ticket applications (enclosing an SAE) and general enquiries to: Jon Cotton, Early Department, Museum of London, 150 London Wall, London EC2Y 5HN [e-mail to: jcotton@museum of london.org.uki LAMAS members E4, non-members £5. Cost includes afternoon tea. Eric MORGAN
MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL

For most HADAS members, the membership year runs from 1st April to 31st March. The next Newsletter will include a renewal form to be completed and sent back to me with a cheque, cash or a postal order for anyone who does not pay by standing order. If you are not sure which form of payment you have arranged, or if you want to change to making your payment by standing order (our preferred method for the time it saves), please contact the Membership Secretary (see details on back page). The exception to this is for those who have joined during the latter part of the year to 31st March 2003, whose subscription entitles them to membership until the April of 2004.


Page 4

SEVERN ESTUARY LEVELS RESEARCH COMMITTEE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING Saturday 16th November 2002 – NATIONAL MUSEUM AND GALLERY, CATHAYS PARK, CARDIFF (Continued from February issue)

After a nice lunch of home-made tomato soup in the museum café, we resumed with our keynote speaker, Garry Member, Director of the Hams and Wight Trust for Maritime Archaeology, on ‘Merged landscapes and Archaeology in the Solent’. Grant aided by English Heritage, the Trust has a staff of three to cover a programme that is more than just shipwrecks. A maritime SMR covers the many shipwrecks around the Isle of Wight, and was the first such database when established in 1989. Since copied by the RCHME, it has over 800 sites – archaeology beyond the low water mark to include submerged landscapes, intertidal areas and the area of the River Test, There are only 53 protected wrecks around the UK coastline. At Langstone Harbour, truncated cliffs give archaeological sections. A Bronze. Age hearth has been found there with scattered potsherds. Friends of the Trust are involved in fieldwork and found a log boat in Langstone Harbour, lying in a palaeochannel and carbon 14 dated to around 500 AD. It lay near shell middens and hurdle work of c. 900 AD. Split timber trackways have also been found. The increased size of modern vessels in the area increases damage to deposits due to silts being lifted off the stronger wakes and propellor wash, exposing the archaeology beneath. The Isle of Wight protected the Hampshire coast from erosion and the action of the sea as sea-levels rose. One oyster fisherman has recovered hundreds of stone axes, yet only three are shown on the local SMR. Volunteer divers working in low underwater visibility have been used to report on the nature of artefacts on the seabed – such as buried salt marshes and sunken peat deposits with channels and truncated peat cliffs, mapping this submerged landscape. An acoustic survey was made to image the sea bed. Peat with Mesolithic finds lies above estuarine silt deposits, with a typical date of 4100 cal BC for the Solent. 8m of sediments formed over 2000 years indicate a steep rise in sea levels. Next up was Richard Brunning, talking about ‘Huntspill’ A joint project in 2002 involving the Environment Agency and Somerset County Council on the Huntspill River, which gives a running section through the landscape. The river was cut in the 1940s to act as the reservoir for a wartime munitions factory and to help drain the inland peat meres. Today, in windy weather waves erode the soft shoreline, undercutting the river banks. Since the 1940s some 5m from each bank has been lost, uncovering much archaeology.. The Environment Agency is now grading the bank to avoid undercutting, and planting it with weeds and willow to stabilise it. At one site, erosion has exposed Roman pottery and masonry remains and field ditches. Roman salt making traces have been found, with the salt water originally contained in settling tanks. Hearth structures for the industry have traces of internal structures in the hearth, below trays in which the salt water was evaporated – the trays may have been of lead, with the nearby Roman lead mines at Charterhouse. Remains of Roman baskets have also been recovered, together with forged coins produced originally in this remote salt marsh environment where unwanted visitors could be spotted a long way off, giving time to hide the evidence! I found Richard Turner’s paper on Chepstow Castle of particular interest, having visited this spectacular site some years ago. It is not every town that boasts a WWI U-boat deck gun in the central square! Working for CADW, Turner described how the actual structure of the castle has been examined in great detail, and relevant documentation also collected together. There has also been some limited excavation. The castle perches on a limestone cliff above the River Wye, which acted as water source and transport highway for supplies and building materials, water transport being dramatically cheaper than land transport. The oldest part of the castle is the great Norman tower at the centre, remodelled in the 1230s and finally completed in the 1290s. The original main Norman door is framed by re-used Roman tile. Sandstone and limestone was quarried from the Forest of Dean, Lydney, the Wye Estuary and other local sources. Much – how much is under study – is re-used Roman masonry, brought by river from Roman sites in the Severn Estuary area, but which ones exactly is presently unclear, though some suggest the major Roman temple at Lydney, Glos; there is tufa in the arches and crushed Roman tile in the plaster of the earliest phase of the tower (1080s). The second phase (1230s) uses different stone including Purbeck marble and stone from the Bristol area, with very high quality carving. Some was carved at the quarry and shipped to the site in kit form. Wooden doors of the 1190s survive in the castle – the oldest castle doors in Europe. The castle was proviSioned from the river, with supplies winched up into the castle. For water supplies, a natural spring at the foot of the castle cliff fed out below tide level, so a high quality circular stone cistern was bult to store the water, which could then be plumbed by bucket from the top; excavation has shown that it stands on a ?Norman timber platform. The conference finished with a very up-to-date joint presentation by Kate Howells and Nigel Nayling on the excavation of the recently discovered and highly controversial Newport Medieval Boat, and its Dendrodating. This fifteenth century ship was found on the site of the new Newport Theatrical Arts Centre. Most of it has now been recorded and lifted by the Glamorgan Gwent Archaeological Trust on behalf of Newport City Council. A watching brief is continuing on the site, and Cows at Llanwern steelworks have provided water tanks and storage facilities. The people of Newport gave outstanding support for the well- orchestrated “Save Our Ship” campaign. The site is on the River Usk in the centre of Newport, some 300m downstream of the castle ruins and adjacent to an Augustinian Friary site. When the orchestra pit for the new building was dug, archaeology was quickly uncovered including a post-medieval stone slipway running towards the river and a timber drain of similar date. The very well preserved clinker-built vessel – with overlapping hull planking over the ribs lying in alluvial clays – started to appear as three battered ribs, and eventually was revealed as being 21m long and 8m wide, with the extreme bow and stern beyond the line of the contractor’s coffer dam – the renamed ‘Save Our Stem’ campaign is trying to ensure that these sections are also recovered, now that the area within the coffer dam has been fully excavated. Dendrodated to the mid-fifteenth century, excavation of the interior of the ship revealed more ships’ timbers from this and possibly other vessels, including rigging, decking and a pulley block. The whole ship was planned at 1:10. Finds included Portuguese pottery, iron slag, three stone cannonballs, coins of Alfonso V of Portugal, and brass strips, possibly from a chest binding. A pump hole in the hull was lined with a wicker basket. Much rope, wool, textile – including hems and buttonholes – was recovered, plus reed matting, tool handles, combs and barrel staves. Since the vessel could not be cut or lifted out, it was dismantled piece by piece and placed on pallets for storage in 17 water tanks at Llanwern. It will be conserved and reassembled, probably in a basement close to where it was found. The vessel, probably built as a cargo carrier, most likely had a central mast with square sail: the keel was beech, deck planks of sawn softwood, and the hull planks oak, being assembled before the framework was inserted. The mast step, a rectangular hole, shows evidence of contemporary cracking thorugh the stresses imposed on the structure by a single mast, and would have required beaching for repair. Some 250 planks survive as 35 strakes (planking levels) on the partly collapsed starboard side, and 16 on the port side, which was probably cut down post deposition as a ground levelling exercise. One timber, which might be part of the vessel, has been dendrodated to 1465-66; the ship certainly had a long life. Updates and further details on the SOS Newport website. Andy Simpson
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WELCOME TO NEW MEMBERS Mary Rawitzer (Membership Secretary)

It is a long time since we have had a news item concerning recently joined members, so may we welcome: Mr Donald Harris, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, whose particular interest in Whetstone was evident in his recent contribution to the Newsletter. Mr and Mrs Parks (Andrew and Val) and son Luke, London N3; Laurence Malin, Watford Way, Mill Hill; Stephanie Cooke, London N12; Michaela Iafrate, Cricklewood; Dorothy Rowan-Wicks, Barnet; Christopher Wiley, Kensal Rise; Dr Vivien Shanson, London N2; Christiane Fitzke, London N12, (who tells us she is a chef and has cooked Mediaeval and Roman dishes).
WALKING ON WATER – Andrew C and HADAS go river walking

Rivers make useful archaeological tools. People need water and settle near it; rivers function as routes for trade or war; ways have to be found of crossing them, and things are dropped in them. River-walking offers the chance of examining places which may have been untouched for centuries. HADAS members began river-walking in the early seventies, and began again in the Spring of 2001. There is no manual – we are constantly evolving methods and procedures. At present we are concentrating on the sources and headwaters of the Dollis which flows into the Brent and from there to the Thames. Wellies are adequate for ankle-deep water, waders for knee-deep and a boat for waist-deep water. You need to wear tough, “slippery” clothing so that you are not stung by nettles or ripped by thorns. Winter or early spring are thus good times. People interested in river walking could be given a brief course on what to look for (basic finds identification), and learn about riverine erosion and deposition patterns. We could “cheat” by using an SMR or finds register or archive to point us at a “lucrative” area, but we feel that the whole area needs searching. The best view is from the stream bed. The leader slowly scans the stream bed (the view of others in the group will be obstructed) and pays close attention to its banks. He or she must also test the bottom of the river for firmness with a walking stick – under four inches of water may be eighteen inches of mud! Progress is slow – recently it took us 180 minutes to cover 320 metres. We are using computer-generated maps on a scale of 1:4038 (approximately 7.8″ to 1 km). Accurate map- reading from the stream bed is usually impossible. The best method we have so far found is to use marker tags. The report form, designed and produced by Emma Freeman (who also produced the OS maps of the river on handy A4 sheets which fit on to a clipboard) has 21 main headings along with sub-options to be marked. We hope to re-walk Dollis Brook from where it crosses Hendon Wood Lane at Grid: 221947 to its source at Grid: 217946; to survey with the resistivity meter for the possible fort on that section, to investigate the features (“cobbles” and “dry lake”) found at the source, and also field-walk the area generally. Vanessa Bunton, MoLas Community Archaeologist, will attend. Dates: Sat / Sun March 22/23 and 29 / 30 March. (Probably Sundays). A minimum of four people will be needed for the river survey. A photographer (Eric?) and a liaison person (Emma Freeman?) would be helpful. Arrangements have to be made via e-mail (only medium fast enough) but you can contact me by text or voice-mail on 07803 470 475 giving your name and phone number and I will give you an e-mail contact.
18TH CENTURY MILITARY MEMORIALS IN NORTH LONDON

In an effort to assist a friend who has compiled a huge database on the officers of the British Army from 1715 to 1793, Andy Simpson has been trying to spot tombstones or memorials which record any details of officers who served in the army between these dates. Should any HADAS member know of memorials in churches local or otherwise, he would be very interested to hear of them or to receive a transcription of the text. The individual concerned must have served between the above dates, though of course he may have died after 1793
Page 6

OTHER SOCIETIES’ LECTURES AND EVENTS – Eric Morgan

Tuesday 4th March, 10.45 am, Hornsey Historical Society. Guided Tour of Mortimer Wheeler House (LAARC & Social Working Collections, including items specifically related to North London). Meet in reception area, 46 Eagle Wharf Road (Between City Road and New North Road)

CENTENARY STUDY DAY – “They Came to Rome – Power and Poetry” Saturday 8 March 1030 – 3 pm. As the Republic crumbled, ambitious provincials sent their sons to Rome – they came to make their fortunes in law, politics and literature… Tutors: Janet Corran, MA and Mary Lanch, MA. Bushey Centre, High Street, Bushey. Tickets £10. Apply to Barbara Beaumont: Tel 020 8950 6046 (WEA)

Monday 10th March, 3 pm Barnet & District Local History Society, Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Road, Barnet. “The History of Barnet – An Introduction” -Talk by Graham Javes (of HADAS).

Wednesday 12th March, 8 15 pm. Mill Hill Historical Society – Harwood Hall, Union Church, The Broadway, NW7 “The Geological Society of London” – talk by Andrew Mussel] (Barnet Archivist).

Wednesday 19th March, 6.30 pm London and Middlesex Archaeological Society, Interpretation Unit, Museum of London, 150 London Wall, EC2. “Surgery in Roman Britain and Beyond”. Talk by Ralph Jackson (British Museum).

Thursday 20th March, 1 pm, Senate House Archaeological Historical Society, Chancellor’s Hall, Senate House, Malet St, WC1 “Radiocarbon Dating – Recent Projects and Developments at the Oxford Laboratory”. Talk by Dr T Higham.

Thursday 27th March, 8 pm. The Finchley Society. Drawing Room, Avenue House, East End Road, N2. “Industrial Heritage”. Talk by R.W.G. Smith (National Trust).

Sunday 30th March, 10.30 am-4.30 pm. The Jewish Museum, the Sternberg Centre, 80 East End Road, N3. Open Day for 70th Anniversary. Art, craft, drama, films, music.

newsletter-383-february-2003

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Newsletter
Page 1

DAPHNE LORIMER MBE

In her capacity as Chair of the Orkney Archaeological Trust, HADAS vice-president Daphne Lorimer has been awarded the MBE for services to Scottish archaeology in the 2003 New Year Honours List. She is in good company, with Richard Morris, previously Director of the CBA, receiving the OBE for services to archaeology, and Tim Strickland also receiving the MBE for services to archaeology and the Community in Middlewich, Cheshire. – Another HADAS member was honoured at the same time – PHILIP VENNING has been awarded the OBE for services to ‘The Society For The Preservation of Ancient Buildings in Britain’ Philip was very active in our society’s early days and will be known to all our older members, reports Dorothy Newbury. Our congratulations to them both!
HADAS ON DISPLAY

With the kind permission and co-operation of Curator Gerrard Roots, HADAS are again going to be putting on an exhibition at Church Farm Museum, Hendon, in the upstairs back room – the Dunlop Room – from Saturday 15th March to Sunday 1 8thMay inclusive – ‘HENDON’S HIDDEN HISTORY’. The theme will be excavations in the Burroughs/Church End area, featuring material from the three seasons of Church Farm excavations, the Church Terrace dig, material from the Ted Sammes course, and the Paddock Roman and other material from site watching by Stephen Alec in 1998.
HADAS DIARY

Tues 11th February 2003 Kitchen crocks to Sunday best – Ceramics in the Home from Henry VIII to Victoria Lecture by Jacqui Pearce FSA, who is well known to HADAS, particularly for running the excellent Ted Sammes post excavation course. Jacqui has been working as a ceramics specialist with the Museum of London for 25 years, currently as a senior specialist in medieval and later pottery. and also has an interest in clay tobacco pipes.

Tues 11th March 2003 The Mackerye Burials, Lecture by Simon West

Tues 8th April 2003 The Villa of Tiberius Claudius Severus; Roy Friendship-Taylor

Lectures start at 8pm in the Drawing Room (ground floor) of Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley, N3. Buses including the 82/143/2601326 pass close by, a 5-10 minute walk from Avenue House or 15-20-minute walk from Finchley Central Tube Station.

HADAS LONG WEEKEND, 111h – 141h September 2003

Jackie Brookes reports that those who have already booked will on this occasion need to arrange their own travel insurance. should they need it also that although the trip is almost fully booked she and David are trying to obtain more rooms so those still interested in wing should contact Jackie to see if there is a room available.
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OBITUARY — MICHAEL ROBBINS by Peter Pickering

Michael Robbins, our President from 1994 to 1998, died on December 21st 2002 at the age of 87. He had a long connection with our area, having been brought up in Hampstead Garden Suburb. Members may remember his presidential address Not What They Used To Be’ about church restorations in the nineteenth century and the many controversies surrounding it. The list of Michael’s high offices is awe-inspiring. He was at some time, and often for many years, President of the Omnibus Society, President of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society, President of the Greater London Industrial Archaeological Society. President of the Society of Antiquaries, Chairman of the Middlesex Council of The Victoria County History, Chairman of the Victorian Society, Chairman of the Governors of the Museum of London, and Chairman of the Standing Conference on London Archaeology. Oh, and he was Managing Director (Railways) of London Transport from 1971 to 1978. It must be a matter of dispute whether his most enduring monument is the Heathrow extension of the Piccadilly Line or the magisterial History of London Transport, which he and T C Barker wrote. He was a historian rather than an archaeologist, but he was very knowledgeable about and sympathetic towards archaeology, and his influence was exercised in his best interests. He was in appearance and demeanour an English Gentleman, and HADAS is proud to have had him as President.
POST BOX SURVEY Bill Firth

At the time of writing 243 post boxes have been recorded in the Borough. These are listed by postal area and by cipher in the tables below. It should be noted that only a small part of N14 and rather larger parts of N10, NW9 and HA8 (Edgware) are in the Borough so the returns from these areas might be expected to be lower than elsewhere. The boxes with no cipher, ignoring one which is modern, and with VR and EviiR ciphers are, as expected in the old parts of the borough. The preponderance of GR (George V) boxes gives some indication of when the area became built up. Some of the EiiR boxes are double boxes. They seem to be fairly new and are sited in business areas to take ready franked business mail in one part and ordinary mail in the other. Many thanks are due to the 12 people who recorded boxes. The word got out to the Finchley Society and the Friern Barnet Local History Society and a member of each of these was a major contributor. I am not going to list names and numbers because the contributions of those who recorded only a few boxes are just as valuable as those who recorded many more. In any case some boxes had more than one recorder but I have attributed the sighting to the first report I received. Later recorders might feel aggrieved that their contribution had been downgraded. No. of boxes by Postal Area

N2 16, N14 4, NW9 8, N3 31, N20 25, NW11 41, N10 7, NW2 12, EN5 7 (Barnet), N11 13, NW4 27, HA8 7 (Edgware), N12 33, NW7 12, No of Boxes by Cipher – a total of 243 recorded in the Borough. None 13, VR 10, EviiR 40, GR 120, EviiR 1, EiiR 39,
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AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY

Ann Kahn kindly brings to my attention more archaeology on the web. A new dataset has been digitised for increased access by Getmapping, the company responsible for producing the Millennium Map, in association with the MoD and the National Monuments Record. This concerns the complete aerial survey of the UK made by the RAF between 1945 and 1949. This is one of the most significant national pictorial records available, showing the state of the country after the bombing and before the post war reconstruction and development of huge areas of former countryside. Previously there was limited access to the negatives, taken on fragile cellulose and nitrate film. Now a digitally scanned version will begin to appear on the Get Mapping website during 2003. See www.getmapping.com for details.
STORES Andrew Coulson

Every organisation of substance has stores. Not mere stores of things but stores. That is a place where thing are kept, categorised. listed; numbered. cleaned, -counted, and piled up-in logically ordered and mutually exclusive heaps. HADAS, as is only proper, has Stores. No longer the simple dump as before, our collection of things has evolved into a highly organised assemblage comprising a multitude of items. Did you know, for example, that thee are at present some forty major categories of things and that this is only the start? It is anticipated that the final total will run into hundreds of categories and thousands of things. Numbers alone are not enough. Each sub-category must be described. If this is not done we will not know where we are, nor where we should be. Take mattocks, for instance. Presently we have mattocks Large ancient and Mattocks Large Modern; two of each there should be but records say there’s only one. Left behind at Hanshaw Drive, perhaps? Needs looking into. Then there are Mattocks Iron Small with funny red handles Five. If they are Mattocks at all, that is. Something to do with the (Very old — ed) Resistivity Meter we did not know we had. perhaps. But all this pales into nothing in comparison with the scandal of the Mattocks Military Small. Four of them are all complete, but the other four lack Mattocks and only the handles remain. And that is not all. The bayonets that once adorned the non-Mattock end of the handles are also missing. We want those back as well. They will do very nicely as a combination tin-opener/excavation trowel/assegai and they can have a category all to themselves. All good stores develop an ambience, which encourages the deposition of items but not their removal. Our stores are no exception. As witness our burglars who broke in, opened two finds boxes, and then left closing the doors behind them. What discouraged them? Could it have been the bones in one of the boxes, or the influence of that minor Deity which, since classical times, has interested itself in stores and especially in their willingness to receive and their unwillingness to disgorge. Appreciation of the existence and power of this force is vital. How else are you to retain your sanity when you find the item you need will not be given to you because it is being cleaned. It is only for emergencies, there is only one left, the key has been lost, it is being repaired. X took it out yesterday, they are stock-taking, and then when finally you arrive panting at the gates of the Stores with the right forms signed by the right people you are told you cannot have it as they are closing for lunch? The minor Deity may be a little more laid back in Hadas’ case. Hopefully. But how much remains to be seen! With grateful thanks to all who had a hand in sorting out the Garage. (And to Andrew for cleaning all the tools! — Ed)

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LECTURE REPORT Andy Simpson

The Archaeology and Anthropology of Australian Rock Art Prof Robert Layton

The January lecture was an unusual and fascinating topic. Aboriginal peoples have been in Australia for some 50.000 years — before the arrival of anatomically modern humans in Europe. Humans evolved in Africa and spread south via the coasts of India and South — East Asia. initially colonising the North and South Australian coastline but not the centre. The two main aspects of their culture are living as hunter-gatherers and their distinctive religious traditions. Their broad-based diet features some 250 animals and plants — actually better than the restricted diet of a peasant farmer. In this egalitarian society, the men hunt, the women gather. A kill gives more meat than can be consumed by the immediate hunting group, so the social aspect of sharing the meat in the camp cements social relationships within the group. Since a the hunting/gathering necessary to feed the group may only occupy 2-3 hours per day, there is plenty of spare time — far more than that available to the peasant farmer. The bulk of the diet, including lizards and bugs (the latter eaten raw, or cooked), and bitter-tasting wild apples is gathered by the women as they chat. Calorific value comparisons included roast Kangaroo at 150 calories per 100 grammes, comparing favourably to beef at 160 calories per 100 gm. This is not a starvation level diet — there are plenty of calories. Distinctive heavy grindstones with their upper and lower portions are left at regular campsites. Population density is low, around one person per square Kilometre, this partly being controlled by women’s body fat levels needing to build up to a sufficient level to ensure a successful pregnancy, whereas more sedentary lifestyles mean higher body fat levels and higher pregnancy rates/population level increases. Low-level landscape management includes setting bush fires to encourage growth of fresh grass for Kangaroos; yam tops are cut off and replanted to permit re-growth when dug up. Religion is based on the creation-period ‘dream time’ when hybrid beings, part human, part animal such as kangaroo, emu and python travelled the landscape. Clans of aborigines, each of whom has a separate ancestor, were given territory at this time, which it is their duty to look after as the locations shared by ancestors from a time thought just out of reach, trailing their ancestors across the landscape, figuratively speaking, by living out the customs that they established and followed. A key word for aborigines is ‘becoming’ as in `becoming a rock’. Of the 200 aboriginal languages spoken 200 years ago, some 40 survive. Though its antiquity is much debated, carbon 14 dating indicates that rock art at least 10,000 years ago (some suggest 12-15.000 years) with examples on the walls of rock shelters. Footprints, such as emu footprints, (follow them and you will find a water hole!) are central in rock art, as are circles representing campsites to which the footprints lead as the story of the ancestors/more recent clan or clan-members travels is recorded in rock or ground art, which can be both secular — recording a hunt or journey — or sacred, recording the ancestors. A distinctive form is X-ray style images of animals such as turtles showing their liver, other organs bone structure and eggs, the latter possibly as a symbol of fertility. Cross-hatching indicates a representation of the ancestors. Rock art is usually in red ochre on a white background, which needs regular re-touching, since if it fades, the power of the ancestors is diminished. Older rock art features only land animals, including now-extinct marsupial species, pre-end of last ice age, when melting ice raised sea levels and separated Australia and New Guinea, previously a single land-mass together with New Zealand at the height of the ice-age. Rather more recently, European colonisation is recorded with images of biplanes and highly detailed images of sailing ships showing cargoes in the holds, bullocks, and men on horseback. Aboriginal copyright to their artwork is now finally recognised, following granting of Australian citizenship in the 1960s, some half-million aborigines remaining today from a pre-colonial population of two million, of whom 90% were killed by colonists in some areas.
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PREHISTORIC ‘BARGAINS’ Eric Morgan

At the last two Amateur Geological Society’s Mineral and Fossil Bazaars in December (See December Newsletters) as well as the obvious mineral and fossil specimens for sale, there was a stall also selling a number of Mesolithic artefacts. These included a ‘Finds Bag’ containing six potboilers from Lemsford, Herts. going for a real bargain at 50p. Some individual worked flints and scraper tools from the Upper Mesolithic at South Weymouth cost a pound each, and if you really wanted to splash out you can purchase larger individual scraper tools from Hertford for a mere £2.50. (Whatever your views on such things. the local antiquities market is obviously flourishing — Ed). The next such Bazaar is December 2003.
=SEVERN ESTUARY LEVELS RESEARCH COMMITTEE —(Continued from last issue)Andy Simpson

Martin Bell then discussed ‘Mesolithic Coastal Activity and Goldcliff East and Redwick’ These surveys were undertaken with CADW support, with eroding Iron Age structures recorded in the 1990s. There is a shortage of well-stratified Welsh/western British Mesolithic sites with associated environmental evidence. There are however, a number of such sites in the Severn Estuary/Bristol Channel area. The estuary formed 6,500 — 5.500 cal BC, affecting the lives of hunter gatherers and drowning old oak forest, submerged trees being found in various locations. sometimes only exposed at low or spring tides. At Redwick for the 2001 survey season a submerged forest was found at the base of the estuarine sequence. Dendrochronological samples indicate oaks up to 400 years old when they died. around 6,200 BC. Some trees had been burnt; there is no archaeological evidence, but it is unclear if this burning was natural or influenced by man. At Goldcliff in a bay thee is an island in the middle of an expanse of coastal wetland, which preserves Mesolithic human and animal footprint evidence in the silts — an old land surface with occupation evidence on it, being encroached by burying deposits which seal and preserve it. Activity on the surface is dated 5,700 — 5,300 cal BC from surveys undertaken August — September 2002. Submerged forest was excavated. sealed by a Mesolithic peat surface containing bone and flint. The peat included two submerged forest horizons on estuarine silts. A charcoal rich old land surface lay above glacial deposits. The Mesolithic peat horizons included calcined bone. Originally, encroaching salt marsh would have gradually inundated grassland. Traces of grass charcoal may reflect man-influenced burnings like the tree trunks mentioned earlier as areas of landscape were ‘burnt off. Footprints and tracks, similar to those at Uskmouth. have been found. At Goldcliff they are in sediments tying over the basal peat and below the forest remains, c.5. 100 — 4,100 BC. Tracings are made on plastic sheets, and indicate oxen. gulls, and humans in the laminated surfaces, including 37 prints from 3 or 4 human individuals. including one person in their late teens. Animal bone evidence is mostly from deer_ with fish scales and bones also showing the importance of fishing. (To he Continued in future New sletters)

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OTHER SOCIETIES’ LECTURES & EVENTS Eric Morgan’s Monthly Round-Up

Saturday February 1.30-3pm, LAARC Open Day, Mortimer Wheeler House, 46, Eagle Wharf Road, N I . Buildings In Bits-From Roman London’s Forum to Medieval Monasteries, Tudor Theatres, Palaces and Victorian Terraces. Handle and Examine original stone carvings, decorative bricks, tiles and stained glass etc

Thursday 6th February 1030am Mill Hill Library Hartley Ave, NW7; History of English Surnames — talk.

Thursday 6th February 8pm Pinner Local History Society, Village Hall, Chapel Lane Car Park, Pinner: Swakeley’s House, Ickenham — talk by Mrs. Betty Dungey. Donation £1.

Monday 10th February 3pm. Barnet & District Local History Society, Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Road, Barnet: BARNET IN POSTCARDS- talk by Terence Atkins Wednesday 12th February 8pm Hornsey Historical Society, Union Church Hall, Corner of Ferme Park Road & Weston Park, N8; Alexandra Palace — North London’s Treasure, Deborah Hitchcock.

Wednesday 12th February, 8.15pm Mill Hill Historical Society —The The Harwood Hall, Union Church, The Broadway, NW7; Raffles In Mill Hill — talk by Dr. Richard Bingle (Preceded by AGM)

Thursday 13th February 2.30pm Edmonton Hundred Historical Society, Ordnance Road Methodist Church Hall, Junction with Raynton Road, Enfield; River Lea to Lee Navigation — talk by David Pain

Friday 14th February, 8pm Enfield Archaeological Society, Jubilee Hall, Junction Chase Side/Parsonage Lane, Enfield, visitors £1; Turkmenistan: Civilisations of the Oxus Valley. Talk by Ian Jones.

Wednesday 19th February 6.15pm London & Middlesex Archaeological Society Interpretation Unit, Museum of London, London Wall; Another World; Urban Archaeology in Russia Today; Clive Orton (Preceded by AGM)

Wednesday 19th February, 6.30pm Greater London Industrial Archaeology Society, Lecture Theatre, 2/3 John Vane Science Block, Medical College (Barts) Charterhouse Square, EC.1: Beneath Your Feet and Above Your Head: Street Furniture — talk by Sue Hayton

Wednesday 19th February, 8pm Willesden Local History Society, The Willesden Suite, Library Centre, 95 High Road, N W 10: W E Gladstone, PM and Willesden Resident Talk by Corinne Gladstone

Friday 2nd February 7.30pm Wembley History Society, St Andrew’s Church flail, Church Lane, Kingsbury N W9: The Future of the Grange Museum of Brent (Neasden) Talk by Curator Alex Sidney

Tuesday 25th February 8pm Friern Barnet & District Local Hist. Soc, Old Fire Station, (Next to Town Hall) Friern Barnet Lane, N.12; To Finchley By Train; Talk by Alan Williams

Tuesday 27th February 2.30pm The Finchley Society, Drawing Room, Avenue House, East End Road. N3 Barnet in Old Photographs; Talk by HADAS Member Graham Javes

newsletter-382-january-2003

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Newsletter
Page 1

HADAS Diary

Tuesday 14th January 2003 The archaeology and anthropology of Australian rock art, by. Professor Robert Layton. Professor Layton worked in Australia from 1974-1981, five years as research anthropologist to The Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander Studies in Canberra and two years with the Northern (Aboriginal) Land Council in Darwin as anthropologist responsible for land claims. He has been Professor of Anthropology at Durham University since 1991.

Tuesday 11th February 2003 Kitchen crocks to Sunday best — ceramics in the home form Henry VIII to Victoria, by Jacqui Pearce. Jacqui has been working as a ceramic specialist with Museum of London for 25 years, first with the Department of Urban Archaeology, and now with the Museum of London Specialist Services, as a senior specialist in medieval and later pottery. She also runs the Ted Sammes post-ex course (see above).

Tuesday 11th March 2003The Mackery Burials, by Simon West Lectures began 8.00pm at Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley Central.
Church End Farm 1961 to 1966 — excavation report By Don Cooper

The recording of the artefacts form this excavation is nearing completion by the students on the Ted Sammes post-excavation course run under the auspices of Birkbeck College by Jacqui Pearce of the Museum of London Specialist Services. The next phase will be the analysis and research prior to publication. Can I therefore make one final plea for information on the whereabouts of any documents and/or artefacts (tiles, budding material, glass, metal objects etc.) that might be from the 1961-66 excavations at Church End Farm, Hendon. Any information please can be sent to me by post to Don Cooper, 59 Potters Road, Barnet, Herts. EN5 5HS. Or give me a ring on 020 8440 4350.
Avenue House Estate under new management By June Porges

In 1918 the ink magnate Henry C Stephens (known as “Inky Stephens” left the Estate for the benefit of the people of Finchley. On November 2002, after three and a half years of hard negotiations. the management of the house and its historic landscape gardens was passed form Barnet Council to Avenue House Management (AHEM). This is a new non-profit making charity company which has a 125- year lease to run the estate for the benefit of the local community. The house has rooms to let for receptions, parties, conferences, wedding and other events as well as housing the offices of a number of local charitable organisations. The 10 acres of gardens contain many fine trees and shrubs (some of them envied by Kew Gardens!), a pond and waterfall, lawns and a children’s playground. In the space of a few weeks the new team and house staff have made a real impact on the appearance of the house and gardens. Users of the house can now enjoy freshly made tea and coffee and order excellent quality buffet meals. A great deal of maintenance work needs to be done. The trustees are eager for local people to become involved In helping to run the estate on a voluntary basis and to help with donations and fundraising, and to use the house for their own function. There will be Open House events for people to see what the house has to offer and what they may be able to offer to the house. HADAS has had a long connection to the house, our Library was kept in a small room upstairs for some time before the east end suffered a very big fire. Since then we have had the use of the Garden Room for the library and to do work on digs and research, we now have the use of a garage to house our finds and tools, and since 1995 we have held our lectures in the house. We have agreed to help with maintenance of the house by keeping the terrace outside the Garden Room swept and tidy. Do come and visit us there -¬usually there are some members in the room on Sunday and Wednesday mornings. Check with June Porges (020 8346 5078) before coming or Andrew Coulson (07803 470 475 text or message) if you are interested in using the library. Meantime do please support Avenue House with physical help, money and by recommending it to your friends for their parties.


Page 2

Victor Jones’ legacy

Victor, who was a Vice President of HADAS and died in February 2002, bequeathed the sum of £1000 to HADAS and expressed the wish that the money be used to start a fund for a Borough of Barnet Schools Archaeological Funds Loan Collection
Membership Details By Mary Rawitzer

If anyone has noticed that a recent newsletter was sent to a strange address and that the current newsletter still hasn’t got it right, please let the Membership Secretary know (see back page). It’s all her fault, or at least her computer’s. Some people may be unhappy that only one member is now named on the envelope for households with one or morefamily members. This was the result of a new broom “modernising” the membership list. However, it was a first attempt and she hopes to improve things in due course. Computers are so useful — and so frustrating. Please be patient.
Camden History Review-Vol 26 By Denis J Ross

I have been sent by Dr. F Peter Woodward of Camden History Society the above-mentioned annual Review which is a very impressive and well-produced 32 page publication. Of course, most of the articles it contains relate to matters outside HADAS strict territorial area but nevertheless there are some items which could be of interest to our members. For example, Dr. Woodford writes, that this issue contains a history of Golders Hill Park (by HADAS member Yvonne Melnick), some of which lies in Hampstead but most of which lies in the ancient manor of Hendon. Another Articlerelates to eating out in Primrose K10856-2002 which could appeal to the gourmets among us! Other Articles are interesting in their own right. The review can be obtained from Camden bookshops at 6.95 or by mail (add £1 for postage and packing) from CHS Publications, Flat 13, 13 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH – tel: 020 7388 9889.
Christmas Dinner

This years dinner was a local event held at the Meritage Centre, Hendon, and scene of a HADAS excavation in the 1970s. Beforehand we had a talk in the adjacent St Mary’s Church given by the Rev. Paul Taylor. The origins of the church are unclear but a documentary reference in Westminster Abbey and in the Domesday Book may point to a saxon foundation, perhaps a small wooden built structure. However, structural evidence and the font point to a mid 12th century date for the present church, apparently the font can be dated by the style of the interlocking arches carved on the font sides. The nave dates to the le century Early English style. The Hendon community was small in the medieval period then started to expand in the 16th & 17th centuries with wealthy people moving out from London. Galleries were inserted into the fairly small church to accommodate the newcomers. During the Jacobean era the manor was held by Welshpool, a prominent family at this time was the Herberts some of whom are buried in the church. A larger than life character was Theodore Williams who was vicar from 1812 to 1875. Amongst other things he had two spells in prison for dent (£1000s) and smashed a marble memorial statue in the graveyard because the family had not paid enough for it. William’s family had made money from slavery yet William Wilberforce lived in the parish. In 1915 the church was extensively rebuilt and expanded virtually doubling its size. Recently it has been refurbished being painted, decorated, new offices and a new organ – the last one was a terrible thing with pipes tuck away all over the place. After the talk, Reverend Taylor who is a dab hand at playing the new instrument gave us a tune before we left for dinner, thanks to him for the talk. Thanks to Dorothy for organising the evening, and to June, Eric, Mary & Doug for helping with the bookstall.
November Lecture — The Ups and downs of life in the British Palaeolithic Brian Wrigley — greatly assisted by Sheila Woodward

It came as quite a surprise to me and probably many others to find that a lecture about ‘Life in the British Palaeolithic’ concerned a period as long ago as 700,000 – 500,000 years BP, and a little later, a very large area of the earth’s surface (in terms of travel and settlement possibility). However, our knowledge has been increased by sites like Boxgrove and, more recently, High Lodge in East Anglia (where our lecturer had recently been In his work for the Leverhulme Trust who have given funds for study of “AHOB” — Ancient Human Occupation of Britain), and Westbury, Somerset. Whilst Boxgrove puts first hominid occupation of Britain at about 500,000 BP, Westbury and East Anglia now push it back to about 700,000 BP, much earlier than previous estimates derived from the Hoxnian period evidence from Swanscombe The Leverhulme Trust granted funds for study of ancient human occupation of Great Britain — not primarily for study of a few human bones found, but study of climatic evidence, and the nature of fauna and landscape. This brings into focus many finds long hidden away in museums of possible worked flints etc (including the “eoliths”) now being re-examined and re-assessed. The scientific methods being used include the Deep Sea Core method for very ancient dating, the Marine Oxygen Isotope Record which can be a record of ancient temperatures — giving warm/cool comparison from 700,000 on. Britain being on the edge of a continental landmass is the sort of area where migrations to and fro (of animal and hominids) may be caused by climatic changes e.g. from Gulf Stream changes. Remnants of the Interglacial c 130,000 show remains of elephants and rhinos etc but none of hominids, although for the 130,000 — 60,000 BP period there is some evidence in Northern Europe. In Britain about 22,000 BP, a cold period with some snow, there is evidence for dear, mammals and birds and possibly there may have been some hominids hunting them.

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The Site

The building site in East Barnet where the finds were made was situated at the southern end of the Prince of Wales Public House (No2 Church Hill Road, IQ 2719 9529). In the 19’h century, the area covered by the building site, was part of the estate of the mansion The Grange. Part of the mansion itself occupied the western portion of the building site and traces of the building were found there.
The Grange & Prince of Wales P.H.

Rear-Admiral Henry Warre, who called it Granada Cottage in honour of his victory over the French off the coast of Granada in South America in 1795′, built the Grange in 1800. From this name it may be supposed that it was not a particularly large mansion. The Grange estate was earmarked for re-development in the late 19d” century although much of this development only took place in the 1930s, which is when the mansion seems to have been demolished. Included in the Grange estate was The Prince of Wales itself. The pub is mentioned as a licensed beerhouse in 18782. On the Roque map of 1754 several building are shown in the vicinity of the site and one of them is certainly the pub or its predecessor. The pub was probably a private house and the main residence on the site at this time. East Barnet Village The mansion ‘The Clockhouse’ in East Barnet Village was mentioned in a rental document of 15063 by an older name Mendhams. Earlier still Katebrygge, an old name for the bridge over Pymmes Brook in East Barnet Village was mentioned in a will of 14064. The earliest reference to this area is in the Anglo-Saxon Charter Boundary S(iii)5 which outlines the boundary of Barnet in 1005. From this description it may be seen that both the building site and St Mary’s East Barnet (01140) lay along the eastern edge of Wakeling Moor. Wakeling Moor denotes the rising ground between East Barnet Valley and Whetstone (ie the Oakleigh Park area). This place name is possibly derived form the Anglo-Saxon Waeclinga tribe form St Albans who gave their name to Watling Street (Edgware Road) and to the old name for Kingsbury in St Albans, Waeclingaceaster. Circumstances Of The Finds The site was developed by the builders as a shop with flats above. The concrete capping and upper layers of soil and clay were already removed by the time the site was inspected for archaeological purposes. The builders reported that they had not found anything of any significance up to this point other than what they supposed to be -Victorian brickwork. This was in the form of small arches associated with drains near the pavement at the very front of the site (on the eastern edge). The archaeologist also noticed at this point the remnants of a brick foundation of a greenhouse and associated yard or outbuilding. There was also a short length of red brick wall running north-south mid way back on the front portion of the site which was probably associated with the east-west wall (wall R) at the back of the site (see plan previous page). A small hole was then dug by the builders near the front of the site out of which came a bottle neck (1780-1820). Due to a long delay waiting for pile drilling to be carried out, and then the sudden re-commencement of work following the pile drilling, the archaeologist missed seeing the bulk of the clay spoil from the foundation trenches being removed. It is estimated that two skips of clay were removed at this time. A bottle base of the mid 18th century was found in the aftermath of this work Due to heavy- rain, some clay then subsided from the garden of the Prince Of Wales and some mediaeval finds (South Herts Grey Ware) were made in that material. After the concrete had been laid in the trenches, the clay “islands” were dug out and moved to the area of the driveway. The archaeologist was able to pick over some of this material, and the bulk of the mediaeval finds (South Herts Grey Ware) were made at this time. It is not known exactly at what point the two Roman sherds were found, but they were found along with some of the mediaeval material and were not known to be Roman at the time. A small scale excavation was then carried out by the archaeologist at the rear of the site over several months in which the remaining finds were discovered.The possible Saxon sherd and the Coarse Border Ware and Hertfordshire Glazed ware sherds were found during this excavation along with some more South Hens Grey Ware. Four more Roman sherds were also found at this time. Wall P on the plan (previous page) was probably part of the mansion itself and was built of non-frogged yellow bricks. Wall Q was probably a 20th century garden wall built of frogged red bricks. The wall surrounding the blue cobble surface was probably also 20th century garden wall and was built of frogged bricks. Wall R and the associated wall at the front of the site were probably part of an out-building or house built in non- frogged red brick This out-building along with the mansion itself are shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1896 [New Barnet; Godfrey Edition; Middlesex sheet 6.08]. 7 From A Char About Barnet And Its History’ S. H. Widdicombe. 2 From ‘East Barnet Village’ Gillian Gear and Diana Goodwin 3 Rental of lands and tenements, acquired by Abbot Ramrygge, 22 Hen. VII. Will of John Rolf, 7Hen IV (Studies In Manorial History byAda Elizabeth Leven. 5. see HADAS newsletter 309, January 1997 ‘Early Barnet And Its Boundaries’ by Pamela Taylor. Finds discussion Bill Bass The pottery assemblage is an interesting collection as little material of this type has been found in the East Barnet area before, although it vs as founded in the medieval period. Most of the ceramic is not to badly abraded and came from a level that would indicate it came from the site or fairly close by, but the material is unstratified so some caution is needed The Roman pottery comprises of at least six small body sherds, which adds to the small amount of sherds found in High Barnet and also the pottery found adjacent to the St Albans Road when the Bridgedown golf course was being constructed. A single flinty/sand (probable) Late Saxon body sherd was identified by the MoL, there may be more of this in the Barnet record as it’s difficult to tell this apart from Medieval pottery. The medieval pottery ranges from ‘thumbnail’ size to a sherd of 60mm x 55mm mostly body sherds, there’s one base sherd and two rim sherds. The MoL comments: “one of the sherds is from the rim of a South Hertfordshire greyware howl. Many of the pottery sherds brought in are made of the same pottery type, even though some of them look quite different. The reason for this difference is that there were many small pottery producers working at the same time, producing variations in the colour and tenure of the pottery. Much of this was made near Arkley. Most forms were bowls, jugs or jars”. Also found of medieval date was a sherd of Hens Glazed Ware and Coarse Borderware. A variety of post-medieval ceramics were found including — Stonewares, Black Basalt Ware (2 sherds form a small vase and a cylindrical teapot). Combed slipware sherds (previously known from Staffordshire) but later produced locally at Isleworth. A mixture of 85 le century Red Border Wares, sherds from several porringers (small bowl with handles). 12 sherds came from a Sunderland Coarse Ware Lead Glazed Bowl, 10 century. Other finds included a whetstone, an 18th century copper alloy shoe buckle and button, also various roof tile and building materials. Some finds are still being processed but the above dyes the general picture.
Page 4

Meeting with Kim Stabler of English Heritage By Bill Bass

This useful meeting was held at Avenue House at the end of October attended by some 15 members. Kim is the English Heritage Archaeological Advisor for North and West London.
History

Kim started off by describing some of the history leading up to the present planning arrangements in London. For many years sites were monitored by the Ancient Monuments Act presided over by the Department of Works, in 1969 this became the Department of the Environment and in 1979 the Scheduled Monuments Act was passed being looked after by the Inspector of Ancient Monuments. Problems with the development of the Rose Theatre and other sites in the late 1980s led to the publication of the Planning Policy Guidance Note 16 by the DoE in 1990 leading to the Greater London Archaeology Advisory Service (GLAAS) being established. The creation of PPG 16 also saw the founding of the many small archaeologic units, consultants and so forth that are familiar today, before PPG 16 most archaeology was in the hands of, and funded by, local councils and museums etc, now archaeological units mostly work on a commercial basis competing for work by competitive tendering.
PPG 16

PPG 16 has been working well over the last 10 years or so, it requires the early assessment of planning applications, and these can go through several stages according to the risk to archaeology. If sites are perceived to be at risk the stages can include: •Desktop Assessment — consulting the Sites & Monuments Record (SMR), maps, plans, geo technical observations (boreholes) and similar

Field Evaluation — limited trenches to test if any archaeology exists or has survived basements, truncation etc.

Mitigation Strategy — can developments be redesigned to avoid sensitive areas, can the archaeology be left in situ?

Watching Brief – archaeologists observe the digging by developers and contractors on site, recording archaeology as they go.

Full Excavation (preservation by record) — usually the last resort if developments cannot be redesigned.

GLAAS researches the planning application and advises on a course of action. If planning applications were found to affect archaeology then some form of ‘Condition’ based on the above stages would be placed on the application before it was to proceed, or the application could be refused. It is not easy to ‘schedule’ sites, this where sites are protected through legislation. Most applications if possible are dealt using the above planning procedure and agreements. In Barnet there are two scheduled areas — Brockley Hill, Edgware and the Steinburg Centre, Finchley (moated manor).
Facts & Figures

Last year (2001/2002) GLAAS scanned 93,000 planning applications. This comprises nearly one fifth of all applications in England. Of these 3000 were appraised. EH gave advice on 1000 applications to local governments, 212 evaluations were secured by placing a condition on planning consent. In Barnet there were 4800 planning applications of which 154 were advised on, leading to 29 being pursued for their archaeological potential, with 3 having significant excavations. Some 24 significant excavations took place as well as smaller investigations. Advice given to all local bodies is free of charge. Borough of Barnet Barnet apparently has one of the better planning departments in the London area, they receive the most planning applications behind Westminster and are keen to act on sensitive developments. In the Borough several priority areas have been marked out as having archaeological potential (Areas of Special Archaeological Significance), no less. These were drawn up between English Heritage, Barnet Council and HADAS, they include the sites of various Manors, medieval settlements, battlefields, Roman sites, prehistonc activity and so on These are different from ‘Conservation’ areas, which is another story. Planning applications are also made public and are sent to various bodies in the borough including HADAS. HADAS monitors the applications by one member who receives them, and then distributes them to three ‘area mangers’ – the eastern area including: Edgware, Mill Hill, Colindale, Hendon etc, the northern area: Chipping and East Barnet, Totteridge, Cockfosters etc, the central area: Finchley, Cricklewood etc. These managers look for developments in priority (or other) areas by consulting maps, the SMR and local knowledge. They report their findings to English Heritage and HADAS as appropriate.
Sites & Monuments Record

The Greater London SMR is maintained by English Heritage and has some 72,000 entries, it contains records of all manner of archaeological and historical sites. All archaeological fieldwork from watching briefs, surveys to full excavation should be entered on the SMR. This information is used to advise various commercial, research and local government bodies. Recently EH has been reorganising and updating the SMR to make it compatible with similar systems in other counties, they have also invested in a new database program and have improved their mapping system by integrating the SMR data on to a Geographical Information System (GIS). EH wants to encourage the use of the SMR by working more closely with academic bodies and research students, in fact a member of HADAS has been working on the GIS aspect of this with a view to aerial photography/mapping in Barnet. HADAS are also looking to update our ‘Gazetteer’ of work conducted in the Borough of Barnet, this will done through a number of sources, the SMR being the main one, so work by EH to make the SMR more accessible will be welcomed. Eventually the Gazetteer will be on a database for easy access by HADAS members, or the public. Thanks to Kim for coming along and explaining her work at GLAAS.

 

Page 5

GRAHAM WHITE HANGAR UPDATE

Early in December 1 was fortunate to join a guided RAF Museum staff tour of the partially completed Graham White Hangar, which has now bee moved from its original position on the former RAF Hendon East Camp site to a new location within the expanded boundaries of the RAF Museum. Whilst externally identical to the original, modem building regulations mean there are some differences. The external brick walls are completely new, and now consist of a main internal wall and external brick skin, the huge original timber roof joists have been refurbished and reused. The interior of the wooden roof, as in the original, is a single coat of white paint. Many of the original window frames have been reused, as have the railway tracks used as guides for the hangar doors. Even the original ground floor water closets and urinals have been carefully relocated! The internal two-storey offices have been shortened to allow for provision of a lift and second staircase, due to fire regulations, but original radiators and some wooden doors have again been reused from the original. Particular care was taken to recreate the effect of wooden shutter to recreate the original appearance of the concrete office ceilings. Paint samples were taken before demolition to ensure accurate reproduction of the original internal paint scheme – green windows and doors and whitewashed walls for the offices. English Heritage and other bodies have been particularly helpful throughout the rebuilding process of the listed building. Completion is expected at the end of December 2002, and the RAFM will be filling this new display space with a selection of contemporary El World War aircraft in January/February 2003 as the museum gears up for formal opening of the new landmark building and Graham White Hangar in November 2003 – the centenary of the first Wright Brothers powered flight.


Page 6


U3A (University of the Third Age) By Eric Morgan

U3A is a learning cooperative for older people which enables members to share many educational, creative and leisure activities. They are wondering if any HADAS members would be willing to run a class on an aspect of Local History. “Most of our classes are held weekly with some fortnightly, and there are some spaces available at present at the Middlesex University- (Hendon), Masoritin Hall (Edgware) and at Glebe Hall (Stanmore). All our Group Leaders give their services on a voluntary basis. Sometimes the courses are on-going but sometimes, if the Group Leader prefers,they can be for just one or two terms. When we start a new subject, we like to publicise it in advance in our Newsletter so we do plan well ahead. This would mean that any new subject planned at this time (deadline March 7th) would start in the Summer term which runs from 2811′ April to 25th July 2003”. If any members are interested please contact: North West London of the Third Age, 137 Hale Lane, Edgware, HAS 9QP Tel: 020 8906 8621

===THE SEVERN ESTUARY LEVELS RESEARCH COMMITTEE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING,===

My annual trip to visit an old college friend gave the opportunity to attend the following conference… Not just the Thames Estuary has archaeological surveys these days. Andy Simpson reports from…. Saturday 16th November 2002 NATIONAL MUSEUM AND GALLERY CATHAYS PARK CARDIFF
Colin Green Travel and Trade on the Severn Sea

The River Severn and its tributaries and estuaries has been a major trade route for thousands of years, with archaeological evidence of shipping activity from the Bronze Age, Romano British and medieval periods, such as the famous Newport ship uncovered in 2002 and discussed in detail later on in the conference. The River Severn is relatively shallow, making operation of deep-keeled vessels impractical. Flat- bottomed vessels were more appropriate. Similar were the Hanseatic League cogs of the twelfth to fourteenth centuries, also being flat bottomed; Trading with the Baltic and other parts of the continent were Severn ports such as Chepstow, Bridgewater, Lydney, and small creeks and harbours such as Magor Pill, which was important from the Iron age right through to the sixteenth century. During this century important centres included Chepstow, Newport and Cardiff and some 18 creeks, some now lost. There was much trade across the Bristol Channel with Bristol, cattle in particular, interrupted by such events as the Great Flood of 1607. Small vessels of only 30-40 tons traded as far as Portugal carrying out coal and returning with iron ore, salt and wine. One of the ports now lost is Llantwit Major, due to late sixteenth century storms blocking its inlet. Trade included shipping out limestone to be burnt as agricultural lime, a distance of up to 14 miles across to the North Somerset coast at ports such as Dunster and Minehead. Migrant workers were also carried to South Wales as labour for the industries of the industrial revolution, and coal exported from Glamorgan Docks. Bristol and Bridgewater were two of the inland ports on improved rivers. The Severn Sea had a vital role in communications, water travel being quicker and cheaper than road travel on the indifferent roads of the eighteenth century, only being eclipsed by the advent of the railways in the nineteenth century; the railways killed off the river trade in the upper reaches early, but it lasted longer in the lower reaches and estuary. Newport, Bristol and Chepstow were still linked by sailing barges in the 1930s, however, In the nineteenth century there were still links to Ireland and continental ports. The Severn Trow (sailing barge) may have evolved from the medieval cog. Smaller wherrys were also used. One Severn barge — the Spry — built in Chepstow in 1894 was rebuilt to sailing condition at the Ironbridge Gorge Museum. Elizabeth Walker of the National Museum of Wales then spoke on the island of Burry Holmes excavation project. This tidal island lies off the Gower Peninsula, and features much Mesolithic and later archaeolo•. Originally an inland hill, rising sea levels mean that it is up to I lkrn away from the prehistoric coastline. It has been uninhabited since the seventeenth century — used as a temporary base by shell fishermen since. Medieval monastic site there founded U95, plus a fourteenth century hall and Iron Age promontory fort — a lot in a small area! However, coastal erosion is now truncating some of the archaeology. One 5.6m diameter VA roundhouse has been found, with postholes in clay-lined pits and evidence of two phases of activity. A Bronze Age barrow within the fort was dug over two half days in 1925, finding a bronze pin and the cremation of an adult female and young child. Early activity is represented by Mesolithic Archaeology lying above windblown sand, itself lying above glacial deposits, and some evidence of Palaeolithic activity. Environmental sampling includes sediment columns — no pollen present, but charred hazelnuts etc did survive, hazelnuts being a valuable source of protein. The Mesolithic layers were 100% wet sieved, with poor organic preservation, even of bone. One human ulna was found in a cave, dated to 8240 — 7600 cal BC. Stone tools are the most predominant evidence of Mesolithic activity, including microliths of quartzite and flint. Scrapers found are mostly single ended and often re-worked. Some show impact fractures, e.g. having hit bone. There is no structural evidence for this period. Next up was Martin Locock, discussing ‘Medieval encroachment and enclosure at Cabot Park, Avonmouth Rockingham Farm, Moorend Farm, `Yeomans’ and others’. This paper covered fieldwork for the period 1994 — 2002. Rockingham Farm featured a pre-Norman boundary bank and pasture that had been enclosed by the time of the 1770 estate map. There is a large defined platform. Excavation revealed a residual Roman brooch and shield stud. The enclosure ditches were frequently re-cut: thee was an early structure buried by the bank up cast. The one house on the site was rebuilt several times, its stone now mostly removed for use elsewhere, having been abandoned c.18$0 after the site had been occupied since c. 1200.Pottery from Portugal suggested widespread medieval trade. Moorend Farm mowed site featured two building clusters. The now derelict building stands on a site occupied since the twelfth century with a long sequence of building and rebuilding. A residual Iron Age bead was a continental import. More recent finds included an eighteenth century ‘slave bead’ made in Bristol to trade for slaves in Africa. Madder Farm. now demolished, was a complex seventeenth century building: a quern stone had been used to cap a well. These various moated sites date mostly from the twelfth century and represent high status encroachment with building platforms and stone buildings on what was theoretically common land. Sixteenth century encroachment was at a lower social level, e.g. cottages with ponds. (To be continued in the next Newsletter)

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Other Societies’ Events by Eric Morgan

Tuesday 7th Jan, 7.30pm Primrose Hill Community Association, Community Centre, 29 Hopkinson’s Place (off Fitzroy Rd) NW1.Transport (The canal & railways which shaped the area, and the traffic which now threatens to destroy it).Admission £4.00 will include wine or soft drinks.

Wednesday 8th Jan Stanmore & Harrow Historical Society, Wealdstone Babtist Church, High Rd Wealdstone Civil War in the Chilterns 1442 – 46, talk by Lawrence Evans,

Wed. 8th Jan 8.00pm Mill Hill Historical Society, The Harwood Hall, Union Church, The Broadway, NWT Myths & Legends of Britain and Ireland, talk by Richard Jones. 8 15pm

Thursday 9th Jan The London Canal Museum, 12-13 New Wharf Rd, King’s Cross. Barging into Britain, talk by David Hilling, Concessions £1.25,

Thursday 9th Jan 7.30pm Pinner Local History Society, Village Hall, Chapel Lane Car Park, Pinner.Stockers House, Rickmansworth & The Coal Posts, talk by Brian Mogan, 8.00pm, donation £1.00

Monday 13th Jan Barnet & District local History, Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Rd, Barnet.Evacuation 1939, talk by Dr. Daphne Glick (of WA), 3.00pm (afternoon).

Wednesday 15 Jan London & Middlesex Archaeology Society, Interpretation Unit, Museum of London, 150 London Wall EC2.The People of Roman London, talk by Francis Grew (MOL) — Hugh Chapman Lecture, 6.30pm

newsletter-381-december-2002

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Newsletter
Page 1

Season’s greetings to all members and their families and good wishes for a happy New Year
HADAS DIARY

Thursday 5 December Christmas Dinner at the Meritage Club (Age Concern), Hendon All places now booked but there may be some late cancellations. Contact Dorothy to check.

Tuesday 14 January 2003The archaeology and anthropology of Australian rock art.

Professor Robert Layton. Last year we did not have a January lec¬ture as our lecture season has now been stretched into May. However June Porges, our Programme Secretary, has been trying for some time to get a speaker on Australian archaeology and was lucky to have been put in touch with Professor Layton. As be is coming from Durham University he can only manage out of term time so she snapped him up for January! Professor Layton worked in Australia from 1974 to 1981: five years as research anthropologist fo The Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies in Canberra and two years with the Northern (Aboriginal) Land Council in Darwin as anthropologist responsible for land-claims. He has been Professor of Anthropology at Durham University since 1991 and his publications include: The Anthropology of Art 2nd edition, 1991 C.U.P. and Australian Rock Art: a new synthesis. 1992 C.U.P.
CAN YOU HELP CLEARING LEAVES ?

A number of local groups who use the premises at Avenue House are helping to clear the leaves from the pathways and drives in the grounds. HADAS has been asked to clear them from the Garden Room to the exit at The Avenue. Can you help? It would be much appreciated and could well prevent someone slipping and hurting themselves.
HADAS LIBRARY

Some members may not know that HADAS has a library of over 2000 books which are housed in the Garden Room at Avenue House. We would like to make these more accessible to members to borrow. If you would like to see them phone June Porges 020 8346 5078. Visits could be arranged before the lecture or on Wednesday afternoons or Sunday morn¬ings when we often have people at Avenue House working on finds and archives. We also hope to display a small selection of books at lectures for members to bor¬row.
LEGISLATION HELPS ARCHAEOLOGY

The new Treasure Act, which became law in 1996, has made reporting finds much easier for both the public and museum. So much so. that reports have increased from an average of 24 a year before the Act to 221 in the year 2000. A fine collection of Bronze Age gold torcs and bracelets found in Milton Keynes has been bought by the British Museum as has a collection of Iron Age broaches, necklaces and bracelets, described as “one of the most significant Iron Age finds in the last 50 years”. They were discovered by metal detector enthusiasts in Winchester.
POST BOXES

Sharp-eyed members will have seen the brief announcement in the press of the joint conservation policy of Royal Mail and English Heritage to protect all post boxes in situ. Boxes will only be moved if they are in a dangerous situation or replaced if they are damaged.Locally, The Press took up the case of the two boxes with the rare EviiiR cipher, both of which have been recorded for the post box survey. One is at the junction of Elliot Road and Hendon Way, Hendon, NW4 (TQ 230 882) and the other is in Great North Road, East Finchley, near Woodside Avenue (TQ 275 889). While the latter can be described as ‘local’ since it is in East Finchley, it is in the Barnet/Haringey and N2/N6 borders and is actually in Haringey. There are reports of three other EviiiR boxes that may be in Barnet but I have not yet checked them. One is inHeddon Court Parade, Cockfosters (which I think is just within Barnet) but the two others reported only as in N14 are more likely to be in Enfield. Is there anyone out there who can check any of this? The boxes with the EviiiR cypher which had already been installed when Edward VIII abdicated were not replaced but those which were about to be put into position had their doors melted down and replaced new doors bearing the GviR cypher. I have not received any reports of post boxes for some time – the survey seems to have come to a standstill. I hope to analyse the results and report soon but we are still short of sites in High Barnet.
FINCHLEY REMEMBERED

This new book edited and published by The Finchley Society contains Finchley residents’ memories from the early 1900s, ranging from childhood and school to transport, shop¬keepers and war-time. There are 65 contributors and the book includes photos from the Society’s archives or on loan from members, line drawings by Mari I’Anson and Peter Marsh and maps of Finchley. Copies, price £8.95 (plus p&p: 76p for one copy, £2.60 for two copies) are available from David Smith, 17 Abbots Gardens. East Finchley, N2 OJG. Cheques with order, payable to The Finchley Society.

 

Page 2

OF MOUNTING BLOCKS AND MILESTONES

Letter to the Editor of HADAS Journal No. 1

Having come to Whetstone as a boy in 1929 and grown up there until the war took me away, I was very interested in the article (Vol.1, 2002) on what in my time was the post office, next to The Griffin, (I can still recall the Misses Gilmour). I had no idea of its antiquity. The article included a picture of the mounting block outside The Griffin and I am glad to see it still survives. A mounting block! Why did I not think of that long ago? Even as a boy I had my doubts about the local story that it was the whetstone on which the knights sharpened their swords before the Battle of Barnet. But I have had more thoughts since The Journal revived memories. Was the stone in fact really a whetsone and did it give its name to the tiny medieval hamlet? E. Ekwall, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names thinks so. Every settlement would have a whetstone of some sort, so there might have been something special about this one. Are there other suggested origins of the name? The notes accompanying a reproduced OS map of 1898 states that ‘western settlement’ is the most likely explanation’. But what was the settlement west of: Friern Barnet perhaps? And the stone itself: what kind of stone is it; where did it come from? Surely it was not local stone – not that size. Could it have been one of those stones brought down, far from their origins, by ice-age glaciers? If, as the author of The Journal article suggests, it was indeed a mounting block, it seems rather low; but perhaps the pavement around it has been built up? Or was it there to assist passengers getting down from a coach? Is there scope for an archaeologist here, to suggest some answers? And could someone find a lost stone? I remember a milestone (nine miles from London) which stood on the east side of the High Road, twenty yards or so from St. Margaret’s Avenue. It is shown on the 1898 OS map. It once abutted the wall of the grounds of the big house, demolished c.1936, and was then left in the middle of the wide new pavement. As I recall, it was made of what looked like grey granite, triangular, about four feet above the ground. I think it was removed during the panic of 1940 – although if German troops coming along the High Road needed the milestone to guide them, they really were lost! It is some twenty years since I was last in Whetstone, and, though an old man’s memory frequently fails him, I am sure that the stone was not in its place. Is it lost in a forgotten municipal dump? Is the finding of it a legitimate archaeological quest? Good luck in your projects. Donald F. Harris 15 Grangefields Road, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, SY3 9DD
Page 3

A SPECIAL EVENT AT CHURCH FARMHOUSE MUSEUM

Monday evening on 4 November – dark, damp but not actually raining and quiet. I arrived at Church Farmhouse Museum accompanied by two jittery dogs who had been bombarded by fireworks for nearly a week. As a Friend of the Museum I had been invited to attend a reception for members of HADAS to mark the presentation of a new display case to the museum in memory of Ted Sammes. I planned to leave the dogs sleeping in the car while I enjoyed the evening’s event but as I opened the car door a barrage of explosions began! It sounded like an action replay of the Battle of Tobruk! We ran for cover. While the dogs sheltered under Gerrard’s desk in the museum office, Friends and guests assembled in the kitchen. We were welcomed by Mary Ross on behalf of Cultural Services (previously known as Libraries, Arts and Museums!). Gerrard Roots, the Museum Curator well known to us all, then spoke. He thanked HADAS for their generosity providing the display case – something he had wanted for many years to enhance the kitchen which is so popular during school visits to the museum. He had enjoyed a long and happy association with both HADAS and Ted Sammes, who had been a frequent visitor. Gerrard particularly remembered working with Ted preparing the HADAS exhibition Pinning Down the Past and Ted’s ‘own’ exhibition One Man’s Archaeology. He recalled the two HADAS digs in the Museum garden during the 1990s and mentioned that an exhibition of significant finds from those digs is planned for 2003. Gerrard considers the association of fhe Museum and the Society particu¬larly important, partly for the generous loan of material to many exhibitions but mainly because the Museum has no significant archaeological finds in its col¬lection and relies on the work and expertise of the Society to show the long history of the local area. In reply our Chairman, Andrew Selkirk, recalled what a committed Hendonian Ted was and that a display case was a fitting tribute to Ted as he firmly believed in showing people what the Society was doing and that archaeology was for us all. Friends and HADAS members then joined in a toast to Ted’s memory and his many years of work for archaeology. Liz Holliday
MARCH OF THE GUARDS TO FINCHLEY

Members may have seen reproductions of William Hogarth’s famous painting of the King’s Guards in 1745. on their way from London to Finchley Common. At that time Finchley Common was a regular site for army training and manoeuvres and The Guards were preparing to fight Bonnie Prince Charlie’s Jacobite troops. The painting shows the army in a state of drunken debauchery and George II, for whom the painting was intended, was not impressed with the artist’s satire of his troops and refused to buy it. Hogarth then organised a lottery for the painting and it was won by the Coram Foundling Hospital, a charity for abandoned babies which Hogarth had helped to establish with his friend, Thomas Coram. The Foundling Hospital was financed by charitable contributions and was an important centre for cultural display in the 18th century. Handel gave fund-raising concerts in its chapel and left the hospital the rights to Messiah. For many years Hogarth’s painting was on display at the hospital with other works of art acquired by the Coram family. Although the site of the hospital in Lambs Conduit Fields was sold in 1926 the Coram Family Foundation for Children survived. However, Government guidelines have been issued recently to prevent charities owning valuable art and earlier this year Hogarth’s masterpiece was sold for £4 million pounds to the new Foundling Museum in London, which is open to groups of 20 or more, by appointment only. A future outing for HADAS perhaps?

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ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL RE-VISITED Sheila Woodward reports on the October lecture

The winter lecture season got off to a fine start with a lively talk by Dr. Ann Saunders, our President, about a group of funery monuments in St. Paul’s Cathedral. Dr. Saunders is contribut-ing a chapter on these monuments to the massive tome being prepared for publication in 2004 (the 1400th anniversary of the founding of the first St. Paul’s Cathedral on the site) and she has already produced a popular version entitled St. Paul’s: the Story of the Cathedral. Looking round St. Paul’s today, with its plethora of monuments, it is hard to believe that for over seventy years after its completion no monuments at all were permitted in the main body of the cathedral. The Dean and Chapter considered that they would mar the integrity of the architecture. By the late 18th century pressure to commemorate great national figures, including heros of the Napoleonic wars, caused a change of heart. The first monument to be authorised was to John Howard, the great prison and hospital reformer. The sculptor, John Bacon the elder, planned a two-figure monument to show Howard expressing his charity. However, a Committee of The Royal Academy (including Sir Joshua Reynolds) which had to approve all designs, decreed only one figure. So Howard stands in solitary splendour, clad in a Greek chiton, kicking away fetters, with a key in his right hand and a scroll of his “Plan for the Improvement of Prisons” in his left. Bacon was unhappy with it but be got his own way by carving the attractive relief at the base of the monument which shows Howard raising an elderly sick man to whom food is being brought, while a jailer reluctantly unlocks the door. The Committee’s insistence on a one-figure monument for Howard was doubtless influenced by its plans for a second monument to Dr. Johnson, who had just died. Reynolds did not wish the lone figure of his old friend to be overshadowed by a two-figured Howard monument. Bacon was again the sculptor, this time with less happy results. Johnson is depicted draped in a toga, leaning on a column, with his arms held awkwardly across his body, in a rather clumsy attempt at a classical pose. It is said that Italian visitors thought that Howard’s figure with its key must he St. Peter and that Johnson’s must therefore be St. Paul! Bacon also sculpted the third monument to be approved, to Sir William Jones, an eminent Calcutta judge. He too is shown in classical garb and it is only on the plinth relief that Bacon had a free hand, depicting Indian deities. The wars with France produced many heroes, resulting in many monuments and (unusually) government funding to pay for them. Thomas Banks produced a splendid monument to Richard Burges, a naval commander who died in 1797. His naked figure, with scarcely a wisp of drapery was said to have “brought a blush of shame to the cheek of modesty”! A draped figure of Victory hands him a sheathed sword and there is a beautifully ornate cannon and a realistic coil of rope. Another navel hero, Captain Robert Faulkner who attacked a French gunboat and was killed in the moment of victory, has a monument by Charles Rossi. It shows Faulkner dying in the arms of Neptune while a winged Victory holds up a laurel wreath. The inscription is worth reading: it tells much about the courage of the combatants and the public’s sympathy with the armed forces. Major-General Thomas Dundas saw action in the West Indies and his monument by Bacon the younger records the Parliamentary resolution that a monument be erected in St.Paul’s. A graceful group of figures includes Britannia holding a laurel wreath above a por¬trait bust of Dundas, while a magnificent lion lies at her feet. An even more striking monument is to Captain George Westcott, killed in a sea battle in 1805. He is shown dying in the arms of Victory and three reliefs on the plinth depict the battle at its height with French gunship exploding.As monuments proliferated the Government, worried about the vast expense, appointed its own Committee of National Monuments, popularly known as the Committee of Good Taste. Its members were gentlemen who had completed their Grand Tour but had no practical knowledge of the problems of sculp¬ture! However, under their auspices the sculptor John Harman produced his massive monument to Admiral Lord Howe, standing against the prow of his ship, accompanied by Britannia and the inevitable lion. Amid a welter of naval commemorations, Lt. General Sir Ralph Abercromby stands out as a military hero of the Egyptian campaign. Richard Westmacott depicted him in military uniform, falling from his horse as he dies. Of the naval heros Nelson must take pride of place. He is buried in St. Paul’s crypt in a sarcophagus originally intended for Cardinal Wolsey, and his monument by Flaxman is one of the finest. Nelson wears his peer’s robes which disguise his missing arm; his sightless eye is cleverly conveyed. Marine gods disport themselves around the plinth, Britannia explains Nelson’s exploits to two young boys and there is of course a British lion. Other heros of Trafalgar are Lord Collingwood, Nelson’s second-in-command, depicted (by Westmacott) in his funeral barge attended by Neptune and with tiny carved cupids forging instruments of war; Captain Geoge Duff (by Bacon junior) whose portrait medallion is flanked by a pensive Britannia and a mourning midshipman; and Captain John Cooke (by Westmacott) with a mourning female figure offset by two cupids “playing at war”. Finally, two more military heros. Sir John Moore was killed at Corunna early in the Peninsula Campaign. After some debate, the younger Bacon was commissioned and produced a dramat-ic scene with Victory lowering Sir John into a sarcophagus. Sir William Ponsonby died at Waterloo after his horse stumbled and he was killed by a French lancer. In his monument, which shows the influence of the Elgin Marbles, the naked hero leans against his horse while a winged figure holds out a wreath. During this period the Government paid for 37 monuments in all and intervened when St. Paul’s began to charge 2d or 3d per person to view them. Admission must be free! That no longer applies but I am sure that this lecture will inspire many of us to re-visit St. Paul’s to take “the monument trail”.
Page 5

OTHER SOCIETIES’ DECEMBER EVENTS Prepared by Eric Morgan

Tue. 3 Dec. 2.00pm Afternoon Arts at The Bull The Bull, 68 High Street, Barnet.Local History Talk by John Heathfield (A HADAS member)

Tuesday 3 Dec. 7.30pm Primrose Hill Community Assoc. Comm.Centre, 29 Hopkinson’s Place, (off Fitzroy Road) NW11 Parks and Open Spaces: two talks: Ann Muller on 20c. History of Regents Park and Past, Present and Future of Primrose Hill by Roger Cline (Camden History Society) Admission £4 to include wine/soft drinks

Wed. 4 Dec. 5.00pm British Archaeological Association Society of Antiquaries, Burlington House, Picadilly Regional Diversity in English Romanesque Architectural Sculpture by Dr. Kathleen Lane

Wed 4th Dec.8.00pm Islington Archaeology and History Society Islington Town Hall, Upper Street, N.1 Highgate Dissenters by Dr. John Thompson

Thur. 5 Dec. 6.00pm The London Canal Museum 12-13 New Wharf Road, Kings Cross, N.1 to 7.30pm Christmas Shopping Evening with mince pies and wine. £1.25 (cone.)

Thurs. 5th Dec 7.30pm Boating and Barging in the 1950s Talk by Tom Foxon

Tue. 10 Dec. 8.00pm Amateur Geological Society The Parlour, St. Margaret’s Church, Victoria Avenue,Finchley, N3 Jurassic Sharks by Dr. Charlie Underwood (Birkbeck College)

Wed. 11 Dec. 8.15pm Mill Hill Historical Society Harwood Hall, Union Church, The Broadway, Mill Hill Instruments for a Victorian Musician by Richard York (includes performance)

Wed. 11 Dec. 8.00pm Hornsey Historical Society Union Church Hall, corner of Ferme Park Road and Weston Park, N8 Victorian Christmas Cards by Peter Street

Thur. 12 Dec. 7.30pm Camden History Society Burgh House, New End Square, NW3 Photographing Camden by Adrian Flood (Camden Local Studies and Archives)

Thur. 12th Dec 8.15pm Hampstead Scientific Society The Crypt Room, St. John’s Church, Church Row, NW3 Learning From Nature by Professor Jacquie McGlade (U. C. L.)

Fri. 13 Dec. 8.00pm Enfield Archaeological Society Jubilee Hall, junction of Chaseside and Parsonage Lane, Enfield Animal Bones and Archaeological Sites by Nicholas Bareson

Sat. 14 Dec. 10.15am Amateur Geological Society St. Mary’s Hall, Hendon Lane, Finchley, N3 to 3.30pm Mineral and Fossil Bazaar (rocks, crystals, gemstones and jewellery)Refreshments. Admission 50p

Tue. 17 Dec. 8.00pm Barnet National Trust Association St. Mary Magdalen Hall, Atheneum Road,Whetstone, N20 Seasons in the Garden at Fenton House by Head Gardener Danny Snapes

Wed. 18 Dec. 6.15pm London & Middlesex Archaeological Society Museum of London, 150 London Wall,EC2 Estuarine English: the Ubiquitous Lighters of Erith by Giles Dawkes

From Monday 9 to Saturday 21 December 9.30am to 7.00pm (Sunday 11.00am to 4.00pm) Barnet Borough Arts Council Chipping Barnet Library, Stapylton Road, Barnet Paintings by Local Artists and What’s On in Local Societies (including HADAS)

newsletter-380-november-2002

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Newsletter
Page 1

HADAS DIARY

Lectures start at 8pm in the Drawing Room (ground floor) of Avenue I-louse, East End Road, Finchley, N3, and are followed by question time and coffee. We close promptly at 10pm

Tuesday 12th NovemberLecture by Simon Parfitt on ‘The Ups and Downs of Life in the British Palaeolithic’. Simon Parfitt, who last visited HADAS in March 1996 to bring the Boxgrove Palaeolithic site to life, will offer a broader view in this lecture.

Thursday 5th December Christmas Dinner at the Meritage Club (now Age Concern), Hendon, combined with a visit to St Mary’s Norman church next door, where the Vicar, the Rev Paul Taylor, will give us a talk and tour. You will also be able to see the memorial to Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles (1781-1826), the founder of Singapore and, for the last year of his life, a Mill Hill resident, who was buried in St Mary’s churchyard.

Several members did not receive details and application form with the October Newsletter. If you require one, please Contact Dorothy Newbury. As no coach is required this year, there is no limit on numbers.
HANSHAWE DRIVE – THE (TEMPORARY) FINALE Andy Simpson

The second season of work at Hanshawe Drive (see Newsletter 379, October 2002), looking for further evidence of the Romans in Burnt Oak, has concluded with the backfilling of the trench on Sunday 29th September. We had reached a maximum depth at the western end of 1.4 metres and were still in heavily disturbed clay and demolition rubble from the earlier Wesleyan Hall. Auguring failed to indicate any end to the disturbance, just more clay, so the excavation was terminated, sections drawn and photographs taken. The high readings shown by the earlier resistivity survey are probably due to some of the (very) large lumps of concrete and masonry that we excavated. There was no indication of any activity earlier than the twentieth century in this central part of the site, so evidence complementary to the Thirlby Road Roman pits still eludes us!
LAMAS 37th Local History Conference:

Buying & Selling in Metropolitan London Eric Morgan has compiled his usual extensive list of fascinating meetings – see back page – but has asked for particular attention to be drawn to this 37th Local History Conference of the London & Middlesex Archaeological Society from 10am to 5pm on Saturday November 16th in the Museum of London Lecture Theatre. Lectures range from Shops & Trading Buildings in London 1200-1700 to a comparative study of Harvey Nichols and Harrods. Retail Trade in Medieval Pinner & Harrow may be particularly relevant to HADAS. £4 for HADAS members, including afternoon tea.

 

Page 2

THE HAZY DAYS OF SUMMER: HADAS’S AUGUST OUTING – in three parts

We start with Piddington Roman Villa, take in a race around Northampton, attempting to take it all in, and end with the calm of the medieval, and later, at Canons Ashby
PIDDINGTON ROMAN VILLA Bill Bass

Piddington lies 6 miles south of Northampton, near the village of Hackleton and we arrived on a glorious summer’s day. Since the site is not accessible by coach we had a pleasant 15-minute walk down a farm track, passing acres of cornfields, to reach the excavation. On the way we observed a church with an unusual tower and brick-built aisles. The party was met by joint Site Directors, Roy and Liz Friendship-Taylor, who have been digging here for 23 years, as part of the Upper Nene Valley Archaeological Society. The villa was first discovered by quarrymen digging for limestone in the 1780s. They found a fine mosaic, but unfortunately little of it survived this early dig. The Upper Nene group started digging here in 1979 “just for a few weeks”. Little did they know that they would still be excavating over two decades later – with, it must be said, the help and enthusiasm of the local farmer. In August the dig is open for 3 weeks so the site was a busy scene with tents, finds processing and excavation underway. The main villa house has now been excavated and back-filled. Interestingly, it clearly developed from an Iron Age settlement, first as a simple rectangular structure which then acquired a verandah, wings, bath-houses, etc, through several phases. Two well-preserved cellar rooms were found, too, the walls reaching up to two splayed window openings. During the 4th century the building fell into ruin, but was then “squatted”, converted into several family units and, eventually, became a location for Saxon burials. Unusually, the names of two successive owners of the villa may be known: stamps on tiles have been interpreted as Tiberius Claudius Severus and Tiberius Claudius Verus. The current excavations centre on two areas to the east of the villa, one of which contained a separate bath-house, possibly for the estate workers, a workshop, a well and a stone-covered drain. The other area near to the villa entrance was assumed to be a stable or outhouse, but digging is now revealing stone foundations and post-pads for several walls and rooms. The latest idea is that this may be an even earlier villa building, but much more work remains to be done. Running through both areas could be seen the remains of the villa boundary wall, which would have surrounded the whole complex. And this new section is not the end of the surprises. Some earlier finds, bronze cavalry fittings, imported pottery, etc, had pointed to a Roman military presence on the site, but without a real context. Current work is looking at the exciting theory that a field directly adjacent contained a fort or camp. Aerial photography, resistivity and excavation of ditches and boundaries are being used to test this theory, giving possibly a further twenty-year campaign for the Upper Nene Archaeological Society. In the summer heat our guides had to compete against a combine harvester going about its work in a nearby field and later a fly-past by a Gypsy Moth and then a Chipmunk Trainer which peeled off and did a ‘circuit’ of the excavations for our admiration. Our thanks to Roy and Liz for their time and care. Further reading: Current Archaeology 146 (1966).
NORTHAMPTON By Barry Reilly

On the outskirts of Northampton our coach paused for a view of the Queen Eleanor Cross, one of the three remaining crosses in England erected by King Edward I to mark the resting places of his wife’s funeral cortege. In Northampton itself we had two hours free time for lunch and sightseeing The Guildhall, built in 1864, is Northampton’s most prestigious building. Usually described as a gem of Victorian Gothic architecture, its interior is a wealth of colour and decoration – allegedly: we were deterred from going inside, unnecessarily as it happens, by the sight of a wedding party at the entrance. Definitely closed and inaccessible was All Saints Church. The original church was largely destroyed in the Great Fire of Northampton in 1675. Five years later it was rebuilt with the help of 1000 tons of timber contributed by Charles II, which explains why his statue adorns the portico parapet. Anyone disappointed at being unable to see inside the church can find a number of photographs on the church’s website: www.allsaintschurchnorthampton.co.uk. An interesting footnote: the poet John Clare was admitted to a Northampton lunatic asylum in 1841 where he remained until his death in 1864, but he had considerable freedom and it was his habit to sit under the portico, sometimes exchanging his verses with passers-by for chewing tobacco. Northampton’s oldest standing building is the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Round Church, built by Simon de Senlis, first Earl of Northampton, as thanksgiving for his safe return from the Crusades. It is one of only nine round churches built in England in the Middle Ages; the design was based on the church of the same name in Jerusalem. It originally consisted of a round nave and a straight chancel, but between the 12th and 14th centuries two northern aisles and a southern aisle plus the tower and spire were added. After falling into disrepair down the centuries, it was restored by George Gilbert Scott and reopened in 1864, much as we see it today. In the porch of the south door is a curiosity: a carved stone sundial showing not the time of day, but the times of services. The porch leads into The Round, the most important architectural feature, which is supported by eight massive circular Norman pillars. The rest of the church has many interesting features, too numerous to mention here, representative of its long architectural history. Another interesting footnote: a stone bench used to run round the circumference of the church; in Norman times most of the congregation stood or knelt, but children and the elderly sat on the bench. This is one explanation for the saying: The weakest go to the wall”. The final notable Northampton landmark which some of us managed to visit was the Central Museum and Gallery. Northampton is, of course, known for its centuries-old tradition of shoe making and the Museum houses the world’s largest boot and shoe collection. However, like All Saints, this too was closed (for refurbishment) the day HADAS came to town. But there was much else to enjoy, including displays of leathercraft, oriental and British ceramics and 15th-18th century Italian painting. Of special interest were the rooms devoted to local history and archaeology; the ‘Hamtun’ gallery traces the early history of the area with impressive archaeological finds from the Iron Age, the Roman town of Duston and the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Hamtun, the precursor of Northampton.
CANONS ASHBY: THE LAST STOP OF THE DAY Jean Bayne’s Report

An enchanting medieval manor house was our last Northamptonshire visit of the day. Canons Ashby takes its name from an Augustinian Priory built on the site between 1147 and 1151. None of the original priory, save the church tower, remains and the present house was built on the site of ‘Wylkyns farme’ after the dissolution of the monasteries in the latter half of the 16th century. The Dryden family owned, created and reshaped the place over 4 centuries. its character as a living, evolving house, is reflected in changing patterns of building and organization. Although spacious, the house does not have a grand, formal atmosphere. Its scale suggests a large family home and it is easy to imagine a bustling household, albeit austere rather than extravagant, maintaining the Puritan traditions of its owners. Indeed, until 1938 there was only one cold water tap in the house and no telephone or electricity until 1947. Much of the food was provided from the estate itself: venison, rabbits, mutton and more. The kitchen was modernised in Victorian times replacing the open fire and spit. The Victorian range, still on view, was in use until World War II. Close by was the Winter Parlour, originally the family dining room, but designated the Upper Servants’ Dining Room in 1710. The most striking feature of this room, and perhaps of the whole house, was the walnut panelling, decorated with the crests and coats of arms of local families. This was commissioned in the 1590s, and only re-discovered in the 1980s under layers of paint. A ‘new’ family dining room, on the other side of the house, was remodelled in 1710 by inserting sash windows, lowering the floor, resetting the door and decorating the walls with fine oak panelling and Corinthian pilasters. The effect was intended to be both fashionable and elegant. A Grand Hall with leather buckets, horseshoes, replicas and pictures of weapons and armoury, in¬tended to be an impressive entree to the house, had become a family billiard room by the 19th century. The staircase, with its grand newel posts and intricate carving was an early 17th century attempt to provide a grand route to the upstairs drawing room – the magnificent centrepiece of the house. There a fireplace and overmantel, intricately carved and ornately decorated, dominate the room. In 1632 a plasterwork ceiling was added, featuring thistles, pomegranates and Red Indian princesses! One room is named after the 16th Century poet, Edmund Spenser, who was related by marriage to the Dryden owners (and the poet John Dryden was a cousin). Upstairs, the main bedroom displays fine furnishings, among them a settee with vivid 18th century embroidered covers and a 19th century four-poster bed that re-uses seven splendid 16th century panels. Outside are lovely gardens, restored by the National Trust from near dereliction and planted with, among other delights, 16th century varieties of apples and pears. From the pleasant tea room in the former stable block a short walk brought us to the church, originally built by the Augustinians on the scale of a small cathedral. This has been extensively demolished and rebuilt to suit first Puritan then Anglican tastes. The most striking objects now are the funerary regalia of Robert Dryden (d. 1708): his banner, pennant, crested helmet, gauntlets, spurs, tabard, sword and shield still hang in the church. June Porges and Stewart Wild are thanked, yet again, for a fascinating and varied day out.
Page 3

BROMLEY MUSEUMS By Andy Simpson

I recently had occasion to visit the Bromley Museum to pick up some aircraft instruments they were kindly passing on to my employer, the RAF Museum. This involved a trip by rail to the outer reaches of Travel Card Zone 6, the nearest rail station being Orpington, 20 minutes out of London Bridge. It was well worth the trip, however; as some readers may know, the area has a strong Roman theme. Bromley Museum itself is situated a brisk 20 minute walk from Orpington station, along the modern Orpington High Street and up Church Hill to The Priory, sharing a pretty park-centre site with Orpington Library and open daily in the afternoon 1pm-5pm, and from 10am on Saturdays. The museum/library building itself is a stone and half-timbered medieval/post-medieval structure, formerly a manor of the Priory of Christ Church Canterbury, built in 1290. Admission to this Registered Museum is free.

The upstairs archaeology display includes prehistoric stone tools and a good assortment of Roman pottery from local sites, which has recently been studied by a student undertaking a thesis on the wear patterns in Samian ware – apparently mixing drinks left distinctive wear patterns in the base of the vessels! There is also a good selection of Saxon weapons and grave goods. The displays include items from the private collection of Victorian MP and banker Sir John Lubbock, 1st Lord Avebury, who introduced Bank Holidays. There is also a reconstructed 1930s dining room and a variety of temporary exhibitions. The Museum is linked with several local archaeological sites, including Crofton Roman Villa, adjacent to Orpington Railway Station and Crofton Halls, open Wednesdays, Fridays, Sundays and Bank Holiday Mondays, Easter to October, and staffed by the Kent Archaeological Rescue unit who excavated and restored the site. Admission is a paltry 80p! There is a sales desk, graphic displays and replica Roman objects, taped commentary and a short talk by an archaeologist. This classic example of a winged corridor villa was inhabited c. AD 140-400 and had some 20 rooms at its peak. Today, the remains of ten rooms can be viewed within a modern cover building., with opus signinuin (concrete) floors, tiled floors and a hypocaust all to be seen. Not far away is the Romano-British bath-house and Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Poverest Road, St Mary Cray, to which visits can be arranged through Bromley Museum (telephone 01689 873826 or e-mail bromleymuseum@bromley.gov.uk). This is also protected by a cover building and consists of three rooms; it may have belonged to a farmhouse complex, or small settlement, close to the River Cray, there being a number of Roman sites on both sides of the river. Part of the hypocaust heating system, with its associated pilae, can still be seen. The building was excavated in 1970-75 by the then curator of Bromley Museum; further excavation by the Museum and Orpington & District Archaeological Society in 1993 indicated a construction date of about AD270 and found evidence of nearby metal¬working with discovery of crushed slag overlying a partly mortared floor. Occupation here also continued until around AD400. Finds from the bath-house and from the nearby Saxon cemetery are in Bromley Museum.
Page 4

Bibliography Missing from the October Newsletter: Roman Hendon – The Evidence

Andy Simpson has provided the following. Brief progress notes in HADAS Newsletters 331 (October 1998) and 332 (November 1998) Various HADAS Newsletters from No.1 October 1969

Roman Roads in & around the London Borough of Barnet Stephen Aleck (unpublished paper) June 1998

Town Trail 1: Hendon Barnet Library Service/HADAS June 1979

Church Farmhouse Bill Bass HADAS Journal Vol.1(pp11-20) 2001

The Buildings of Roman Britain Guy de la Bedoyere Batsford 1991

The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Placenames (4th Edn) Eilert Ekwall OUP 1960

Roman Hendon HADAS 1971 An Investigation of Roman Road No.167 Brian Robertson Trans. LAMAS, 22, part 3 (pp 10-29)

1970 Roman Material Found at Grove House, Hendon in 1889 Brian Robertson Mid 24 (pp146-150)

1973 A Moulded Face-flagon Neck from Church Terrace, Hendon Edward Sammes Mid 28 (pp272-3)

1977 Pinning Down the Past – Finds from a Hendon Dig Edward Sammes HADAS 1986

A Place in Time Ed. Pamela Taylor 1989 Sulloniacis – A Dampener for Sun Worshippers?

Pamela Taylor HADAS Newsletter 333, p2 Dec1998 Parish Church of Hendon St Mary, Visitor’s Guide (no date)

A Roman Presence in the Borough of Barnet (Gazeteer of all known Roman rinds in the Borough) Helen Gordon HADAS Newsletters 102 & 103 Aug & Sept 1979

Hendon Church Farm House Excavation 1993, Interim Report HADAS June 1994 London Fieldwork & Publication Round-up London Archaeologist Annual Publication Various issues


Page 5

OTHER SOCIETIES’ EVENTS from Eric Morgan

Thursday 7th November 7.30pm. THE LONDON CANAL MUSEUM, 12-13 New Wharf Rd, Kings Cross, Nl. FURTHER SECRETS OF THE LEA VALLEY. Talk by Dr Jim Lewis (£1.25)

Wednesday 13th November 8.15pm. MILL HILL HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Harwood Hall, Union Church, Mill Hill Broadway, NW7. TOTTERIDGE TALES – RICH & POOR. Talk by John Heathfield (HADAS member)

Friday 15th November 8pm. ENFIELD ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Jubilee Hall, junction Chase Side/Parsonage Lane, Enfield. THE PORT OF ROMAN LONDON. Talk by Bruce Watson

Friday 15th November 7pm. CITY OF LONDON ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, St Olave’s Parish Hall, Mark Lane, EC3. EAST LONDON ROMAN CEMETERY. David Bowsher (MoLAS)

Tuesday 19th November 2.30pm. EDMONTON HUNDRED HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Jubilee Hall, jn. Chase Side/Parsonage Lane, Enfield. DR JOHNSON’S LONDON. Natasha McEnroe

Tuesday 19th November 8pm. NATIONAL TRUST (BARNET ASSOCIATION) at St Mary Magdalene Hall, Atheaeum Rd, Whetstone, N20_ REFLECTIONS ON SERVING THE NATIONAL TRUST FOR ONE-THIRD OF ITS HISTORY. Talk by Tom Burr MBE

Wednesday 20th November 6 for 6.30pm. LAMAS at Interpretation Unit, Museum of London, 150 London Wall, EC2. ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF THE GOLDSMITHS’ COMPANY. David Beasley

Wednesday 20th November 8pm. WILLESDEN LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY at Willesden Suite, Library Centre, 95 High Rd, NW10. HIGH ROAD WILLESDEN. Talk by Committee members, slides Wednesday 20th November 8pm. ISLINGTON ARCHAEOLOGY & HISTORY SOCIETY. Islington Town Hall, Upper St, N1. ROMAN REMAINS AT LEFEVRE WALK, PARNELL ROAD. Talk by Robin Taylor-Wilson

Thursday 21st November 8pm.ENFEELD PRESERVATION SOCIETY. Jubilee Hall, jnct’n Chase Side/Parsonage Lane, Enfield. THE SPAINISH FLU IN EIVHELD 1918. Talk by Graham Dalling

Saturday 23rd November 1 lam to 4 pm. NORTH LONDON TRANSPORT SOCIETY, St Paul’s Centre, corner of Church St & Old Park Avenue, Enfield. NORTH LONDON TRANSPORT BAZAAR. Transport-related goods, photographs, books, videos, memorabilia, etc. Historic buses give free rides round local scenic area. light refreshments. Admission £1.50.

Thursday 28th November 8pm. THE FINCHLEY SOCIETY, Drawing Room, Avenue House, East End Rd, N3. TRADING STANDARDS AUTHORITY WORK & YOUR RIGHTS AS A CONSUMER. Talk by Catherine Townley

Tuesday 26th November 8pm_ FRIERN BARNET & DISTRICT LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Old Fire Station (next to Town Hall), Friern Barnet Lane, N12. CARING FOR FRIERN BARNET. Talk by Karl Ruge

Wednesday 27th November 8pm. BARNET & DISTRICT LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Rd, Barnet. AGM.

Wednesday 27th November 7.30pm. FRIENDS OF BRUCE CASTLE, Bruce Castle Museum, Lordship Lane, Tottenham, N 17. MEDIAEVAL LONDON, LOST & FOUND. Talk by Bruce Watson

Sunday 1st December 10_30am_ HEATH & HAMPSTEAD SOCIETY, Burgh House, New End Square, NW3. ARTEFACTS OF THE HEATH. Walk led by Michael Welbank (donation £1)

newsletter-379-october-2002

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Newsletter
Page 1

HADAS DIARY

Lectures start at 8pm in the Drawing Room (ground floor) of Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley , N3, and are followed by question time and coffee. We close promptly at 10pm.

Tuesday 8th October: Lecture by Dr Ann Saunders M.B.E. on ‘St. Paul’s Cathedral – our marble heritage’. HADAS will give a warm welcome to Dr Saunders, our previous President. Besides editing the journals of the Topographical Society and the Costume Society, Dr Saunders is well known as writer and lecturer on the history and architecture of London and her latest book is ‘St Paul’s: the Story of the Cathedral’.

Tuesday 12th November Lecture by Simon Parfitt on ‘The Ups and Downs of Life in the British Palaeolithic’. Simon Parfitt, who last visited HADAS in March 1996 to bring the Boxgrove Paleolithic site to life, will offer a broader view in this lecture.

Thursday 5th DecemberChristmas Dinner at the Meritage Club (now Age Concern), Hendon, combined with a visit to St. Mary’s Norman church next door, where the Vicar, the Rev. Paul Taylor, will give us a talk and tour. St. Mary’s is believed to have been built on the site of an earlier Saxon church. Earlier members will remember our Arabian Nights dinner which was held in the Meritage Club in the 1980s. Details and application form enclosed.
An invitation to meet Kim Stabler of English Heritage at the Salon Room, Avenue House on Thursday 31 October at 7.30pm.

Kim has recently taken over from Rob Whytehead as the Archaeology Advisor for North and West London. She advises on planning matters, development and the Sites & Monuments Record in our area and deals with local societies, archaeological contractors, developers and local authorities. This will be an opportunity for Kim to meet HADAS, discuss her role at English Heritage and for us to exchange views on the future of planning, development and the SMR in Barnet. Bill Bass.
STILL LOOKING….

We are continuing in our efforts to find the Romans at Burnt Oak. However, as of Sunday 8th September, the digging team at Hanshaw Drive had still not reached pre-1920s levels. They are now at a depth of some 1.3 metres at the western end of the five- metre long trench and are still in redeposited clay and building rubble from the 1920s Wesleyan Hall. This is very firmly compacted and difficult to dig through. We have until the end of September to reach the bottom, and at the time of writing Sunday work is continuing. Andy Simpson
MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY

Mary Rawitzer has accepted the job of Membership Secretary. We wish her success and many new members. We would like to thank Judy Kaye, retiring membership secretary, for all her hard work.


Page 2


FUTURE OF THE U.S. BASE AT UPPER HEYFORD, ENGLAND by ELLEN HALE from USA TODAY

Just a decade ago, U.S. bombers thundered down the runway here in their mission to protect the free world. Eight F-1 1 1 sarmed with nuclear weapons, their pilots always nearby, stood ready round the clock. Today, the airstrip serves as a parking lot for 20,000 cars. Cattle graze on the fuel dumps, and the barracks house high-tech start-up companies. The yard-thick concrete hangars provide impregnable protection for medical records. Bomb stores hold a different sort of explosive: fireworks. The British government and historic preservationists want to turn this former U.S. air base — one of the largest and most critical frontline defenses against the Soviet Union — into the United Kingdom’s first monument to the Cold War. Preserving Upper Heyford as a symbol of 40 years of nuclear tension, officials say, is as essential as protecting battlegrounds and cathedrals. Opponents, who consider the base an unsightly gash on the otherwise bucolic Oxfordshire landscape, would like to see most of it razed and turned into a park. “Heritage doesn’t just involve medieval castles and standing stones,” argues David Went, inspector of ancient monuments for English Heritage, the government group responsible for selecting cultural sites for statutory protection. “These structures mark a point in time that shaped all of our lives, and it is rapidly passing out of memory.” English Heritage has just completed an inventory of the country’s Cold War sites, from bunkers and bomb shelters to bases. It has made Upper Heyford its top priority because of pending proposals to build houses on the site and allow other parts to revert to the original pastoral state. Hearings are being held. Officials could rule on the future of the base by year’s end. But by all accounts, it appears certain that at least a important, and possibly the first, nationally sanctioned Cold War memorial in the world. Bills pending in Congress would authorize the Interior Department to inventory Cold War sites in the USA, but there has been no organized effort to preserve monuments from that era, says Gary Powers Jr., son of U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers, who was shot down over the Soviet Union in 1962. In the USA, remnants from the Cold War have been preserved, but nothing on the scale of an entire base. Gary Powers runs an online Cold War museum and lobbies for preservation of Cold War sites. Created during World War I and then used by the Royal Air Force during World War 11, Upper Heyford was taken over by Americans in 1950 to serve as a frontline base for the U.S. Strategic Air Command. In an effort to recreate a slice of America in the heart of rural England, existing housing, deemed too small by American standards, was enlarged. A shopping mail, bowling alley, baseball diamonds, pizza parlors and donut shops were added to Americanize the base. Even today, U.S.-style fire hydrants and street signs pepper the 1,250-acre site, set among the rolling hills and farmland of rural England. At its peak in the 1970s and ’80s, 13,000 U.S. servicemembers were stationed at Upper Heyford. Three U-2 spy planes flew out of the base, patrolling the perimeter of the communist Warsaw Pact countries. About 75 F-111 tighter-bombers were housed here in 56 monolithic, concrete hardened shelters that give the rolling landscape an eerie sense of the secret world of the Cold War. “This was not a public war like other wars,” Went says. ‘There are no battlefields or burial grounds. You don’t even have grandpa’s memories. It was all locked away, and all you saw were the gates.” Since the U.S. Air Force left Upper Heyford in 1993, planners, developers and preservationists have debated what to do with the base. Local officials wanted to return it to its original “green” state. A consortium of builders, which runs the site, had hoped to build as many as 5,000 new homes. One local preservation group says it should be completely protected, including the 1.9-mile airstrip — the longest in Europe. ‘It’s prominent, it’s austere, and it’s an intrusion into what was once open countryside,” says Patrick Burke, planning policy manager for Cherwell District Council. The council, which wanted to see the site returned to parkland. has now grudgingly accepted that because of their historical significance, some parts of the base should be preserved. Ardent preservationists envision Upper Heyford as the prime Cold War monument in Europe complete with a museum, bomber planes in the hangars and tours for visitors and schoolchildren. The entire sweep of the base must be protected, they argue. to convey the nature of a war that never required a battlefield and was unlike any other in history. “It is the best existing example of Cold War landscape and architecture,” says Frank Dixon of the Oxford Trust for Contemporary History. The reason we all don’t speak Russian is that that base was there. It helps us understand that the peace we have today is a result of the Cold War.” Contributed by Stewart J Wild
Page 3

HADAS OUTING TO SUTTON HOO AND ORFORD JULY 2002

Many thanks to Tessa Smith and Sheila Woodard who arranged this very successful day.

SUTTON HOO by KAREN LEVY

Our destination,Sutton Hoo, located in East Suffolk, on the River Diben. It is noted for its Royal Anglo- Saxon burial ground, where in 1939 archaeologists uncovered one of the richest graves ever excavated in Europe. We disembarked our coach into some much welcomed sunshine and headed for a courtyard, surrounded by modern buildings housing the exhibition, cafe and shop. In the courtyard stood a half size replica of the warrior boat used in the burial. Our guide commenced our tour by taking us to a field, across which an Edwardian House stands.Here, in 1926, Edith Pretty and her family came to reside. After her husband’s demise she delved into spiritualism and this combined with encouragement from friends and family gave her the impetus to investigate the site located within the 400 acre estate. The area consists of 17 mounds believed to be of the Royal Dynasty of the Wuffings. During the 7th Century it appears that the area was also used to bury execution victims – those who would not convert to Christianity – as it was considered Pagan soil. A gallows was found close to their burial site. Most of the mounds have been pilfered by grave robbers. However, in 1939, when Basil Brown started to excavate the boat, although a robber’s hole had been dug (and a Tudor beer jar found – digging is thirsty work) the burial chamber had been left intact. The boat itself (measuring 90 foot long) only remained as an imprint due to the soil’s acidity levels. Although there was no trace of a body, they discovered an array of magnificent treasures – 263 in all: jewellery embellished with over 2,000 Indian garnets (which took several days to cut and polish), feasting dishes and a grand selection of armour befitting a Royal send off. They were taken to the British Museum for safe keeping due to the commencement of World War 11. Carbon dating suggests that the grave dates back to around 600AD and could belong to Raedwald. King of the East Angles who died around 625 AD.

ORFORD by KEN CARTER

Orford has human scale. It’s enchanting. Even the coach park appeals. Well-established greenery transforms the tarmac expanse into life-size parking bays. Time stands still. A board in Quai Street announces : Pair of Georgian style 4 bedroom cottages to be built by autumn 2002′ It’s mid-July. When will work start ? Orford used to thrive. It was a port on the river Or. It had quays… a market place… several dwelling streets… three churches… and a castle overlooking them all. King Stephen sanctioned the market in 1135. Henry II’s castle took 9 years to build ( 1165-1173 ). It countervailed Hugh Bigod’s stronghold at nearby Framlingham… and cost £ I ,400. The flint keep is circular, with three towers only – an innovative structure – intended to eliminate blind spots. We enter the castle by a wooden stepway to the first floor. Inside, two locals greet us with sounds that instruments of the time might have made. We explore the premises : a large open circular space on each floor… dark passages… dim side-rooms… a kitchen… three privies. At the top of one castle tower I spotted an early gothic fireplace – and imagined men huddling there… sheltering from winds off the North Sea. St Bartholemew’s has flint walls, early gothic windows, a square tower and a truncated chancel. Outside, I walked around the remaining mid C 17 ruins. Inside, Opera East was directing a lighting rehearsal for Janacek’s ‘Cunning Little Vixen’ . Each year, the sea thrusts sand towards the Ness – leaving Orford a little farther from the sea, as the ship sails. River-silt aggravates the port’s decline. Quai Street was once a creek… and Ford Cottage is land-locked. The Old Warehouse serves delicious home-made scones and jam, though. Time stands still here, too.


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ROMAN HENDON -THE EVIDENCE — CONTINUED by ANDY SIMPSON

It should be noted also that the 1969 trial trenches by HADAS in the rear of Peacock’s Yard and Mount Pleasant, Church End found pottery indicating occupation no earlier than the late 19th century. Similarly. a HADAS excavation at 50 The Burroughs (TQ227 891) in 1986 found only post-medieval material, as did a dig by Percy Reboul in the garden of 14 Cedars Close in 1980 (TQ238 897). A watching brief on the site of the Hendon Bus Garage at the Burroughs in 1993 by MOLAS (TQ2290 8930) showed only natural clay overlain by 18th century makeup. HADAS site watching at the PDSA building at Church Terrace (TQ2298 8950) on the 5th November 1993 showed only modem concrete, soil and drain disturbance above natural clay in a 45cm wide trench at the rear of the building, with no finds. A more recent HADAS excavation south west of here in 1991/2 in land formerly part of St. Joseph’s Convent at the junction of The Burroughs and Watford Way (TQ2245 8915) found a single residual sherd of medieval Hertfordshire Grey ware, and much post-medieval material, in disturbed top layers, plus an undated ditch, but no Roman evidence. (See HADAS Newsletter 256, 1992) The Paddock/Church End sites lie one mile east of the A5/Watling Street, a known major Roman route from London to Verulamium (St. Albans) and the north which forms the western boundary of the present day Borough of Barnet, and south of the Roman road projected by the Viatores study group in 1964 as their route No.167, running south from Verulami um to London through Barnet Gate (where Roman coins, now lost, were found some years ago) and possibly Mill Hill and Hendon. Other nearby Roman finds including a third century coin at Moat Mount This route or, more likely, that of another road was recorded in section by HADAS a mile or so east at Copthall playing fields in 1967/8, (TQ2325 9140) when some 130 native and Roman sherds of mid – late first century pottery were found associated with the 21 foot wide cambered pebble road surface. Stephen Aleck suggests an early route of some sort from Church End Hendon to Red Hill, Burnt Oak roughly along the line now represented by Greyhound Hill, Aerodrome Road, Booth Road and Gervase Road, as shown by early maps and the alignment of a former footpath, linking two known sites with Roman occupation, though to prove any Roman connection would be difficult. Other Roman occupation in the vicinity includes the (now scheduled) first/second century pottery import and production site at Brockley Hill on Watling Street excavated at various times since 1937(succeeded by some late third-early fourth century, possibly agricultural, activity), pottery and tile scatters from nearby Edgwarebury, and the late third/early fourth century pit or ditch with barbarous radiate coin, pottery, building material and bone found in Thirlby Road, Burnt Oak by HADAS in 1971 (TQ2059 9080); one of these is probably the site of Sulloniacae as recorded in the Antonine Itinery. The seven Roman Lamps and defaced coins reported near Mill Hill in 1769, alleged Roman finds at a possible earthwork at Mote Mount, Mill Hill, a Roman gold coin at The Hyde, Colindale. odd pottery sherds at Hendon Isolation Hospital, Welsh Harp, The Hyde, both close to the Watling Street, and also more recently, to also add to those recorded by Helen Gordon in 1979, the two sherds and tile fragments found by HADAS at The Mitre Inn, at High Barnet in 1990 and a single sherd at 1263-1275 High Road, Whetstone on the line of the old Great North Road in 2001 hint at scattered outlying Roman occupation of some description. SUMMARY What is clear is that from half a dozen quite closely grouped sites in the centre of Hendon there are indications of first — fourth century occupation, possibly centred on the area now occupied by the church of St Mary, that seems to have included tile bonded and roofed masonry building(s), possibly with brick columns, (but no trace of wall plaster as yet, and only one, vague, mention of possible mosaic tesserae) and possible outlying early cremation cemetery(s) south and east of it — but, as yet, no recognised Roman inhumations or in —situ building remains. With the paucity of villas in the area and the dominating high ground position of the site! find myself thinking of a then remote ‘Romano-Celtic’ (cella and ambulatory) type temple, possibly on a site sacred in earlier times, perhaps with associated scatter of buildings that might have hosted occasional festivals or fairs — hence the pottery – or even a mausoleum, though I suppose an isolated tile kiln lying between the Brockley Hill and Highgate Kiln sites is another possibility. Ted Sarnmes also thought the site might have ritual/ religious connections, based on the pottery evidence — see above. The lack, so far, of ovens, iron tools, quemstones, animal bone, glassware, spindle-whorls and loom-weights might argue against it being a domestic or agricultural site. The phasing/dating of the finds needs more study — the cremation burials are likely to be of early date, but the pottery found includes both contemporary VRW and other wares and third/fourth century material, indicating either continuous occupation throughout the Roman period or perhaps Brockley-Hill style early and late bursts of activity with a possible lull in between during the unsettled third century. Masonry buildings did not become common in Roman Britain until the second century though timber framed buildings from the first century did feature tiled roofs. Only more finds can fill in the gaps! To quote the late Ted Sammes ‘This would seem to suggest that there must have been a building of some pretension in the area, and since the finds were concentrated in the area next to Church End, one wonders whether the Roman site may be under the modern road or under the church’. This is an interpretation still valid today, for an area that will repay careful study. Andy provides a very good bibliography to go with this article, but there is no space to print it here.

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Other Societies Events from Eric Morgan

Thursday 3rd October, 7.30pm . THE LONDON CANAL MUSEUM. 12-13 New Wharf Road, King’s Cross, Nl. THOMAS TELFORD. Talk by Anthony Burton ( author & T.V. presenter }. Concessions £1.25.

Thursday 3rd October, 8pm. PINNER LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Village Hall, Chapel Lane Car Park, Pinner. FIELD END REVISITED. The development of the old part of Eastcote. Talk by Dr. Colleen Cox & Ms. Karen Spink. £1.

Sunday 6th October, 10.30am. 7pm. NORTH LONDON TRANSPORT SOCIETY – UNCOMPLETED NORTHERN LINE EXTENSIONS. Extra walk & study tour led by Jim Blake. Meet at Finsbury Park Station. Must book in advance. Send S.A.E. to N.L.T.S., `Ravensbrook’ 8, The Rowans, London, N13 SAD

Sunday 6th October, 10.30am. HEATH & HAMPSTEAD SOCIETY. Burgh House, New End Square, NW3. GEOLOGY OF THE HEATH. Walk led by Ivor Fishman. Donation £1.

Wednesday 9th October, 8pm. BARNET & DISTRICT LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Stapylton Road, Barnet. A SAFARI IN THE CITY. Talk by Paul Taylor.

Wednesday 9th October, 8pm. EDMONTON HUNDRED HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Jubilee Hall, junction of Parsonage Lane/ Chase Side, Enfield. THE GUNPOWDER PLOT & THE ENFIELD CONNECTION. Talk by Robert Musgrove.

Thursday 17th October, 7.30pm. CAMDEN HISTORY SOCIETY. Hall of St Mary’s Somers Town Church, Eversholt Street , NW1 ( opposite the side of Euston Station ). STREETS OF ST. PANCRAS : SOMERS TOWN & RAILWAY LANDS. Talk by Streets Research Group.

Friday 18th October, 8pm. ENFIELD ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Jubilee Hall, junction Parsonage Lane/Chase Side, Enfield. THE ROLE OF SURVEYING & G.I.S. IN PROFESSIONAL ARCHAEOLOGY. Talk by Duncan Lees.

Friday 18th October, 7pm. CITY OF LONDON ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. St. Olave’s Parish Hall, Mark Lane, FX3. LONDON BEFORE LONDON. Talk by Jon Cotton ( Museum of London ).

Saturday 19th & Sunday 20th October, from noon. ENGLISH HERITAGE. Kenwood, Hampstead Lane, NW3. SPORTS & PASTIMES ( MEDIEVAL ). £3.50 adults, £2.50 concession. £1.75 child.

Tuesday 22nd October, 8pm. FRIERN BARNET & DISTRICT LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Old Fire Station ( next to Town Hall ) Friern Barnet Lane, N12. LOCAL HISTORY USING OLD MAPS. Talk by Hugh Petrie ( Barnet Borough historian ),

Saturday 26th October, 10am. EDMONTON HUNDRED HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Jubilee Hall, junction Parsonage Lane I Chase Side, Enfield. ALL DAY CONFERENCE.

Thursday 31st October, 8pm. THE FINCHLEY SOCIETY. Drawing Room, Avenue House, East End Road, N3. HOW THE NEW CABINET STSTEM IS WORKING & HOW THE FINCHLEY SOCIETY BEST BE INVOLVED. (Jean Scott memorial lecture ) Given by Leo Boland, Chief Executive, Barnet Borough.

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Page 1

HADAS Diary

Tuesday October 8: The new lecture season opens with St Paul’s Cathedral our marble heritage by Dr Ann Saunders, past HADAS President.

Lectures start at 8pm in the Drawing Room (ground floor) of Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley, N3, and are followed by question time and coffee. We close promptly at 10pm.

Tuesday November 12: Simon Parfitt, who last visited HADAS in March 1996 to bring the Boxgrove Palaeolithic site to life, will offer a broader view in The Ups and Downs of Life in the British Palaeolithic.

December, date to follow: Christmas Party. A definite date has not yet been fixed, but possible ones are Thursday December 5 or Monday December 9. Details will follow in the next Newsletter. London prices have escalated enormously and most appropriate locations fora HADAS event are now obliged to employ security staff which adds to the cost. So we are going back to the practice in the early days of HADAS and planning a local dinner with an interesting visit nearby. We will visit St Mary’s Church, Hendon, where the vicar, the Rev Paul Taylor, will give us a talk on its history — a Norman church with possible Saxon foundations. Next door is the Meritage Club (Age Concern) built on the site of Ted Sammes’ excavations in the 1970s and where HADAS held its Christmas Arabian Night in the 1980s. Members will be able to show their Ireland weekend photos and those from other outings or activities, and the 1984 Channel 4 video Barnet Before Domesday may also be shown. A member has offered to run a quiz, and it has been suggested we have a couple of sales tables (minimart substitute) with books on one and cakes and Christmas goodies on the other.
Hanshaw Drive: the sequel

Following the excavation of our first trench at Hanshaw Drive in 2000 (HDWOO) adjacent to the house in Thirlby Road where the Roman pits were found in 1971, the digging team have now returned. The trench this time is 5×1 metres and cuts across a prominent mound at the centre of the site. So far, the stratigraphy this time round is pretty basic — turf, about 15cm of post-1965 topsoil, a thin layer of ash/ cinder, then a thick and very well packed 50cm or so of redeposited London clay mixed with demolition rubble from the former Wesleyan Meeting Hall (1928-1965). This contains such goodies as electrical wire, bathroom tiles and slabs of concrete. Below this we have just started to come down onto what will hopefully prove to be the original buried (and very sandy) ploughsoil, which has already yielded its first 18th century day pipe stem fragment. No sign of the Romans just yet, however. We are presently digging on Sundays 10am-4pm with a break for lunch. Would-be diggers please call me on 0208 200 6875 or Brian Wrigley on 020 8959 5968. Andy Simpson August 18 update: The buried soil was a false lead. We are 89cm below the turf level and still in very firm redeposited clay — we found a plastic shampoo bottle!


The Friary Park survey

The survey has been continuing here with some areas being resurveyed to provide a more consistent result. Latest results show an unusual intriguing feature, shaped as a long line with circular ends. It is difficult to speculate what this might be, but if it were a structure of some kind it would have been a substantial one. Research by Oliver Natelson of the Friern Barnet and District Local History Society shows a mansion had been built in Friary Park in the 16th century (the present house in the park is mid-Victorian). It stood west of Friern Barnet Lane and south of St James’s church, with which it was connected by an avenue in 1783, when the extensive grounds were bounded to the west by ponds and Blackett’s brook. “The house contained 17 hearths in 1664, when it was unoccupied. In 1797 the main east front of five bays with two wings was in an early 18th century style but the core of an older house survived with piecemeal addi¬tions, probably including a hall of c 1660.” (extract from Victoria County History of Middlesex). Whether the survey feature is connected with such a building or some earlier or later event remains to be seen, but the results are encouraging. The survey will con-tinue into September. Bill Bass For more information on this, see the HADAS website.
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Plan preserves Ted’s cottages

Barnet Council has published an additional chapter to its development plan entitled Cricklewood, West Hendon and Brent Cross Regeneration Area. Over the next ten years the area roughly bounded by Hendon Way, Park Road, Edgware Road and Crickle-wood Lane (240 hectares/592 acres) on both sides of the North Circular Road is scheduled for improvement. The Brent Cross area will become a new “town centre”; new and improved transport links will run between Hendon Central/Brent Cross tube and Brent Cross and Cricklewood and there will be a new train station behind the Virgin cinema complex on the Edgware Road. Areas of Special Archaeological Significance and nature conservation sites are included, while the Cricklewood railway workers’ cottages (Gratton Terrace, et al), which Ted Sammes fought so long to save, are protected within a conservation area. The public are invited to forward comments during the six-week consultation period ending on Monday October 7. For your copy of the proposals call the Strategic Planning Team at Barnet House, Whetstone, on 020 8359 4990, fax 020 8359 6054 or e-mail forward.planning@barnet.gov.uk Stewart Wild
Lottery cash for the Grange

There is good news for the Grange Museum of Commu-nity History, currently located at Neasden in our neigh-bouring borough Brent. A major grant from the Herit¬age Lottery Fund — almost £1 million — is well-nigh guaranteed, which will enable its collections, which document and celebrate Brent’s unique history and cul-tural diversity, to be far better and more accessibly displayed. The money will help fund the relocation of the museum from its present site, which has poor physical and disability access, restricted storage and display space and poor educational facilities, to new premises at Willesden Green Library Centre. The new central location includes an innovative proposal to develop an integrated children’s library, museum and Learning area and much-needed space for permanent displays, temporary exhibitions and im proved storage and conservation conditions. Basing the museum within the library complex will help to create a new cultural facility for Brent and assist in the develop ment of a range of educational activities and facilities. The award is one of 22 announced by the HLF for major projects as wide-ranging as the creation of a new national museum on the waterfront at Swansea, restor ing Hull’s largest urban park and the Stonehenge plan.

Sadly, all the poles have gone

Following last issue’s plea for information on the research on trolley bus poles and lamp standards in Woodhouse Road and Friern Barnet carried out in 1978, Bill Firth provides this update. I remember this work well. I started it in Golders Green when it became obvious that new street lighting standards were being put in. At the time there were trolley bus poles used as lamp standards from Childs Hill to Henleys Corner, which I recorded, but they were replaced soon after. Raymond Lowe took some photographs. I was unaware of any similar poles elsewhere in the borough but Brian Wibberley, the BLW of last month’s comments, took me up on this and recorded those in Woodhouse Road and Friern Barnet Road. There are none left now. Just to be sure! rode along the length of the two roads in early August. I do not know when they were replaced but I imagine not long after those in Golders Green. The Research Committee minutes of November 5 1976 recorded Mr Lowe as reporting: “Trolley bus poles now in use as lamp standards were converted by Edward Clack for the North Metropolitan Electricity Co., Hendon District.” At this time Mr Clack had retired and was living in Appleby, Cumbria. One other point: the poles originally supported a heavy weight of wires and were installed leaning away from the centre of the road so that when the wires were added the poles were pulled upright. When the poles were used as lamp standards they were not carrying the weight of the wires and they leant away from the road.
Eyes down, once again

Bill Firth’s Article (History Beneath our Feet) in the last Newsletter struck a chord with me, although it is quite some years since my late pa rents paid bills to Northmet. A few thoughts from deepest Surrey, where I have been looking at public utilities covers. In my parish there are six different styles of gutter rainwater gratings, made by 40 (yes, forty) different ironfounders, from Exeter to York. Main drainage reached here only in 1931. One draincover was cast in India, and others bear the names of local builders. But remember Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure of the Retired Colourman: “The house is older than the water-pipes”; an 18th-century cottage here has the draincover of a builder whose nearby yard opened only in 1927. Don’t overlook the railway station: mine has a Southern Railway water valve cover (1923-48) and had another from an engineering firm which was involved with the station building in 1885. This last has been lost, which brings me to my final point: record before “development”, resurfacing or traffic damage leads to the disappearance of evidence! Derek Reran
The Romans are delayed:

The continuation of Andy Simpson’s account of Roman Hendon has unfortunately been squeezed out of this Newsletter. Watch the next one…
Research on Shirehall Lane, Hendon

A paragraph in the MoLAS 2002 annual review briefly summarises the complicated constructional history of the building at 8 Shirehall Lane, Hendon, which formerly housed part of the Hasmonean Primary School. Andrew Westman of MoLAS (the Museum of London Archaeology Service), has kindly allowed HADAS to publish a much fuller summary of his report. In return, he hopes a HADS member may be able to help find out the name of an earlier researcher of the building’s history. Andrew Westman writes: I was able to spend one day (in February last year) in Hendon Archives and Local Studies Cen-tre, and was lucky enough to come across some notes on the building already col-lected by an earlier researcher. These were very useful to me, but unfortu¬nately neither I nor the archivists could identify the author. The notes included a list of photographs, but not copies of the photographs themselves, obviously taken before alterations to the house in the 1990s (such as inserting RSJs, breeze block walls, and eliminating the entrance passage and the stair flights on the ground floor). I’d like to know who did this research, in order to be able to thank them and acknowledge them properly in the archive if not the report, and it would also be useful to know the wherea¬bouts of the photographs or even obtain copies of them. I’d be most grateful for any light anyone in HADAS may be able to throw ,on these questions. If any member can help, please email Andrew at: andreww@molas.org.uk, or write to him or phone him at MoLAS.
Education on much altered footings

The Museum of London Archaeology Service was com-missioned by Rosenfelder Associates, architects, on be¬half of the Jewish Secondary School Movement, to ana¬lyse and record a standing building at 8 Shirehall Lane, Hendon, London NW4, part of the Hasmonean Primary School, at 8-10 Shirehall Lane. The building was statutorily listed as being of special architectural or historic interest, Grade 2, and the investigation, which took place in February 2001, and a subsequent report were required as a condition of plan-ning permission to demolish the building before redevelopment of this part of the school. The oldest structural remains, identified in the south-west part of the building, were timber posts and beams, probably of oak and the remnants of early timber framing, perhaps 17th century in date. These timbers may have belonged to a two- storey building constructed on this site (designated Building 1), to the west of which a set of two rooms was later added, one on the ground floor and the other on the first floor directly above. The new rooms, built of tim¬ber studs infilled with brick and including a chimney stack to one side of a hipped roof, can be dated broadly to the latter half of the 18th and the early years of the 19th centuries; documentary evi¬dence suggests that they may have existed by 1796, when Build¬ing 1 and a neighbouring build¬ing to the south (10 Shirehall Lane) were described as “two dwelling houses with coach- house, stable, out-offices, garden and a small pightle [or cultivated field]” . The first-floor room had a high ceiling with a decorated cornice and a pair of doors, the doorcases having en- gaged flat fluted columns and corner rosettes in a late 18th-century style. Most of the older, timber-framed part of Building 1 was then dismantled, retaining only the added set of rooms, and replaced by a new series of rooms, built on two floors fronting onto the street to the east and partly enclosing the retained set of rooms (a change sufficiently extensive to be designated Building 2). The new external walls were built largely of brick, with internal walls built of timber studs infilled with brick nogging, around two brick chimney stacks. A hipped roof was built over the new rooms, separate from that over the rooms retained from Building I and sur-rounded to front and sides by a brick parapet. The first- floor landing was rebuilt with a floor partly at a higher level than previously, causing one of the pair of doors in an existing first-floor room mentioned above to be sealed up; the higher level was presumably to accommodate the lower flights of the staircase, which by implication was therefore also rebuilt, or at least rearranged, at this time. The surviving timber banisters and handrail of this staircase were in a late 18th or early 19th-century style. The construction of Building 2 is documented possibly as early as 1828, when this building and its neighbour were described as “two substantial brick dwellings with stabling to each, yards and garden”, and certainly by 1840, when this site comprised a “dwell¬ing house, stabling, garden and forecourt”. According to documentary evidence a loggia in wrought and cast iron was erected against the street front, and this may have included balconies in front of full-length windows on the first floor. This loggia is documented in 1862, but may not have been an original part of Building 2 as a ground- floor window in the building was enlarged at some time to form a full-length window or glazed door, perhaps to suit the loggia. This building appeared to have been a private residence until 1922 when, according to documentary evidence, two doctors set up their practice in it. A wing was then added to Building 2, to the north, documented by 1935.This wing was constructed of concrete, brick and steel, and included a second staircase to the rear, windows with Crittall steel frames and, facing the street, a combined steel-framed door and window. Alterations were made elsewhere in similar materials, possibly at separate times: the rear and side walls of Building 2 were rebuilt; a passage from the first-floor stair landing and an adjacent room were opened up to form a single room; and probably at this time the fireplaces were blocked, the chimneys cut down and the roof coverings replaced. After 1960, the loggia was at least partly dismantled and replaced by a canted bay window on the ground floor. In about 1970 the building was taken over for use as part of an adjacent primary school. As recently as 1997, rooms were opened up to form large classrooms on the ground floor, with steel joists inserted for support in place of walls, the original staircase was removed from the ground floor, making a suitable hallway just inside a new entrance in the south wall linking the building with the rest of the school, and the first floor was vacated. The classrooms in the building were last used in 2000.
Destinations to dream of…

Inspired by the HADAS sortie to Ireland, or simply longing for a break from Britain? If either is the case, the British Museum Traveller has a wide range of escorted tours of a historical and archaeological nature. Members might like to consider the following tours which, at the time of writing, still had places available. Thebes and the Oases of the Western Desert September 29 16 days £1,990 (reduced from £2,350) The Imperial Cities of Morocco October 5 9 days £1,395 Discover Jordan October 5 9 days £1,395 Classical Turkey October 5 15 days £1,880 Beyond the Oxus: Bukhara and Samarkand October 11 10 days £1,699 Ancient Rome October 14 7 days £1,425 Discover Lebanon October 19 8 days £1,198 Egypt: The Story of the Nile October 21 14 days £1,895 (reduced from £2,150) Discover Egypt October 22 7 days £1,075 Journey through Cambodia November 2 15 days £2,395 Guatemala: Archaeology and Anthropology November 6 15 days £2,950 North and South Vietnam 15 November 16 days £2,695 For a brochure and further information, call 020 7436 7575 or visit www.britishmuseumtraveller.co.uk

Who’s now in charge, and what they’re doing

HADAS Hon. Secretary Denis Ross provides his quarterly report on committee activities The following items may be of interest to members arising from the AGM and the committee’s first meet¬ing in the society’s current year: The AGM took place on June 11 2002 and was attended by 39 members. It was chaired for the first time by the society’s new President, Harvey Sheldon. The following were elected as members of the commit¬tee: Officers: Chairman: Andrew Selkirk, Vice-Chairman: Brian Wrigley, Hon. Treasurer: Micky O’Flynn, Hon. Secretary: Denis Ross. Other members: Christian Allen, Bill Bass, Jackie Brookes, Don Cooper, Andrew Coulson, Catherine Da Costa, Judy Kaye, Eric Morgan, Dorothy Newbury, Peter Nicholson, Peter Pickering, Tim Wilkins. After the meeting, there were various presentations — organised by June Porges — relating to the society’s activities (reported in last Newsletter). The committee met on July 5 2002. The following items were among matters discussed: (a)The following appointments were made: Membership Secretary: Judy Kaye, although she has expressed a wish to be relieved of this office because of pressure of work. Co-Ordinators: Fieldwork: Brian Wrigley; Programme/ Newsletters: Dorothy Newbury; Events: Eric Morgan; Publicity: Tim Wilkins. (b)The Birkbeck course on the analysis of materials from the Sammes archives is running for the second year at Avenue House on Wednesdays from 6.30pm to 8.30pm, from September 25 2002 to March 26 2003. Enrolment forms can be obtained from me or from Birkbeck. (c)The society’s first Journal proved popular and successful. It is hoped to publish a second edition in the current year. (d)The society has purchased a new resistivity meter which is easy to use and effective. In particular, it is in use for the society’s current activities in Friary Park. (e)The society has always enjoyed a close rela-tionship with Church Farmhouse Museum in Hendon and has agreed to donate a display case to the Museum. It will indicate that the case is donated in memory of Ted Sammes. (f)The society’s website and email group con-tinue to expand. The society’s trip to Ireland took place from July 12 to 16 and was very successful — thanks to Jackie Brookes who organised it. A full report accompanies this issue of the Newsletter.

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On the learning curve: it’s that time of year again

Who has enough fingers to count the HADAS members who have followed the London University extra-mural diploma or certificate course in archaeology? But still there should be new takers for these serious yet very enjoyable courses, now run under the aegis of Birkbeck. Looking at the current pattern of study, things have changed hugely since this Newsletter editor did it (I shan’t admit when). Then, each diploma course ended in an exam rather than the course work/ one major essay scheme of today and the diploma and certificate were entirely separated. But the range of study is much the same, moving through the palaeolithic and mesolithic to the archaeology of western Asia and prehistoric Europe, with a range of choices for the final, fourth year of the diploma. Even the name of David Price-Williams still features among the lecturers. But enough nostalgia, to business. In 2002-2003 all year one to three courses will run at the Institute of Archaeology, with fourth year options there (the study of artefacts) or at Russell Square (Roman Britain) or at the Museum of London (physical data in archaeology). There are a whole series of other courses run by Birkbeck, too. For details of everything in the prospec¬tus, telephone 020 7631 6627/ 6631, fax 020 7631 6686 or email archaeology& ce.bbk.ac.uk Nearer home, there is a new series of lectures — Exploring Traditional and Alternate London — at Hamp-stead Garden Suburb Institute. Lecturer for the 32-week course, which starts on Monday September 23, is well-known London historian Robert Stephenson. He will chart the development of London from prehistory, through the Roman and subse-quent periods, to the present day. Sessions will deal with city-wide topics or focus on specific districts of the capital and their historical and architectural heritage. Time is devoted to London’s legends as well as to a number of alternative perspec¬tives of the city, including its sacred sites, energy centres, dowsing surveys, folklore, execution sites, ghosts and ancient customs. The course combines a series of slide-illustrated lectures with guided walks. For more information call the Institute at Central Square, NW11, on 020 8455 9951 or visit www.hgsi.ac.uk
Did you read about

According to the Sunday Times (August 11), archaeolo-gists are to search beneath the Kremlin for a trove of gold and silver treasure, same of which may have lain hidden for more than 500 years. Valuables ranging from coins and diamonds to ecclesiastical documents are believed to have been buried over the centuries by aristocrats and monks beneath Moscow’s famous landmark, a fortress dating from 1156. Most of the digging is expected to be around the Supreme Soviet, opposite President Putin’s office. It is on the site of a monastery demolished on Stalin’s orders in 1930. At the time, dozens of golden objects, including 17th-century chalices, were found. Renovations in the basement of the Patriarch’s Palace in 1963 uncovered 13th-century jewellery and a secret 15th-century arsenal. In 1994 about 3,500 gold and silver coins from the 16th and 17th centuries were found in the building housing the president’s offices. Tatyana Panova, the Kremlin museum’s head of archaeology, said that they hoped to find relics from the era of Ivan the Terrible, the first Russian tsar, who ruled from 1547 to 1584, and also from the reign of Catherine the Great (1762-1796). The grave of the “Amesbury Archer” is considered to be the most significant Bronze Age burial so far found in Britain. Some 100 items were buried with a man aged between 35 and 50. They included three copper knives, gold earrings, five pottery beakers and two sets of flint tools, and their richness implies the owner was a member of an aristocratic elite. The grave, three miles from Stonehenge, is thought to be contemporary with the erection of the first bluestones at the monument, around 4,300 years ago. A chess figure found in Albania suggests that the game was played in Europe 600 years earlier than previously thought. The ivory piece, dating from the 5th century, was discovered by archaeologists at Butrint, an ancient Mediterranean city. It is believed to be a king or queen, as its engrav-ings include a small cross, and is thought to have belonged to a wealthy owner because of ivory’s cost and rarity at that time. Members of the Institute of World Archaeology, affiliated to the University of East Anglia, found it in a Roman mansion. They claim it is Europe’s oldest known chesspiece. Chess originated in India in the 2nd or 3rd centu-ries BC but was not thought to have spread to Europe until the 11th century. Butrint is a World Heritage Site which the institute has been excavating since 1994. Temples, a theatre and a basilica have already been uncovered. “Howling eunuchs gave their all in Yorkshire” or “Roman cross-dressing eunuch found bejewelled in his grave” are hardly the expected headlines for ar-chaeological reports in The Times or the Daily Tel¬egraph. But that is exactly how the two papers titled their accounts of interpretation of the skeleton of a young man, wearing female jewellery, found close to the North Yorkshire Roman site of Cataractonium. He is believed to have been a priest of Cybele, followers who dressed in women’s clothes and cas¬trated themselves in honour of the goddess during a spring festival called the Day of Blood.
Other societies’ events

Stanmore & Harrow Local Historical Society Wednesday September 4, 8pm Talk: The History of Harrow School, by Rita Gibbs. Wealdstone Baptist Church, High Road, Wealdstone.

London Canal Museum Thursday September 5, 7.30pm Talk: Tide Mills of London, by David Plunket. 12-13 New Wharf Road, King’s Cross, Ni. Concessions £1.25.

North London Transport Society Saturday September 7, llam-4pm Transport Enthusiasts Bazaar. St Paul’s Centre, corner of Church Street/Old Park Avenue, Enfield. Admission £1.50. Free vintage bus rides to the Royal Forest Hotel, Chingford, via scenic Lea valley. Avenue House, East End Road, N3

Sunday September 8, 3pm-5pm Garden Party with entertain-ments and refreshments, proceeds to building fund. Amateur Geological Society

Tuesday September 10, 8pm Talk: The Evolution of Planets, by Kathy Willis. St Margaret’s United Reform Church, Victoria Avenue, N3. Barnet & District Local History Society

Wednesday September 11, 8pm Talk: Nicholls Farm Revisited, by Gillian Gear. Wesley Hall, Stapylton Road, Barnet. Hornsey Historical Society

Wednesday September 11, 8pm Talk: Westminster Abbey, by Bernard Baboulene. Union Church Hall, corner of Ferme Park Road/ Weston Park, N8. Pinner Local History Society

Thursday September 12, 8pm Talk: Middlesex History Sources (from 1700) at the Public Record Office, by Paul Carter. Village Hall, Chapel Lane Car Park, Pinner.

Friern Barnet & District Local History Society Sunday September 15, 2pm Friern Hospital Tour — see 150 years of local history. Led by 011ie Natelson. Meet at forecourt of New Southgate Station. £1.

Willesden Local History Society Wednesday September 18, 8pm Talk: Great Central and Metropolitan Railways in the Willesden Area, by Peter Rousselange. Library Centre, 95 High Road, NW10.

Edmonton Hundred Historical Society Wednesday September 18, 8pm Talk: The Three Barnets, by Gillian Gear, Jubilee Hall, junction of Parsonage Lane/Chase Side, Enfield. Enfield Archaeological SocietyF

Friday September 20, 8pm Talk: E.A. Bowles of Myddleton House, by Brian Hewitt. Jubilee Hall, Enfield (as above). NB: HADAS did a resistivity survey of the bowling green lawn at Myddleton House last October.

City of London Archaeological Society Friday September 21, 7pm Talk: Excavations at Plantation House, by Robin Nielson (MoLAS). St Olave’s Parish Hall, Mark Lane, EC3.

Friern Barnet & District Local History Society Tuesday September 24, 8pm Talk: Work of the London Civic Forum, by its director, Darryl Telles. Drawing Room, Avenue House, East End Road, N3,

The Finchley Society Tuesday September 24, 8pm Talk: Alexandra Palace, the History of North London’s Most Famous Building. Old Fire Station (next to Town Hall), Friern Barnet Lane, N12. Friern 13a met & District Local History Society

Sunday September 15, 2pm Friary Park Tour: a circular tour of the park and St James’ the Great Church. Meet outside the main entrance in Friern Barnet Lane. £1. NB: HADAS is currently doing a resistivity survey of the park.
Go through the closed doors

Once again the London Open House Weekend is approach-ing, the two days of the year when a variety of places throughout the capital usually closed to the public open their doors. One regular is the Mill Hill Observatory, and there will be conducted tours of Burgh House, Hampstead (in¬cluding the old wine cellars) at 3pm and 4pm on Sunday. This year’s dates are Saturday Sept 21, Sunday Sept 22. The list of participating properties is available from London Open House, PO Box 25361, NW5 1GY, (£1.50 by cheque or in postage stamps, plus an addressed A5 size envelope with 41p stamp) or look at it in local libraries. If you subscribe to the London Open House Bulletin (£13.50pa, send cheque or credit card details to London Open House (Unit Cl) 39-51 Highgate Road, London NW5 1RS, or email your details to send@londonopenhouse.org) you will be automatically mailed a copy of the yearly directory. Just about every London borough is joining in, but the website, www.londonopenhouse.org, tells you more.

 

Page 4

HADAS goes to Galway July 12-16 2002
Day 1 Of feuds and forts and friaries

Ireland at last! A HADAS visit to that enticing island has often been discussed. On July 12 2002 it became a reality thanks to Jackie Brookes’s energy, determination and patience. After a 7.30arn start from Hendon and the usual tedium of check-in at Heathrow our Aer Lingus Airbus 320 landed us safely at Shannon Airport soon after 1pm. We were met by Jim Higgins, the Galway Heritage Officer and our chief guide throughout our visit, and Sean Spellissy, local historian, who rapidly whisked us away by coach to visit our first round of sites. Our route took us through Co. Clare into Co. Galway and we were given an outline history of the area as we travelled. The feuding O’Rourkes and O’Connors and O’Neills, plus the invading Vikings, can be very confusing to the uninitiated, but here we were firmly in O’Brien country. Descended from Brian Boru, King of Munster and High King of Ireland in 1002, the O’Briens remained top dogs in the area until the 17th century. We kept encountering them for the rest of the day, Our first stop was Mooghaun Hillfort which we climbed in a misty drizzle. The current Irish Great Hillfort Project aims to identify, date and plot the distribution of these monuments. Already the known numbers of forts has been doubled and modern excavation is pushing their dating back (as in England) from iron age to late bronze age. They either continued in use or were reoccupied in the iron age and, interestingly, were often again occupied in the early Christian era. Mooghaun is an impressive fort built on a heavily wooded limestone hill commanding views over the Shannon estuary and the river Fergus. Its major defences were three concentric circles of bank and dish with drystone wall, making it a cashel (stone fort) rather than a rath or lis (earthen fort). The entrance across the outer rampart and ditch was strongly fortified. Within are but circles of varying dates, and the inner enclosure had been farmed cereals, cattle, sheep and pigs. The area covered by the fort was huge, but much was demolished in the 1850s when the railway was built. Mooghaun is famous for the late bronze age gold hoard found about one kilometre north of the fort. Some of the magnificent lunulae, torcs and ear-rings are on display in the National Museum in Dublin. Gold was panned in Munster from the early bronze age and was still being mined there in the early 19th century. Our next stop was at Quin Abbey or Friary. An Anglo-Norman castle built on the site in 1280 was destroyed in 1286; its portcullis and four drum towers (three remain) were incorporated into the later Franciscan friary. The Franciscans became popular in Ireland in the 14th and 15th centuries. Their abbeys were typified by their long naves, short transepts and chancel, slender towers and triple-stepped battlements. Quin Abbey is a substantial ruin and still displays many of those characteristics. It has a most attractive vaulted cloister with coupled columns, slightly marred by clumsy internal buttresses, added later, The domestic range of buildings has an upper floor intact where one can see the latrines (always a popular feature with English tourists!) and the dungpit beneath. Although the friary was suppressed in 1451 a few friars returned to Quin and the last one died and was buried there in 1820. A short drive brought us to Ennis, the county town of Clare, built on an island or islands in the river Fergus and chosen for the O’Brien capital in the early 13th century. It is a pleasant, bustling town but we had little time to explore it, our main attention being claimed by Ennis Friary (where we met local historian Mary Kearns). Another Franciscan foundation, endowed by the O’Briens and founded in 1242, it was suppressed in 1543 and the building subsequently used as an assize court and an Anglican church. One last friar was saved by a plea that only a madman would travel about in a friar’s habit, preaching openly! He continued to live at the friary, wearing his habit and saying private masses in his own room, until his death in 1617. Superficially, Ennis Friary is less pleasing than Quin, due mainly I think to the awkward additions to the tower, but it has fascinating content: lovely window tracery from which the famous blue glass has long since disappeared; a charming little medieval carving of St Francis showing the marks of the stigmata; and the extraordinary 15th century panels from the MacMahon tomb now incorporated in the 19th century Creagh tomb. They portray scenes from the life of Christ, the most striking being the Resurrection, where a skeleton-thin Christ pushes aside his tomb slab and steps vigorously forward surrounded by slumbering guards in full medieval armour. A rather unflattering female statue on the right is said to depict Marina O’Brien-MacMahon who commissioned the original tomb. Continuing towards Galway we saw evidence of Ireland’s exceptionally wet spring in “winter lakes” — stretches of water which would normally have disappeared by now with drying winds and sunshine. Our final stop was at Kilmacduagh, an ecclesiastical and monastic settlement founded in the 7th century. Amid church ruins dating from the 10th, 12th and 14th centuries is one of Ireland’s Round Towers, 34 metres high and retaining its conical cap. The purpose of these structures is still debated: bell towers to call the monks in from the fields; a look-out (there are windows near the top); a place of refuge, with its door 8 metres above the ground? Or may be just a status symbol? We can only guess. The towers were built between the 10th and early 13th centuries and are almost unknown outside Ireland: one or two are found in Scotland and there is one at Peel in the Isle of Man. And so finally to Galway city and our own comfortable accommodation in Conib Village — but no time to do more than dump our luggage before rushing to our belated (9.15pm) dinner in the restaurant on the University of Ireland campus. It was eaten to the deafening strains of the students’ disco — a strain indeed to some of us, though music to the ears of others. Declining Jim Higgins’ kind offer of a lecture at about 10pm, we wended our way along the delightful riverside footpath back to Corrib Village, unpacking and bed. I have seldom slept more soundly.
DAY 2: reporter Tessa Smith

Fairies and the queen After the previous night’s quaint ceremony of the change ing of the keys and the discovery of a leprechaun’s boots and shaving gear in one of the rooms, we were agog and ready for Saturday’s shenanigans. In spite of the fairies, the leprechauns and the picking up of the packed lunches, we were at last off to Carrowmore and the Cerde Fields. Our guide for the day was Martin Timoney, President of Sligo Field Club and editor of the archaeological magazine. He explained that the recent huge road building schemes and development of industrial and housing areas have resulted in more than 1,000 archaeological excavations every year. Our route ran south east of the Ox mountains, through ice-age-smoothed limestone hills, and on the horizon we saw Knocknasheen iron age hill fort, Carrowkeel passage tombs and cemetery, and hill forts topped by cairns. We were surrounded by tribal centres. We travelled through territory owned by the ancient O’Hara family towards Sligo, where mesolithic shellfish middens have been excavated and where, even today, an oyster festival takes place. We stopped briefly near the Cluny Gap, through which the Sligo to Dublin steam train used to run, and two very happy HADAS members discovered a three-foot gauge railway track, platform and signal parts still in situ after 40 years of disuse. Could this be a future bobble-hat fest for Bill and Andy? Carrowmore megalithic site is one of Europe’s major passage-tomb cemeteries. The peninsula is dominated by Mount Knockarea, its cairn-topped summit the legendary burial place of Queen Maeve. The cemetery itself, roughly a mile square, contains about 30 passage tombs, many more having been destroyed in the past. Although the tombs are quite small and simple they have recently been dated to around 4,000BC, 2,000 years earlier than previously thought. The supporting stones are on either side of a passage, topped by a wedge-shaped roof-stone, and are sometimes encircled by a ring of boulders. Finds include cremated human bone, pins made of antler, flint implements and pottery. Recently the local county council decided to make a rubbish dump on top of the gravel diggings in the area. Outraged, Martin Timoney headed a team which took the CC to the Supreme Court, which judged that the county council must consult with the people, and the proposed plan for a dump was abandoned. Martin was equally horrified to see horses churning up the soil next to the ancient monuments and urged us to write to DHUCAS(Irish Heritage) to complain. In complete contrast, our next stop was at Skreen churchyard where Mary Timoney showed us the extremely high quality carving on the box tombs she has been researching. One was especially fascinating, of a wealthy farmer, dressed in top hat, tails and cravat, ploughing with two horses. It was built in 1825 and carved by Frank Diamond, the first of five generations of monumental masons. Our last visit was to the Ceide Fields, County Mayo, where a neolithic community had settled on a hillside with dramatic views over the sea. They built miles of stone-walled holding pens, round wooden houses and tombs, the stone being brought from long distances away. It was though to be a peaceful community and certainly it was a beautiful place. However, 2,000 years ago peat moss grew and entirely sealed the site in a.spongey bog. Some areas have now been excavated and the methods used is intriguing. The bog is probed by long bamboo rods, all of equal length. When one touches a stone lying deep below the bog is it left there. Continuing in the way results in a series of rods the tops of which exactly mimic the stones below. Thus, the stones lying buried can be accurately recorded. That evening Jim Higgins gave us a humorous and speedy lecture on Irish prehistory, before we strolled back to the leprechauns, the fairies and bed.
DAY 3: reporter Graham Javes Carving out legends

burial mounds, previously unrecorded. Very exciting: an illustration of Ireland’s rich monumental heritage still waiting to be discovered. We fought our way through the nettle-filled fosse of a rath to reach the mound. A rath is a particular type of ring fort characterised by earthen walls. Typical finds include iron tools, weapons and personal ornaments but rarely any pottery. If a site is waterlogged traces of wattle and daub huts may be found. Sometimes national roads have clipped forts. A few ring forts are as early as the iron age but most date from the Christian period, sometimes remaining in use as late as the 16th or 17th century. Cattle would be brought into the ring fort. Evidence may be found of iron-working, slag, moulds, the usual range of early Christian work, carved wooden objects if the ground is waterlogged, and glass. Later, chieftains would have handed over ring forts for ecclesiastical uses, churches were sometimes built within them and later still they were used for the burial of unbaptised neonatal infants. There is a strong association between ring forts and fairy folk — the so-called fairy forts where the shee lives. We climbed a mound called Gronya’s Bed, where, so the story goes, an old man, eloping with a young girl, once slept. Of unknown use, this barrow was certainly man-made. The fosse regularly floods in winter, testified by the irises growing in it. If excavated we could find a burial in the mound and secondary burial in the fosse. Next stop was Clonfert. The township was destroyed during the 1595 rebellion, as were the monastery and nunnery. Until then Clonfert, whose name means liter¬ally “the bog island of the grave”, had been a city where as many as 3,000 students studied at the College of St Brendan; today it is barely a village. Christy Cunniffe is the driving force behind the current restoration of St Brendan’s cathedral, the west end of which, with its magnificent romanesque door, was unfortunately under wraps when we visited. Near the west door Christy parted the branches of a very dense bush to reveal a pagan stone. The site has a long history stretching from pagan times through Celtic Christian, catholic and now Church of Ireland. Much of the church is pre-romanesque; projections on the west end have features based on wood¬en churches. Clonfert was pillaged several times by the Danes and the church burnt. It was again burnt in 1179 and rebuilt, when the romanesque doorway could have been added. St Brendan, the founder saint, is reputedly buried here under a coffin-shaped slab. The devil in the form of a cat cast out of the church is reputed to have left the paw mark in a stone slab, again outside the west door, but this is thought to be counter- Reformation propaganda. The churchyard is the inner sanctum or vallum of a larger site. Last year archaeolo¬gists found a second vallum or enclosure at the east end of the church. There is an open-air offering place. We dived into a wood on the edge of the churchyard where Christy showed us a holy well. Like most wells, Under the guidance of Christy Cunniffe and Jim Higgins we set out in quite heavy rain. En-route we saw several fiadh fulachta (burnt mounds). These are believed to be bronze age cooking sites, where stones were heated in a fireplace, then placed in a trough of water to boil meat. An alternative use may have been tanning. We passed remains of several tower houses, monuments which, we were told, may be seen in most parishes. It was still drizzling when we reached our first site, which was also the coffee stop, the famous Turoe Stone. The most important of five monoliths, this massive gran-ite boulder is sculpted into the shape of a domed stone 168cm high, with the upper 78cm decorated with curvi-linear ornament. Compasses, which were known to iron age man, would have been used to mark out the swirls. In pagan-Celtic times the stone would have been coloured with different light and shade worked together — almost certainly a copy of something in metal. It was very probably a phallic stone used in fertility ritual. This granite boulder, which would have stood out in the surrounding limestone country, could have been brought from either the west or the east of Ireland. Its original site was close to the Rath of Feerwore ring fort, half a mile from its present location. In the 19th century it was moved by the landowner to its present site in the grounds of The Pet Farm, Turoe House, near Loughrea. There are two main theories: the first that it is derived from continental works of non-figurative sculptors, and the second, that currently accepted and based upon its decoration, that it is largely an insular stone. Various dates from the 2nd-1st century BC have been suggested and more recently the first century AD. One writer has seen it as a stylised human head, its step-pattern repre-senting a torque. Another, the clash and union of cultures – earth and sky cultures, neighbour and invader. The only agreement would seem to be the fallback of ritual object. Coffee was served here with the most delicious scones. A few members found a football for a kick- around in a goal mouth. Back on the coach, we passed the Volunteer Arch, c.1790, but its associated Lawrence House was demol-ished in the 1930s following earlier removal of the roof to avoid payment of rates. Many houses in Ireland suffered a similar fate. This part of county Galway has been O’Madden and O’Kelly country since the 17th century. In the 13th century there was Anglo-Norman settlement in the area, but many retreated during the Black Death, At Fynagh Farm, Loughrea, we were met by the farmer, a pleasant lady just back from her duties as lay preacher in the local church. She accompanied us as we walked across several fields, which our guide had never walked before, and we found apparent bronze or iron age this spring comes and goes at intervals. A dog is alleged to have drowned in this one, after which it dried up. Later the spring came out from the trunk of the chestnut tree that we saw, but it was defiled a second time when two boys, climbing the tree, urinated into the well and it dried up. Up to the 19th century people were still using holy wells and its waters were used to cure warts. You left a part of yourself: a tradition gone by the 1980s. Today the well is used by others, especially travellers, who have come in with a different tradition: we saw rags hung from branches, nails and coins hammered into the tree. The ruined bishop’s palace had been home to 23 bishops: it was last occupied by Sir Oswald Mosley. We continued on to the Shannon Hotel, Banagher, one of several bow-fronted mid to late 18th-century houses, where we had afternoon tea or Guinness in the hotel garden on what turned into a hot afternoon, our best day weather-wise. Anthony Trollope lived and wrote here and Charlotte Brontë honeymooned. On route again, we saw a Martello tower on the riverbank near the Shannon Bridge, built to fortify the Shannon at the time of the Napoleonic Wars. Continuing, we passed the Seven Sisters. This local landmark is a line of seven trees planted by one of the John Eyres to com-memorate his daughters, though in fact he had nine. At Loughrea we observed part of the original town moat as we hurried along Dolphin Street towards the friary. The moat had probably been a boundary and a sewer but today it carries a clear, fast-flowing stream. Richard de Burge founded the Carmelite Loughrea Friary about 1300. The building exterior is rather spoilt by heavy pointing. In the friary churchyard is a grave stone for a butcher, the tools of his trade, a knife and sharpening steel, carved in an oval. There is also a flat tombstone to a farmer, with harrow, coulter (for putting rims on wheels) and plough shear. By the skin of our teeth, we arrived back at the university just in time to sit down to dinner. Having been late on the previous two evenings we were under threat of a surcharge had we been late again. I should add that this in no way reflects on Jackie who was tearing her hair out to get us back on time! The after-dinner lecture, by Jim Higgins, was on early Christian churches. He showed slides of many churches that we hadn’t seen and some that we had. We learnt that there is no real romanesque architecture in Ireland but many churches with romanesque features, mostly add¬ing a window or door to an ancient church. Often churches occupied earlier, pagan sites. The monasteries intro¬duced the need to control time and built many pillar-type sundials. People often take the stones from churches but almost as often return them — either because they feel they have brought them bad luck or because they had only “borrowed” them to effect a cure!
DAY 4: reporter Barry Reilly The past in flower

The Burren plateau in County Clare, just 13 miles south of Galway city, is famous for its starkly beautiful lime¬stone landscapes, remarkable flora and rich archaeologi¬cal heritage. The words of the Cromwellian general, Edmund Ludlow, are well known in Ireland: It is a country where there is not enough water to drown a man, wood enough to hang one, nor earth to bury him… What is less known is that he went on to say of the people there: …and yet their cattle are very fat; for the grass growing in turfs of earth, of two or three foot square, that lie between the rocks, which are of limestone, is very sweet and nourishing. As we travelled south, our guide Dominic Monaghan explained more. “Burren” comes from the Irish for “stony place”. It consists of limestone pavements, divided by fissures into bare slabs of rock. The climate is very temperate with a high rainfall, providing an ideal envi¬ronment for the wide variety of plants which flourish in the crevices and in the thin but fertile soil which covers some areas of the rock. Our first destination, on the north western edge of the Burren, was the ruined Cistercian Abbey of Corcomroe. The Cistercians came to Ireland in 1142 and preferred isolated and underpopulated locations for their monas-teries. Nowhere is this more apparent than at Corcomroe. Known as “St Mary of the Fertile Rock”, it was founded at the end of the 12th century, probably by the King of Limerick, Donal Mor O’Brien. Built in the Hiberno-Romanesque style it is well preserved; the chancel retains its richly vaulted roof as well as a carved effigy of a bishop and one of the few effigies of an Irish chieftain to be found in the country, said to represent Conor O’Brien, grandson ofDonal, who was killed in a battle fought nearby in 1227. Part of the ruined cloister still stands, as well as what may be an infirmary or guest house and a fragment of the pointed arch gatehouse. By the 15th century it was too poor to sustain a full community of monks and the church was shortened by a roughly built wall. We moved from Corcomroe to our morning coffee stop at the attractive coastal village of Ballyvaughan. On the way, Dominic pointed out a solitary Galway hooker moored in the bay. This is the famous fishing boat of the area; its name, source of much amusement to American visitors, comes from theDutch hacker relating to hook and line fishing. No longer used as working boats, they can now be seen at various annual sea festivals in Galway. After a pleasant break in Ballyvaughan it was time to turn inland to visit one of the most famous monuments of the Burren. Poulnabrone is an impressive example of a neolithic portal tomb, a class of tomb characterised by a tripod design consisting of two tall portal stones and a lower backstone held in place by the weight of a massive capstone. Poulnabrone’s 12ft by 7ft capstone weighs 8 tonnes. In 1985 the eastern portal stone was found to be cracked and had to be replaced by a similar stone, but this provided an opportunity to excavate the burial chamber and surrounding cairn. The remains of at least 22 individuals were found with bone pendants, disc beads, quartz crystals, flint scrapers, a polished stone axe and a flint arrowhead buried in one of the thighbones. More than 60 sherds r:::” of pottery were also found. Radiocarbon results from the bones have dated the tomb from 3780 BC to 3560BC. The conclusion was that special tombs like Poulnabrone were for people of high status while others were buried in similar but less dramatic tombs. It is believed that the cairn was only a few feet high: the soaring capstone was meant to be seen. Our journey back to the coast took us through Lisdoonvarna, famous for its spa waters and annual matchmaking festival, on to the best known tourist spot in County Clare. The Cliffs of Moher are a five mile line of sheer cliffs rising at their highest to 650 ft. Formed of layers of siltstone, shale and sandstone, they are fa¬mously dramatic. Close to the highest point is O’Brien’s tower which gives an incredible view southwards along the cliffs. At least, that’s what it says here on the internet website. Unfortunately very high cliffs and very low clouds aren’t a good idea. We couldn’t see a thing. After a forlorn hour wandering up the cliff path listening to the waves hidden below and glumly surveying the various tourist sales opportunities we could wait no longer and it was time to return to Galway. Half an hour later as we sped down the coast road the sun was shining out to sea and, yes, looking back from the coach, there was the distant profile of the cliffs emerging from the lifting clouds. We consoled ourselves with a brief stop by the road-side, within sight of the Aran Islands, for a final look at the Burren and its remarkable plant life. It is the only place in Europe where Arctic, Alpine and Mediterranean plants flourish together. Botanists the world over come to study the flora at all times of year — the Burren is never out of bloom. Some in our party quickly spotted a few orchids although in May and early June they grow here by the acre. Also easily identified were bloody cranesbill and spring gentian. From here we took the coastal road along the south¬ern edge of Galway Bay, pausing only to take a brief look at Dunmory Castle just beyond Kinvara. The coach dropped us off for our final evening in Galway at O’Flaherty’s restaurant in the city centre. After a fine meal— Irish stew was the popular choice —we returned to the university having had a varied and fascinating day but grateful that we could have a lie-in the following morning.
DAY 5: reporter Andy Simpson Signals at green

All too soon it was our last morning in Ireland, with a flurry of packing and loading of the coach before head¬ing down to Galway city — founded by Anglo-Norman settlers in the 13th century, medieval city state, one time third port after London and Bristol, capital of the west of Ireland and the fastest growing city in Europe —to meet Jim Higgins once more for a walking tour of the city for those that wished. I was one of those who opted to do my own thing, give the “bobble hat” an airing and investigate the transport facilities of Galway, ancient and modern. There is much to interest the transport enthusiast. The Bus Eireann singledeck coaches are very modern, but you can still take a scenic open top ride around the city of Galway on a proper half-cab Leyland Titan bus, driven on occasion by one of our coach drivers! The railways are equally interesting. As Bill and I found out during a photographic foray on the Monday evening, the 1840s built Galway station of Irish Rail is a wonderfully evocative place, with signal box, a forest of semaphore signals, two road engine shed, working turn-table, water tower and water crane, occasionally visited by visiting steam specials, all with the beautiful backdrop of bay and mountains. The usual service is every couple of hours eastwards to Dublin hauled by 1990s-built die-sels. There is also some freight traffic serving the docks on Galway Bay. Naturally, I made a return visit on Monday morning for more piccies! Those who went on the tour visited St Nicholas of Myra Collegiate Church, built by the Anglo-Normans in 1320 and dedicated to the patron saint of all travellers. According to local tradition, Christopher Columbus heard mass here before sailing off to America. Nearby is the house of Nora Barnacle, wife of writer James Joyce, now a Joyce museum. Scattered around the city centre are examples of merchants’ houses. After checking out the large and well-appointed tour-ist information centre near the station, I then went on to do a little shopping, stopping off in the modern Eyre Square shopping centre to view the two restored “Shoe-makers” and “Penrices” drum towers. These, survivors of an original 14 towers on the walls built from 1270, connect a 60-metre length of preserved city curtain wall which features Galway’s only antiques and collectibles market. Eyre Square itself, lying at the centre of the town in front of the railway station, is pleasantly laid out as a tree-lined park, and features a plaque to the memory of assassinated US President John F. Kennedy, who was made a freeman of the city shortly before his death in 1963. Also to be seen is Lynch’s Castle, the finest surviv-ing town castle in Ireland, of 15th-16th century date with decorative features found only in southern Spain. Reno-vated in the 19th century, it is now a bank. Down by the River Corrib in Galway city is the Spanish Arch bastion, a 1594 built twin-arched extension to the city defences intended to protect the quays at a time when trade with Spain was vital to the city. Adjacent to it is the small Galway City Museum, operated by Galway City Council Heritage Office, which houses archaeologi¬cal and social history material and several relics of Gal¬way’s horse trams. It is open daily during the summer and well worth the two Euros admission charge. The Galway and Salthill Tramway operated a single route from October 1 1879, and was only ever horse operated. It linked the city of Galway with the resort of Salthill on the shore of Galway Bay and was one of the last horse tramways in Britain. The trams had ceased run-ning by May 12 1918. Some relics survive in the museum — there is a single tip-over reversible seat, hinged bulk¬head panel, ticket and original company share certificate, plus a splendid selection of railway photos and paper¬work, The museum’s social history collection includes ma-terial from The Claddagh, a fishing village formerly located on the west bank of the Corrib Estuary which existed as an outpost of Irish dress, language and culture until its traditional thatched cottages were replaced by a housing estate in 1934. Its customs included the election of a king who was commodore of the 300-strong fishing fleet; his “hooker” boat had a white sail, while those of his subjects were brown. The women all wore shawls and customarily wore the Claddagh ring, of distinctive two hands clasping a crowned heart design and used as a sign of betrothal or marriage, depending on how worn. After various members had indulged in the duty free shops at Shannon airport, the return tea-time flight to Heathrow—on the same Aer Lingus Airbus that we flew out on — was smooth as ever, with wonderful views of Buckingham Palace, Green Park, the Albert Hall and Kew Gardens on the final approach, though we did have to wait rather a long time for our luggage! Then it was back on a coach to Hendon. The end of a wonderful few days. Thanks, Jackie!

Sadly, no HADAS member was awake enough during one of the evening lectures to claim the prize of a copy of Jim Higgins’ splendid book “Irish Mermaids” for correctly identifying the site of one of his slides, reports Deirdre Barrie. Afterwards, Deirdre wrote and asked how to buy a copy, to which Jim responded by sending her two, one of which is now in the HADAS LIBRARY. The illustration right (by Michael Lerillunt)(not on internet version) of the late 15th/early 16th century carving from the screen-wall at Kilcooly, Co. Tipperary, is one of the few mermaids Jim has located outside the main concentration in Galway. They were all, he explains, a potent symbolic warning to Christians against being seduced and destroyed by lust and sexual indiscretion, and also a reminder against the sins of vanity, pride and lust. The book, which has detailed descriptions of 10 mermaids and lots of illustrations and background information, is unfortunately not available here, and Jim has very few copies left. He is however planing a revised, enlarged edition, so if you’re interested, contact him via e-mail, or write to him care of City Hall, College Road
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HENDON & DISTRICT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY

OUTING TO PIDDINGTON, NORTHAMPTON & CANONS ASHBY with June Porges and Stewart Wild

SATURDAY 17 AUGUST 2002This promises to be a pleasant day out north of London, with something for everybody. We have visited Piddington before, in August 1990. Sensible footwear (and perhaps an umbrella!) is essential. B.00am Coach leaves Quadrant, Hendon (opposite DSS) 8.10am Coach leaves St Mary’s Church, Finchley (top of Hendon Lane) 8.25am Coach leaves Golders Green (side entrance to Underground) We will make our first stop in Newport Pagnell for tea/coffee and biscuits at The Swan Revived. This lovely old coaching inn dates from 1540. We continue to Piddington where we will meet local archaeologists Roy and Liz Friendship-Taylor who will explain to us their more than twenty years of excavations at the site of a vast Romano-British villa and bathhouse uncovered on local farmland (see Current Archaeology # 117 and 146). It is anticipated that digging will be in progress during our visit. Access is along a half-mile footpath between fields so suitable footwear is essential. There is the possibility of transport for those who might find the walk strenuous. We shall see the Eleanor Cross at Hardingstone before arriving in Northampton, where the market square is one of the largest in Britain. Apart from the busy market, there is plenty to see and do in this charming county town: several handsome buildings, the Guildhall, the excellent local museum and art gallery, All Saints Church (fine 17th-century), and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, dating from 1100 and one of only four round churches in Britain. We shall have around two hours free time here; you can either bring a packed lunch or take advantage of local pubs and restaurants. Continue to Canons Ashby (National Trust), a wonderful Elizabethan manor house that has survived more or less unaltered since around 1710. Hear of the history of the Dryden family and see furniture and wall paintings and Jacobean plasterwork of the highest quality. Explore the gardens and the surprisingly grand village church – all that remains of the Augustinian priory from which the house takes its name. Before leaving there will be time for refreshments (not included) on the terrace or in the pleasant National Trust tearoom. COST: £18.50 per person. Includes coach, morning tea/coffee, entrance fees and gratuities. National Trust members please bring your valid membership card.