Category

Volume 4 : 1985 – 1989

Newsletter-192-February-1987

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 192: February 1987 Edited by Isobel McPherson

PROGRAMME DETAILS

REMEMBER, REMEMBER – MEETINGS ARE NOW ON THE FIRST WEDNESDAY OF EACH MONTH.

WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 4TH “London in the Mid-Saxon and Viking Period” by Dr, Alan Vince, Deputy Finds Officer for the Department of Urban Archaeology, museum of London.

Many features of the Medieval and later landscape originated in the Mid-Saxon period, that is in the 7th to 9th centuries-, if not before then. Archaeology has until recently produced little evidence to confirm or refute these historical suggestions but now, as a result of excavations at sites along the Strand, it is possible to compare archaeological and historical data for the period. Evidence from the rest of Greater London is still limited but there is now enough information to suggest how mid-Saxon settlement sites can be recognised and what, in particular, to look for.

Surprisingly, there are even fewer excavated Viking settlements.

This will be an especially interesting lecture for HADAS members who discovered Saxon Hendon during the excavation at Church Terrace in 1973-74. Our latest publication “Finds from a Hendon Dig” by Ted Sammes will be on sale at the lecture, price £1.50.

WEDNESDAY MARCH 4TH “The Early Saxon Period in the London Region” by John Mills, of the Museum of. London (The January lecture trans­ferred to this date).

TED SAMMES REPORTS ON THE TWENTY-FIRST LOCAL HISTORY. CONFERENCE

This took place on Saturday, November 22nd at the Museum of London starting at 11.30,am early timing which must have been appreciated by those coming a long distance though I felt it was perhaps a little late. It did, however allow the morning to be devoted to one speaker, Elizbeth Hallam of the Public Record Office. Her subject, appropriate for the year, was “Domesday Book a National Monument of Antiquity”. She suggested that it was a list of resources drawn up to satisfy the greed of a cruel conqueror at a time when William was threatened by the kings of France and Norway a threat which never
materialised possibly the name was a hostile term, coined by the defeated Saxons. With the passing of the years, the book became an inseparable complement to the Great Seal and the Charter Tenants, especially the great abbeys, who soon realised that it gave them an undisputed title to their possessions. It was still being used in the 17th century to prove the right to exemption from tolls. The speaker continued with a detailed account of the history and travels of Domesday Book.

After lunch, it was the turn of the non-professionals, and Doris Hobbs gave an exceptionally lively and interesting account of the medieval market town of Croydon. I guarantee no-one fell asleep during this final paper – a good example of how to make history come alive. She thoroughly deserved the ovation at the end.

The stalls, as usual, showed that Local History is still alive and amateur-propelled:

– AND ON THE DAY SCHOOL “THE LONDON TIN-GLAZED POTTERY INDUSTRY”
.

This, unusual event, on Saturday November 29th, attracted a sell-out audience, indeed T was lucky to get a ticket. It was held in the Education Department of the Museum of London.. The speakers packed into one day information which would take many such sessions to absorb properly.

After an introduction by Dr Alan Vince, John Hurst took us through the intricate movements of the potters from Italy to Spain and on, eventually, to the Low Countries in the 16th century.

Michael Archer warned us to beware of trying to tie things down too tightly, both the origin of individual pieces and of their painted designs. This point was emphasised by other speakers, who gave examples of potters moving from place to place. Both before and after lunch, detailed descriptions were given of-some London sites, Lambeth by Brian Bloice, Vauxhall by Rhoda Edwards, Southwark by Graham Dawson.

Lunch-time gave us an opportunity to view the exhibits, which included the famous’ London ‘plate dated 1600 or 1602. Later, Clive Orton gave an account of his work on standardising the classifica­tion of pottery types and Frank Britton gave a detailed account of 18th century production in London. This gave him an opportunity to mention his book on the subject, to be published in April 1987 with a pre-publication price of £30.

It was an exhausting day and the Museum is to be congratulated should have liked to have received a list of participants, with a ‘note on their interests and whom they represented. I feel sure that the range of those attending was wider than usual, including’ ceramic dealers, museum personnel, full and part-time archaeologists. Name badges would have been helpful.

MORE ABOUT PLASTICS from Percy Reboul

I am grateful to Dr Hoblyn for extending the discussion on early plastics. Front page, too! He is quite right: in my anxiety to stick strictly to the text of the. ‘Guide to the Exhibition’, I took the cellulose nitration process for granted, which is particu­larly inexcusable as I worked for the Company for many years!

Quite the best book on the subject of early plastics is Maurice Kaufman’s ‘The First Century of Plastics’, published by the Plastics and Rubber Institute, London (£7.00): Sylvia Katz’s Classic Plastics’ .contains beautiful photographs and. is more concerned with design and social hi-story aspects. Sylvia, incidentally, is the author of the new Shire book on plastics which, if this correspon­dence is maintained, should sell in large numbers to HADAS members.

For several years now I have been finding ‘good homes’ in museums, County Archives, and the like, for the exceptionally fine collection of British Xylonite archive material. Only this week we found the original Title Deeds for the Brantham site – including a 16th century Foot of Fine written in Latin. This was translated by our Borough Archivist, which is a tenuous connection between plastics and Hendon if you like! In the same box was found Parkes’ patents assignments patents assignments–

More surprising (and even more exciting for me) was the discovery in 1980 of an old deed box containing an unpublished manu­script •called “The British Xylonite Company – reminiscences of Harry Greenstock”, It proved -to be a unique, fascinating, personal account of the very earliest days of plastics, Harry, a born historian, was born in 1881 and died in 1969. His account includes the memories of his father who was at Brantham from day one as time-keeper and storeman,

Just to give you the flavour: Harry recounts how in the Acid and Bleach. shops, free clothing was issued .to the men. It was army surplus stuff, no less than the red coats and leather breeches and leggings of earlier decades. How strange to think that these ‘left overs’ of the Napoleonic (?) or Crimean wars were to find their final use on a remote Essex marsh!

Happily, my Company agreed to publish the memoirs with lovely old photographs, and I am lodging a copy in the HADAS library should anyone wish to read it.

Two final’ and unconnected points. Brantham was chosen because of its remoteness, bearing in mind the explosive nature of cellulose nitrate. Many of the raw materials were brought up the creeks in the wonderful Thames sailing barges some of which still sail today. There is even one called XYLONITE in memory of past glories.

Xylonite is still made today at Brantham, and some of the original production equipment is extant. It is chiefly used (and has been for many years) in table tennis balls where it is unrivalled in performance: no-one has found a better substitute.

OBITUARY – DR GLYN DANIEL from Ted Sammes

This eminent scholar, known to millions through his chairmanship of “Animal, Vegetable and Mineral”.died on December 13th at Cambridge in his 72nd- year. A man of many parts,- he was probably most interested in the archaeology of the prehistoric period in the 1972 membership list of the Prehistoric Society he is listed as having joined. in 1935.

Megaliths were a special delight, as was also the pursuit of the history of Archaeology. It was in the latter connection that on reading his “The Idea of Prehistory”, published in Pelican Books in 1964, I came across a reference Aylett Sammes, an Essex. Antiquary. I wrote to him not with much hope of a reply, but in due course and much to my delight, a. helpful reply came back which encouraged me to trace back further my possible family history.

There must be thousands of people who, like me, found him able to make Archaeology a living thing which should not be divorced from History. Finally, as Editor of.”Antiquity” he gave his readers constant reminders and updates on all that was best in World Archaeology. He will be sadly missed. Many tributes will be written, each one different, because of his varied interests.

NEWS OF MEMBERS

Following the death of his wife, Jeanne, Alec Thompson expects to move quite soon to 24 Briardene Crescent, Whitley Bay, Tyne & Weare, to be near his married daughter. The Thompsons joined HADASin the 1960s and we hope this will not be the end of a long association. Perhaps when we next plan a N.E. expedition, we can work in a reunion with Alec. Meanwhile, we wish him well in his new home.

Nell Penny spent an uncomfortable week in Whittington Hospital just before Christmas after a bad fall in the kitchen. Being Nell, she argued her way out in no time, determined to hang on to her independence, and began zimmering her way around and heading for a full recovery. She is now managing with one stick and making good progress. All her HADAS friends must rejoice that things were no worse and hope she will soon be her old, active self.

CHRISTMAS SUPPER AT ST JOHN’S GATE, CLERKENWELL by MARY McGHEE

This piece should have been in last month’s newsletter, but I’m afraid that after the night of December 12th, Christmas preparations took over and all too soon it was too late: My apologies: However, better late than never. The Christmas supper was a great success and the venue a fitting one for the HADAS 25th anniversary celebration.

The coach dropped us at the Grand Priory Church of St. John and after a brief history of the building and of the Order of St John, we split into two groups and visited both the church and the splendid Norman crypt, some of which dates from c 1140. Without guidance, we should have found it difficult to relate the much restored upper building to the 12th C round nave and choir but in the crypt we were on more familiar ground and those of us who were in Mary O’Connell’s group were very impressed with her grasp of detail and her ability to hold her audience.

We then crossed the Clerkenwell Road (risking life and limb) to the Gatehouse itself. Here we spent some time in the two small museums, each of which deserved longer study. One housed a remarkable collection of items relating to the Order of St John and the other documents and displays which traced the history of the St John’s Ambulance Association and Brigade. Next we went upstairs to the Chapter Hall, which made a splendid, welcoming setting for our celebration meal. An enormous fire filled the open hearth, the paneling glittered with the arms of long dead Priors while later portraits, including one of the present Queen, gazed down gravely on eighty HADAS members enjoying an excellent buffet meal and a chance to exchange news gossip and in-jokes. Even the necessity to queued, since the gatehouse was not built (in 1504) with HADAS dinners in mind, became enjoyable as we moved through the Old .Chancery with its silver and fine chimney-piece into the Council Chamber to the service bar.

A thoroughly enjoyable evening. Our thanks go to Mary O’Connell for her choice of venue and to Dorothy Newbury, whose organisation – as usual – was impeccable.

If you would like to know more about the Hospitallers and their modern descendants the St John Ambulance Brigade, remember to visit the exhibition at Church Farm House Museum, Hendon, before it closes on February 8th.

During the evening Ted Sammes announced, to our great delight, that our Chairman, Andrew Selkirk, had just been elected Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. We have come by a set of verses, by a fellow-Fellow, which give an amusing account of the procedure.

In part, they read:

‘Twas in the year of ’86
If my memory plays no tricks
A Thursday evening, I remember,
The 27th of November
The Antiquaries, by long-held habit
Devoted an evening to the Ballot
A row of boxes, a score in all
awaited to receive a ball.
The meeting room was full of Fellows
A few were young, most quite mellow
Boxes checked and minutes read
The business of the hour was sped.
Sharp at six, the President rose,
Announced the Ballot, at once, “Foreclosed”
Commenced the counting, in full view
Of the aspiring candidates, who
Desired to become an F.S.A.
Before, the ending of the day.
Some were elected, some were not
The murmur stilled, the room was hot
With bated breath we listened and
“Selkirk” finally came to hand.
The Secretary, solemn as Bede,
Went on the Certificate “blue” to read.
And then, like a grave mathematical Don
t he signatures written ‘thereon.
Numerous signatures, quite a lot
-Plus 50 by post- a hell of a lot
when the balls were added – Phew!
A hefty total of 72.
A just recognition quite overdue,
May I now join with those sons of a gun
Who were glad to take note that justice was done.
When duly admitted and signed in the book
You’ll be “Non Extinguetur” – can borrow a book.

And then, it you wish for an evening of fun,
Try out a ballot and see how it’s done
SPRING COURSES

The University of London offers a one-day course on New Results at Tell Abu Hureyra, Syria, a course of 10 lectures on Early

Hominid-Evolution, a Field Survey week, Monday July 13th to Sunday 19th, and a fortnight’s course in Urban Excavation. This sounds an excellent course for aspiring “dirt archaeologists”. Students will be given instruction in: Excavation techniques and methods of survey; Recording and initial processing of finds; Site and trench drawing. All this takes place on the Bermondsey Abbey site, Director Harvey Sheldon, from 3rd to 16th August 1987. Although there would appear to be no ban on outsiders, space is provided on the application form for declaring Diploma/Certificate/non-examination status. Further details from Miss E.M. Clancy, Dept. of Extra-Mural Studies, 26 Russell Square, – or again from the editor.

City University offers “Discovering London”, a ten-week course covering the whole of the city’s history from Pre-Roman times to post-1945 development, and “Industrial Archaeology” – 10 meetings plus 6 hours of field visits. The latter offers a very comprehen­sive list of topics, under three main headings: Materials,

Transport and Power. Further details from the Extra-Mural Depart­ment, Tel 01-253 4399, Ex. 3268/9, or from the editor.

EDUCATION DEPARTMENT, Verulamium Museum St Albans Herts. are organising an 8-day tour of Roman and Medieval Provence from 24th October – 1st November 1987. An excellent itinerary is planned at an inclusive approx price of £375. If any members are interested please ring St Albans 59919 – Mr Hildreth-Brown – before February 28th.

PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT AT THE BURROUGHS. HENDON. Before Christmas there was a note and plan in the Hendon Times of a proposal put forward by Barnet Council to consider the development of land locked away between the Town Hall and Watford Way. It looks as if access is to be gained by demolishing the doctors surgery(St George’s Lodge) and re­locating it in the new development. A 40-page brochure has been prepared with the idea of interesting possible developers in the project. We have not yet seen a copy of this, but one has been requested. It is understood that facilities for archaeological excavation may be built into any development that takes place. This is necessary as part of the area is close to The Grove, where Roman remains were found in 1889, and Burroughs Gardens with its medieval material, excavated in 1972

PROGRAMME 1987 – Apologies for delay in sending out Programme Card but we are experiencing some difficulty this year in arranging dates and venues. Our summer outings will start with a walk Mary O’Connell to North Clerkenwell, followed by day trips to Taplow and Dorney Court, Danebury and Andover, Royston area, a return visit to Dover Roman Painted House, and a weekend in September (11th – 13th) with John Enderby at Abergavenny. We hope for sunny days and look forward to seeing our regulars and new members too – filling the coaches helps to keep the costs low.

Dorothy Newbury

Newsletter-191-January-1987

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 191 January 1987 Edited by Liz Holliday

DIARY,

Wednesday 7 January LECTURE CANCELLED

We have just heard from the library that the lecture hall is to be redecorated and will not be available for:our January meeting. An alternative venue was suggested, but we felt this would not be satisfactory at such short notice.

Wednesday 4 February “London in the Mid-Saxon and Viking Period” by Dr. Alan Vince, Museum of London. At Hendon Library. The Burroughs, Hendon. Coffee available from 8pm. Lecture begins at 8.30pm.

AFTER IRON a note from Dr.E.H.T. Hoblyn

“I was very interested in Percy Reboul’s page in your December issue but was puzzled by his reference to Parkesine. My organic chemistry is now more than rusty but I wonder if chloroform and castor oil would produce a sub-

stance ‘hard as horn’, I have therefore, done some digging and have found from Sylvia Katz who wrote ‘Plastic Plastics’ that Alexander Parkes in his early work in the 1840s mixed cotton fibre and wood flour with nitric and sulphuric acids (which would give him nitro-cellulose) and he then mixed the ‘resulting product with castor oil and wood naphthna to produce his original ‘Parkesine’. It was, however, when he moved to mixing camphor with nitrocellulose and alcohol that,’ in 1865, he produced the better known form of ‘Parkesine’, the forerunner of celluloid orxvlonite as it was better known in thiscountry.(‘Plastics in the Service of Man’ by Couzens and Yarsley).The British firm manufacturing celluloid was the British Xylonite Company founded in 1877 which, in 1887, built a factory at Brantham on the banks of the River Stour opposite Manningtree, Essex. They made artificial ivory and tortoiseshell for combs (functional and decorative) and hairbrushes; tubing for bicycle pumps and bodies for fountain pens; handles for toothbrushes and shaving brushes; and a large tonnage of piano keys and knife handles in the form well known before the modern dishwasher led to metal handles.

They were made in the plain-and excellent grained ivory forms. Another popular product was the celluloid collar and shirt front (or ‘dicky’) which comprised a sheet of linen sealed between two sheets of white celluloid. I do hope that Percy Reboul will keep us posted with his findings.”

SOME ANSWERS TO THE GREEN PUZZLE

The borough archivists are grateful for two helpful replies to the enquiry concerning ,green lanes, one recommending W.G.Hoskins’ comments in The Making of the English Landscape and the other pointing out that in 1764 Hendon Lane/Finchley Lane was not a particularly major road.

This month’s accessions to the Local History Collection include archives from the Mill Hill Highwood Townswomen’s Guild; copies of deeds and photographs concerning the Alexandra public house, East Finchley and the surro­unding area; albums of photographs of Chas. Wright & Co.’s factory, Hendon and a booklet of photographs of Barnet and Hadley produced in about 1900 by J.Cowing.

Herbert Norman’s donation of his drawings of local buildings was mentioned in the Newsletter last month members may like advance notice that these will be on display in an exhibition of his work to be held at Church Farm House Museum from March 28 to April 26 this year.

A STORM IN A VESTRY TEA CUP

Nell Penny uncovers a rebellion by the Hendon Vestry

Local rates, be they parish, borough or county, have ever been matters of controversy. In 1820 the vestry of Hendon parish, conscious of having to set ever increasing poor rates (in 1821 they were to set three rates at 6d in the £ – 7.25p in the in all) began to look at rating valuations. They found that these had not been changed since 1722, and promptly appoint­ed a committee which revalued the parish at a total of £24,470.

At the same time the Vicar, the irascible Reverend Theodore Williams, was also doing his sums. Since 1722 Hendon vicars had been accepting a 3d rate in commutation of their “Great and Little Tythes”:- “always excepting Surplice. Fees and other Perquisites”. Mr. Williams gave notice that he was putting an end to this system. The vestry therefore had the vicar’s property and his tithes assessed. The vicar protested – the parish persisted. In 1822 the Reverend Williams and Thomas Street appealed to a General Quarter Sessions against the assessments. Mr. Street was presumably a newcomer to the district – his name does not appear in .the 1821 census. The vicar chaired the vestry meeting in September, a function he very rarely performed; the officers of the parish did not feel bold enough to contradict him to his face. They appointed a sub-committee of William Geeves, Thomas Shettle and Mr.Goodchild, all farmers and office holders, to reconsider the valuations. By ‘December the vestry had decided to let the valuations stand and to pay their solicitor to defend them against the vicar at the Quarter Sessions.

Meanwhile, the vestry had taken steps to turn itself into a Select Vestry according to legislation of 1818. In theory a vestry had been a town meeting of ratepayers in practice it had been a monthly gathering of half a dozen office holders, churchwardens, overseers of the poor and surveyors of the highways who accepted the accounts of the overseers of the poor. There might be a few more ratepayers at a meeting where the poor rate-was to be- set. The crowded meeting in the parish church in November 1822 decided by 200 votes to 165 that a Select Vestry should be elected. Hence­forward a vestry meeting could not be larger than twenty members, but a minimum of five was necessary for a quorum.

But back to our storm in the vestry tea cup. Eventually Quarter Sessions reduced the assessment on Mr. Williams’ property from £672 to £640 and on his tithes by a similar percentage. But Williams did not wait for the outcome of his appeal. It seems that he regarded the Vestry Clerk, James Goodyer as his arch enemy and the leader of the vestry rebellion. I think James disliked the vicar as much as the latter disliked him. Preserved among the parish archives are meticulous copies of most of the letters to and from the vestry at this period – all in Mr.Goodyer’s beautiful copper­plate handwriting. There is also a list of Goodyer’s own property: five houses in the Burroughs and one in Brent Street. On the new valuation he had secured rating reductions which averaged 11 per cent.

On January 29th 1823, the vestry met and read a letter from the vicar to Mr. Greeves, one of the churchwardens The letter attacked James Goodyer on three counts: a) that Goodyer’s personal property was wrongly rated; b) that the vestry clerk had been appointed to his job in 1796 by “private appointment” and that his salary of £40 a year out of the poor rate was “extravagant and unwarranted” and c) “I will submit to your own good feeling whether a man who is capable of making a false entry in a Parish minute book be not morally incapable of fulfilling any public trust”. The vestry held a Special meeting next day and replied to the vicar a). all rating appeals were up for arbitration so the parish would not comment in the meantime; b) Mr. Gooyer’s appointment as Clerk had not been a private appointment but by a “valid public vote” and the parish was obliged to “those gentlemen.— for the discrimination used in the selection of a gentleman to fill that office whose conduct in and great attention to the Duties thereof, have given general satisfaction… the salary paid to Mr.Goodyer’ is neither extravagant nor unwarrantable”. c) the charges of falsifying the accounts against Mr Goodyer were so serious that the vestry asked the Reverend Williams to produce his evidence for their consideration.

Unfortunately this letter was in Goodyer’s beautiful handwriting. The Vicar would not open it and returned it to the vestry. This provoked the vestry to write to the Bishop of London regretting that “Communication between the Vicar and themselves had been cut off” and asking for the Bishop’s guidance. At the next vestry meeting in February 1823 the Vicar took the chair, but stormed out when the Vestry would not endorse his accusations against Goodyer. A churchwarden had to preside so that he could sign the minutes and announce the date of the next meeting. Another letter to the Bishop of London told him the vestry would like “Counsel’s opinion” about the Act of 1818 which they thought laid down that if the Vicar took the chair at a vestry meeting he must sign the minutes.

In April of the same year the Vicar and the vestry were at it again. A parishioner had paid what she thought were agreed fees for a tombstone of brick and stone to be erected in the churchyard. Disputing the fees, the Vicar had it dismantled – immediately – and “thrown into the Public Road”. Again to the Bishop the vestry regretted “the varience unhappily existing between the Vicar and his Parishioners which promotes secession from the Church” .

At the same April meeting James Goodyer resigned as Parish Clerk. Perhaps he felt that over twenty-five years of copying accounts and taking minutes was enough – perhaps he felt he must leave the fight against the Reverend to a younger man. He pleaded ill health. The vestry paid they were very sorry to lose him. There is no record of what the Reverend Theodore said.

ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF SERVICE

Gerrard Roots outlines the current exhibition at Church Farm House Museum

The St. John Ambulance Brigade – the uniformed branch of the Order of St. John, which has itself existed in Britain since c.1148 – celebrates its centenary in 1987. Founded •to promote knowledge of first aid amongst the general public, its first division in this area was set up in 1903 and was based upon. Queen Eizabeth’s Boys School in Barnet. Since that time numerous divisions have been created in the Barnet area.

The activities of the Brigade have greatly expanded since its inception. The Brigade numbers increased significantly during World Wars I and II when members of the St. John volunteered for active service with the Royal Army Medical Corps or provided emergency first aid at home with the air raid patrols.

The Brigade, as well as continuing its first aid training, provides first aid assistance at public gatherings, gives an aeromedical service to bring the sick home from abroad, and through the St. John Air Wing, transports vital organs and medical supplies for transplants.

This exhibition presents through photographs, documents, costume and other memorabilia, the wide range of St. John activities in the Barnet area over the past 80 or so years. It also shows something of the history of the origins of the Order of St. John from its first hospice in Jerusalem in AD 600.

The exhibition will be on show from 3 January until 8 February.Please remember that there will be no lecture in January. The next lecture “London in the Mid-Saxon and Viking Period” will be on Wednesday 4 February

LETTERS FROM HADRIAN’S WALL

Anne Cheng summarizes a recent article in Omnibus by Alan K. Bowman and J. David Thomas.

At the Roman fort of Vindolanda, a mile to the south of Hadrian’s Wall, a unique collection of writing tablets is being unearthed. The texts, which date to around AD 100 include both official documents and, the private correspondence of military personnel. They are written in ink on thin slivers of wood, which was used instead of papyrus as this would have, been expensive and difficult to obtain in Britain. The deposit of writing tablets appears to extend to at least twenty metres and over 500 new finds have already been catalogued.

Many of the new texts belong to the archive of one FIavius Cerialis, a commander of a unit at the fort. However, the outstanding discovery of 19.85 must be the archive of Cerialis’ wife, Sulpicia Lepidina. Two texts in this archive contain closing lines written by Claudia Severa, Lepidina’s correspondent. This is certainly the earliest known example of writing by a woman in Latin.

Claudia’s letter is written in two columns side by side as is normal in these tablets. She invites Lepidina to a birthday party:

“Iii Idus Septembr[e]s, soror,ad diem

sollemnem natalem meum vogo

libenter facies ut venial

ad nos incundiorem mihi

diem?] interventu tuo factures si

venia]s”

After transmitting various family greetings she adds the following lines in rather an awkward hand:

“sperato te, soror
vale, soror,anima
mea, ita valeam
karissima et have”

“I shall expect you sister. Hail and farewell, sister, my dearest soul, as I live in health”.

The processing of these finds is extremely time-consuming and demands painstaking attention to detail, but with the amount of material already found, there is hope of yet more exciting discoveries to come.

Newsletter-190-December-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 190: December 1986 Edited by Liz Sagues

HAPPY CHRISTMAS AND AN

ARCHAEOLOGICALLY PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
TO ALL MEMBERS

DIARY

Until December 7 HADAS 25th Birthday Exhibition, “One Man’s Archaeology” at Church Farm House Museum, Hendon, by founder member Ted Sammes. Open on weekdays (except Tuesday afternoons) from 10am to 1pm and .2pm to. 5.30pm, Sundays 2pm to 5.30pm. Admission free.

Friday December 12 Christmas Supper and tour of the Gatehouse, Clerkenwell. We have had a very good response – 75 members attending. If any late-comers want to join the party please ring Dorothy Newbury, 203 0950, to see if there are any cancellations.

Wednesday January 7 The Early Saxon Period in the London Region, by John Mills, Field Officer West London Archaeological Group, Museum of London. At Hendon Library, The Burroughs, Hendon, 8.30pm start, coffee available beforehand.

Wednesday February 4 London in the Mid-Saxon and Viking Period, by Dr Alan Vince, Museum of London.

REMEMBER, 1987 LECTURES WILL BE ON WEDNESDAYS MINIMART POSTSCRIPT

Dorothy Newbury reports that the super anniversary year effort by so many members has brought our final total – clear profit – to… £1,009. This has been achieved by sales since the day, and by the tireless effort of Mrs Lampert taking various items round to salerooms. But PLEASE, PLEASE, don’t expect us to repeat this phenomenon, at least not before our 50th anniversary.

DIG NEWS

Medieval charity Excavations at the site of the old Royal Mint, near the Tower. of London, are confirming the charitable work of the Cistercian abbey of St Mary Graces, founded in the 14th century by Edward III and one of the richest and most prestigious houses of the order in Britain. Among buildings being revealed by the Department of Greater London Archaeology in a major project set to continue into 1988 is a monks’ dining room, part of which seems to have served as a soup kitchen for the local needy. There are hopes of a HADAS visit to the site in due course.

A second major religious site, that of Bermondsey Abbey, burial place of two queens of England, first a Cluniac priory and later a Benedictine house, is also being excavated by the department and beyond the City bounds archaeology does get some attention in the current Capital Gains! exhibition at the Museum of London, until February 1.

THE ROMANS’ CIVIC CENTRE UNCOVERED

Audrey Hooson reports on the November lecture

Our lecturer was Gustav Milne from the Department of Urban Archae­ology at the Museum of London, Mr Milne had visited HADAS in 1981 when he gave an early report on the excavations centring on the port of Roman London – now summarised in a book recently published by the museum, In order to put the Roman Civic Centre Project in context he reminded us of those excavations and compared the City’s two market areas.

The harbour market was in the present Thames Street/Monument Street area. The first small warehouses were built in the first century and there was gradual expansion during the second and third centuries on land reclaimed from the river. As might be expected, the finds show that trade was in imported goods, particularly from the Mediterranean.

North of the port on the eastern hill of the City in the present Gracechurch Street area were the Forum and Basilica. In the 1880s, prior to the building of Leadenhall Market, impressive Roman walls and floors were exposed, which were drawn and painted by Henry Hodges, an architectural artist. During 1977 the GPO dug a three-metre deep tunnel along Gracechurch Street which showed parts of the Basilica and the Forum in the sections and in 1981 buttresses were found in Cornhill.

It has always been the policy of the DUA to record and if possible excavate before any development which might add to knowledge of the Roman civic centre and therefore the planned major redevelopment in 1985 by the Legal and General Insurance Company gave an excellent opportunity for large-scale excavations, which were funded jointly by the developers, the City of London Archaeological Trust Fund and English Heritage. The site, which exposed part of the NE area of the Basilica and some external buildings to the north, was excavated partly after demolition, surrounded by massive concrete shoring which was one of the main reasons for the large budget, and partly in basement areas before demolition, in order to avoid delays to the development.

Evidence from many phases was found. These included the original oak woodland covering the hill, early simple buildings, a burnt layer containing the charcoal impression of a 10cm wide writing tablet and at least two major re-buildings. During the Roman demolition clearance prior to the first stone buildings horses or mules were used in transporting materials and they left their hoofprints visible in the trampled mud of the loading area. The first stone building was constructed with inadequate foundations over earlier pits and ditches and soon had very bad cracks in the substructure. A later building had tile piers on sandstone blocks to give greater stability. In the later periods some of the rooms in the Basilica had been subdivided.

A two-metre depth of road with varying standards of upkeep in the successive surfaces showed that there were some periods in the three or four centuries of its use when repairs were delayed or poorly executed.

When the Saxon street were laid out in 1086 they crossed the northern line of the Basilica, which was presumably therefore no longer visible,

Although Mr Milne was able to tell us in great detail about individual areas of the site he emphasised that it is still too early to attempt to arrive at a final conclusion concerning the stratigraphy and dating, especially of the eventual decline.

However, there is a very good pottery sequence and the further analysis of the finds and the detailed site recording, which are now all that remains of this important phase in the history of the City, will enable him to write not only the full technical archaeological report but also another illustrated book. A treat in store.

The Port of Roman London (Batsford, £9.95) is available from the Museum of London and bookshops. Royalties go to the City of London Archaeological Trust Fund.

WORK DONE, IN HAND AND TO COME

Ted Sammes reports on the annual meeting of local societies at the Museum of London

Twenty-one people attended this meeting, four of whom were from the staff of the Museum of London, two from the Geffre Museum, two from the Passmore Edwards Museum and one from the Cuming Museum. Perhaps the Kingston Heritage Service should also be loosely classified with the museums. Societies represented were the Carew Manor Group, City of London Archaeology Society, Fulham and Hammersmith Historical Society, Pinner Local History Society, Ruislip, Eastcote and North wood Local History Society, Southwark and Lambeth Archaeological ‘Excavation Committee, Wandsworth Historical Society and West Drayton and District Local History Society.

Harvey Sheldon read a report from Clive Orton on post-excavation work. Interim reports have been published in the London Archaeolo­gist on the excavations at Beddington and also on.Bermondsey Abbey. A book, Archaeology of West Middlesex, has been published.

Reports, with slides, were given by the Passmore Edwards Museum on work at Barking Abbey. Keith Whitehouse reported that the local council now has plans to restore part of Fulham Palace for a museum;

Slides were also shown of a dig at the palace.

Colin Bowlt, Ruislip, Eastcote and Northwood, again stressed the plight of many standing buildings which had no statutory pro­tection. He had produced a paper and it was agreed to pursue the matter further and if possible secure a meeting with HBMG. Recent CBA matters were discussed, especially the code of practice for developers and archaeologists sponsored by the British Property Federation and the Standing Conference of Archaeological Unit Mana­gers.

I am conscious that I have only touched .on the total breadth of the topics discussed. A copy of the minutes is held by our, secretary. A further meeting has been arranged for March 23 1987.

A GREEN PUZZLE

Pamela Taylor, one of the borough archivists, wonders if any member can help with the precise meaning of the term “green lane”, particularly in the 18th century There is in the local collection a lease of Hendon House and various lands, made in 1764 (MS 8665). One block of land, in Hendon, is said to lie between other lands on the south, the road leading up Brent Street to Hendon Church on the west, Vicarage Lane on the north and the other Green Lane called the Park Lane on the east. The next block described consists of 20 acres in Finchley parish abutting other lands on the south, two woods on the east, Mordens (Dollis) Brook on the west, and the Green Lane leading from Hendon to Finchley Church on the north.

The term “green lane” is obviously being used as a precise description but if it means, as it is often taken to, an unsurfaced road, it seems surprising that Hendon Lane was not among the first to be metaled,

As this deed indicates, there are rich seams of material waiting to be uncovered in the Local History Department, and the archivists would be delighted to see more researchers from HADAS. There is a steady flow of new items into the department and the archivists hope in future to keep the newsletter informed of at least some of the new acquisitions. Recent additions include log books from the Hendon St Mary’s Girls Friendly Society with early photographs of the church, title deeds for houses in Baronsmere Road and Copthall Drive and a number of his original drawings donated by Herbert Norman,.

PUBLISHED AT LAST

Gillian Braithwaite reviews The Roman Art Treasures from the Temple of Mithras by J. M. C Toynbee (LAMAS Special Paper No 7, price to non-members £5)

It was a very nice surprise to receive this excellent and attractive-looking monograph through the post last month, with the latest copy of the Transactions of LAMAS, and to find that it came free as part of my subscription.

This is a very important publication, and one that has been long awaited, ever since the Temple of Mithras was first discovered beside the Walbrook stream in 1954 and the majority of the statues and art treasures here reviewed were found. Many of the sculptures and the famous silver casket have been published elsewhere at different times, in particular by Professor Toynbee herself in JRS XLV, 1955, and in Art in Roman Britain (Phaidon, 1965), but this is the first time the complete collection of treasures including the three sculptures that were found during building operations on this same site in 1889 and undoubtedly came from the temple has been published together, in a separate volume of its own. Though Professor Toynbee completed the text several years ago, sadly this publication was not to see the light of day until over a year after her death. However, it was worth waiting for, as it is extremely well produced, with a good collection of colour plates and many more in black and white.

The marbles from the Walbrook Mithraeum are without doubt the most important single set of classical sculptures ever found in Britain, and indeed as a collection of Mithraic sculptures they are almost unique in the Roman world, only one other Mithraeum, that of Merida in Spain, having yielded a comparable set. It seems they were deliberately buried within the temple sometime in the early fourth century, shortly after the temple had been partly destroyed, and, given the timing, it is assumed that it was the Christian icon­oclasts who had sacked the temple and that the worshippers of Mithras saved what they could of their treasures and later buried them beneath the temple floor.

Though the treasures were buried in the fourth century, most of the marbles date from the second century, and almost certainly they were imported ready sculptured from Italy. The famous heads of Mithras, Minerva and Serapis would apparently all have originally belonged to full-size statues, the bodies of which were probably locally made, of inferior stone or stucco. The Mithras head is in all likelihood from the cult image Mithras Tauroctonos, which seems to have stood at the end of the nave in all Mithraea, showing Mithras slaying the Bull Sometimes this is just a flat slab carved in relief, but others may be carved in the round, such asthe one from Rome now in the British Museum: The head of Minerva which now looks as though the back of her head has been sliced off would, it seems, have worn an elaborate crested helmet made of metal, either silver or bronze.The helmet must have been removed before burial, stolen perhaps by the Christians. Apparently this is the only large-scale head of Minerva ever found in a Mithraeum.

The brilliantly polished head of Serapis with the obligatory corn modius on top is of a standard type well known in the Roman world, particularly in the reign of Commodus. It is by no means uncommon to find Serapis, god of fertility and the underworld, asso­ciated with the mystical religion of Mithras, which was concerned above all with the passage of the soul through this world and into eternal life. All the other gods represented in the sculptures, Mercury, Bacchus, mother-goddess, Genius, Dioscurus, river-gods, can also be seen to be natural associates of Mithras in their roles either as guides of the soul on its journey after death or as prime movers in the fertility cycle of death and rebirth.

Reading through the catalogue describing all the different sculptures and treasures, one cannot help being struck not only by Professor Toynbee’s immense knowledge of Roman art in all its aspects but also by her great ability to describe a work of art and convey the spirit of it. This excellently produced volume is a fitting memorial to her, but also a very poignant reminder of the great loss caused by her death.

MORE BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS LISTS

Liz Sagues suggests some new titles:

First, a little HADAS advertising, for Pinning Down the Past, Ted Sammes’ survey of some of the more unusual and interesting finds from the society’s Church Terrace, Hendon, dig in 1973-74. Don’t expect turgid trench-by-trench detail – Ted’s method has been to take particular finds and set them in their historical perspective. So, for example, a reader learns that the medieval English lobed cup has its origin, in form at least, in China’s Sung Dynasty or that one tiny fragment of pottery can be traced back to a manufacturing site in Germany’s central uplands. Lace tags or spa water bottles, the splendid Saxon pin, “rose farthings” and a forged groat – all these and many more are explained, in easy to understand language, What more appropriate gift for any Hendon resident, or anyone beginning to take an interest in local archaeology. Copies cost £1.50 – as a special pre-Christmas offer, no extra charge is being made for postage – from Joyce Slattery, 5 Sentinel House, Sentinel Square, NW4 2EN.

Ranging much further afield is Barbara Bender – a happily-remembered name to many extra-mural diploma students – in The Archaeology of Brittany, Normandy and the Channel Islands (Faber & Faber, £14.95). It’s an invaluable guide for the archaeologically-minded, Francophile tourist, providing excellent detail for locating sites (I’ve tested it) and ranging wide, even to sites which, “while unexciting in themselves, provide a marvellous opportunity to explore wild and remote areas”. There’s a comprehensive introduction as well as the gazetteer with its map references, plans, photographs and concise explanations. And archaeology to her includes Romanesque churches, useful leavening – her own word – for a heavily prehistoric diet.

Lindow Man – The Body in the Bog (British Museum Publications, £15) is an intriguing, compelling acknowledgement of the extraordin­arily comprehensive range of scientific disciplines brought to bear on one small human survivor, edited by Ian Stead, J.B. Bourke and Don Brothwell. Much, as the contributors reveal, has been dis­covered about him, from height to blood group, from why his teeth fell out to the particular worms that infested his gut. But many puzzles remain… Watch out for volume two.

More briefly, the British Museum Publications “blue book” series is newly extended by Egyptian Life, by Miriam Stead, and Greek and Roman Life, by Ian Jenkins. Colourful, excellently produced and with a wealth of human information, they are excellent value at £4.95.

And for a really indulgent Christmas time read, give or be given – Some Small Harvest, the memoirs of Glyn Daniel. Though published by Thames and Hudson (£12.95) it does not form part of the Ancient Peoples and Places series, through which Glyn Daniel has contributed so much to archaeological publishing… Full of both personal and archaeological detail, it’s a long and rewarding read.

SITES FOR WATCHING

The following sites, subject of new planning applications, could be of possible archaeological interest. Members noticing signs of development on any of them are asked to notify John Enderby on 203 2630.

1 Brockley Avenue, Edgware Front and side extension

20 Brockley Avenue, Edgware Side and rear extensions

Brockley Hill Farm, Brockley Hill, Landfill regrading and

Edgware planting scheme

100-102 Sunningfields Road, NW4 Erection of 12 flats

234-236 Hendon Way, NW4 Block of 17 flats

The Barn, Nan Clarks Lane, NW7 Extension

Holcombe Cottage, Holcombe Hill, NW7 Extension side and rear

Little Manor, Barnet Lane, Elstree Covered swimming pool

Site of “Retreat” and “Glenmore”, Erection of 12 flats

Tenterden Grove, NW4

Lawrence Farm House, Goodwyn Avenue, Extension and car park

NW7

Spaniards Field, Wildwood Rise, NW11 House and covered swimming pool

Land at Arkley Hall and Arkley Rise, Six houses
Barnet toad, Arkley

116-118 High Street, Barnet Alterations and extensions to

listed building

145 High Street, Barnet Block of Offices

36 Wood Street and rear of 36 flats

23 Union Street, Chipping Barnet

Land adjoining East Finchley Station 6,912 sq m of offices and fronting High Road parking for 560 cars, also l50 flats

68-72 Union Street, Chipping Barnet Office building.

A CHURCH’S PAST REMEMBERED

From HADAS member Frances Gravatt comes a copy of You Shall Remember, her account of the beginnings of Hendon Baptist Church, published to commemorate the centenary this year of the present church building.

She traces the congregation’s history back to the 1821 census listing of the “Dissenting Meeting House” in Brent Street, identifies those important in its progress thereafter and chronicles the building of the new church – which, apart from predictable financial problems also faced unwanted natural hazards, including an unfortunately located spring. But all, as this year’s celebrations confirm, were successfully overcome.

Copies of You Shall Remember are available from Frances Gravatt at 47A Finchley Lane, NW4 1BY, price £l (add 20p for postage).

THE FIGHT TO SAVE THE GRAHAME-WHITE HANGAR

Bill Firth reports on the latest moves

The Thirties Society, which was founded to protect British archi­tecture and design after 1914, has expressed its wish to become actively -involved in the protest. This is the first significant. national body, to do so, which is very encouraging for those members who missed the issue of The Times in which the HADAS letter on the hangar was published, the letter is reproduced here.

The RAF is leaving Hendon on 1 April next year after some 70 years, and the event is being commemorated by honouring the service, with the freedom of the Borough of Barnet, in which Hendon Aerodrome is situated.

However, the aerodrome is older than the RAF having been founded by the great aviation pioneer, Claude Grahame-White, in 1910, Nothing remains of this early period, but amongst the buildings dating from the Great War there is a hangar, a listed building, which includes an office block bearing the name “The Grahame-White Company Limited”.

The Ministry of Defence is proposing to demolish this hangar despite its listing, but Barnet Borough Council, bearing in mind the historic importance of Hendon Aerodrome, is opposed to demolition not only in view of the historic significance of the building but also because of the lack of evidence that possible alternative uses for it have been examined.

In addition to the Hendon and District, Archaeological. Society, the Association for Industrial Archaeology, the Greater London. Industrial Archaeology Society and a number of other organisations have made representations for the retention of the hangar, but the. Ministry insists that it must be demolished so that the full commercial value of the site can be realised. We believe that the importance of this building overrides purely commercial considerations and that its demolition would be a major loss to aviation history and archaeology.

… and gives advance notice of a visit

The RAF has agreed to a visit to the Grahame-White buildings at Hendon Aerodrome in late February/early March 1987. When the RAF gives me a firm date I will send details to all those who have expressed interest. If anyone else wishes to join the visit, please send a SAE to me at 49 Woodstock Avenue, NW11 9RG. The visit is restricted to about 30 people and applications will be dealt with on a first-come, first-served basis.

HELP, I’VE BEEN DRABBLED

Ted Sammes becomes a victim of typographical gremlins

One of the few rewards that one looks forward to with both appre­hension and hope after mounting an exhibition is that of reading the press reports. I was a little bit moithered when I failed to find any report in the Ham & High, which normally does us so proudly. It was, however, pointed out by Gerrard Roots that if I would look for a heading which read “Findings of one man and his dog” I would find what I was missing.

This was followed some days later by an apologetic note from Liz Sagues saying that if I took the “o” out of dog and inserted an “i”, all would be well! Well, well, and I thought I had been turned into a budding Phil Drabble! PS: the exhibition is open until December 7.

AFTER IRON …

Percy Reboul argues the case for plastics as historical material

It may come as something of a surprise, HADAS members that plastics (depending on how you define the word) were discovered nearly 125 years ago. What is generally regarded as the birth certificate of the industry occurred in 1862 when a remarkable inventor called Alexander Parkes showed his Material “Parkcsine” at the Great Inter­national Exhibition in London’s South Kensington. The actual exhibi­tion site was where the museum complex now stands.

While most people have heard of the 1851 exhibition, far fewer are aware of the 1862 show which was, however, regarded by its con­temporaries as a world event of outstanding importance. It is possible that the Prince Consort’s death in December 1861 cast a long shadow over public life in general and the exhibition in particular.

The exhibition was to bring forth at least two inventions of major importance: a “new match which could not be’ignited by friction alone” (today’s safety match), and a new material called Parkesine after its inventor, “the product of a mixture of chloroform and castor oil which produces a substance hard as horn but, as flexible as leather, capable of being cast or stamped, painted, dyed or carved…”. Parkesine was awarded a bronze medal for excellence of quality.

Parkesine was an early form of what most of us know by the name “celluloid” and it is highly prized by collectors. Perhaps the finest collection of Parkesine is in the basement store of the Plastics and Rubber Institute in London where it remains awaiting the birth of a National Plastics Museum. A few pieces can be seen, however, in the Science Museum.

Of more direct interest to HADAS members, perhaps, is the news that the Institute of Industrial Archaeology is to hold a one-day seminar at Ironbridge during the 1986-87 academic year. I am hoping myself to make a contribution to the proceedings.

The amount of sheer ignorance and antipathy towards plastics is startling. Proof our emergence from the Iron Age came about a decade ago when the tonnage of plastics produced in the world’s leading industrial country, the USA, overtook the tonnage of ferrous metal produced. We should be thinking ahead, to the not-too-distant time when plastics will become dating evidence at least as important as pottery.

One can see already, for example, the value of objects such as squeezy bottles and polythene bags which arc as distinctive as pottery for dating purposes. Now is the time, incidentally, to make your mark in this field. The world awaits a typology of the tooth­brush or a catalogue of cornflake packet giveaways which, make no mistake, will be as collectable and interesting to archaeologists a mere hundred years from now as Pratt-ware or Codd bottles in our day.

It has been my privilege recently to work with a small dedi­cated team to found the world’s first Plastics Historical Society. Its objects are to promote the study, preservation and sharing of information on all historical aspects of plastics and to encourage the recording of current developments judged to be of value to future generations.

The plastics industry is lucky in the sense that many of its pioneers are still alive. It is vital that their memories and the records of their achievements are recorded. They are the equivalent of the greats such as Brunel, Stephenson and Lister of previous generations. The chance to record first-hand evidence is not to be missed.

Sadly, many of the early records are disappearing fast, brought about mainly by the current spate of mergers and buy-outs. New owners don’t care overmuch for traditions and archives take up val­uable office space which can better be used in the fight for indus­trial efficiency; but there is always hope. More and more people are coming to value things such as old photographs, cine film, catalogues and even the typescripts of chairmen’s speeches. An excellent organisation called the Business Archives Council is doing sterling work on a pathetically small budget to encourage industry to look after its old records.

Paradoxically many of the very fine artefacts made from plastics in the ’20s and ’30s are being preserved because. the dealers have realised that there is money to be made…..There even rumour that some plastics artefacts are being forged using the original moulds – which should prove as lucrative a field day for the lawyers as the mouldings themselves are for the dealers.

In conclusion, I hope any member who may have a query on the subject, or would like help with identification, will contact me.

ALWAYS KICK A MOLEHILL, Tessa Smith explains why

We only went into the pub for a flagon and we ended up… But that would be giving the game away!

We were in the village of Corfe Castle, in the Isle of Purbeck, quenching our thirst in the quaintest little terrace cottage pub. To my surprise, there on the wall was a photo of Roman finds from a nearby-excavation, a square-sided glass-flagon, a colander, black glass flagon, a colander, black burnished bowls and jars (but unfortunately no spacers!). On seeing our interest the publican sold us a booklet summarising excavation work from 1976 to 1984, of a Roman villa at Bucknowle Farm, only half a mile south west of Corfe Castle

Apparently in 1975 Tony Brown, on kicking a molehill, noticed Roman-pottery and tile so, with permission, dug trial holes, and one of these produced a short length of stone walling and part of a red tessellated floor. The following summer, under the auspices of the Dorset Archaeological society, an exploratory excavation began, and it has continued each summer since.

The publican told us it was such a pity we had not arrived the day before as the excavation was being filled in that very minute, but if we wanted he would give us instructions as to where it was. Almost forgetting our local brew, we went hot foot the half-mile or so, until we saw the dreaded JCB in the distance, and sure enough it was smoothing down the final clod of earth. Dismally disappointed we field-walked the area and to our joy we noticed and examined a few small sherds of black burnished pottery left on the surface.

This extensive Roman site overlies an earlier Iron Age habitat and covers an area of at least five acres. By 1984, eight buildings, including barns, a hypocaust, corridors,’ furnace, hearths, child burials, coins, pottery and many small finds had been excavated, much of which is now housed in the museum at Dorchester. This Roman villa is thought to be the first substantial form of the villa-type, based upon a pasture economy, in the heart of Purbeck.

The moral of this story is: 1. always kick a molehill, and 2. develop a thirst for knowledge on a hot summer’s day. You never know what may turn up.

RESISTIVITY SURVEY OF WATLING CAR PARK SITE 1986 Brian Wrigley presents an interim report

Main Overall Plot

yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

xxxxxyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyoo

yxyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyxyyyyy

yyyyyyyyyxyyyyyyxyxyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

yyyyyyyxyxyxyyyyyyoy

oooyyyyyyyyyyoyoy

yyyxyyyyxyxyxxyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyxxyyyyyyyy

yoyyyoyyyyyyyyoyo

oyoyyyoyyyyyyyoyy

yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

oyyyyoyyoyyoooyoooyyyyyyyyyyyAyyyyyyyyoyyyyyyy

yyyyyyooooyoyyyyyyyoyyyyyyoyyyyyyoyoyyyyyyyyyy

xyxyyyyyyyoyooooyyyyoyoyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyxy

xyyyyyyy yyyyy yyyyyyyyyyyy yyyyy ooyoxyo

yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

GRID 2

ooyyyyyyyyyyy

yoooyooooooyy

yyoyooyooooyo

yyyyyyyyyyyyy

yyyyyyyyoyyyy

yyyyyyyyyyyyy

yyyyyyyyyyyyy

yyyyyyyyyyyoy

yyyyyyyyyyyyo

yyyyyyyyyyyyy

yyyyyyyyyyyyy

yyyyyoyooooyy

yyyyyyyyyoooy

GRID 3

yoooooooyyoyoooyoooooooyooooo

oooooooooyyyyyoyyoyoyoyoxoxox

oyoooyyyyyoxxxxyyyoyyyyxyyxyy

ooooyoyxyxxxxyyyyxxyxyoyxxyoy

oooooxyyxxyxxxxxxyxxxxxyxyyyo

oooyoyyxyyyxyxxxxxxxyxyxyyyxy

yyooooooooooooxyxxxxxxxyxyyyy

yyoyoyoyyyyyyxyxxxxxxxxxyyyxyy

xyxyyyoyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyx

ooooooooyyyyyoyoyyyoyyoyoyoyoy

Our first concern was to cover as much as possible of the main accessible area,. Which we have done, in the main by runs 5 metres apart with probe spacings of 1 metre. The results are shown in the diagram called Main Overall Plot, on which high readings are shown as “x”, low as “o” and medium as y. Blanks are areas inaccessible (brambles, trees, etc) or readings for one reason or another suspect.

It will be seen that the high readings seem to concentrate in the top left of the plan (north-west) and the lows in the bottom part, particularly towards the left (west). To see if any pattern emerged from this low area, we did a further more detailed series of runs 1 metre apart, probe spacings of 1 metre, covering the rectangle shown, and these are shown by the same symbols in Grid 2. Here there seems to be a linear run of lows, near the top.

We have tried some runs at ½ metre probe spacings (which means, broadly, that only half the depth of ground is being explored) and found this gave readings three or four times as high i.e. the features giving high resistance are, say, within a metre or so of the ground surface. One possible theory to explain this is that the deeper readings are including more of the water-bearing clay sub-soil, which is of low resistance, and thus lowering the overall reading.

If the high-resistance features are near the top, it seemed to be sensible to explore the high areas with ½ metre probe spacings, so as to concentrate more on the top. This we therefore tried in the area which had given some high readings, top left of the Main Overall Plot; the result is shown in Grid 3 and shows hardly any regular pattern.

At about the point A on the Main Overall Plot, we found a spot consistently giving the lowest reading, when traversed in two directions at right angles, at 2 metre spacings. It is just possible that this is a pit.

To sum up – we have made no breathtaking discoveries; but we have achieved what we expected to, that is to find some indication of two or three places where trial trenching would be worthwhile. Our loyal band of resistivity testers is now itching to get trowels into the earth!

One other result of this activity is that we now have a little group of members well practised in operating the resistivity meter, and in the course of using it much improvement has been made in the external leads and contacts – we think it is now a much more robust machine which can be used at some speed even in tangled long grass. .There are other projects for which this could be useful – for example, a search for the “missing piece of moat at Finchley Manor and, further in the future, exploration in advance of the water pipeline to be laid around the north of the borough.

OBITUARIES

Jeanne Thompson Members, and especially those who go on the coach outings, will be sorry to learn of the sudden death of Jeanne Thompson. Her husband Alec took early retirement in the spring of 1983 so they had high hopes of doing many things together, and one they did manage was a visit to Turkey. But their plans were cut off by a sudden heart attack.

They were both often on the outings and I sometimes used to pull her leg because she invariably returned to the coach having somehow acquired what appeared to me to be the major part of the weekend shopping!

Alec intends to move up to the Newcastle area so as to be close to his married daughter. I am sure we will all wish him all the best in starting a new life in a different area. I for one will also miss Jeanne’s cheery presence. By Ted Sammes


Harry Mason
You will all be sad to learn of the death of Mr Mason on November 6, less than a year after that of his wife Connie. They both came into the society in the very early years and were both regulars on outings until Mr Mason’s health deteriorated. Mrs Mason continued right up until the weekend in Cumbria’ in 1985. And they will be remembered by us all as our coffee providers at lectures. They came out in all weathers and gave up only in May 1985. By Dorothy Newbury

MORE DIARY DATES

Egyptology

It’s proving an excellent winter for anyone with an interest in Egyptology, for overlapping with the University of London Extra Mural Department series on British Archaeology in Egypt comes a complementary series given by staff from University College’s Department of Egyptology concentrating on one of the most absorbing and controversial periods of that country’s ancient history, the reigns of the heretic pharaoh Akhenaten and his successors:

Dr Geoffrey Martin, whose discovery of the tomb of Maya, treasurer of Tutankhamun, had such widespread, publicity earlier this year, is introducing the lectures, on Wednesday evenings, in the Chemistry Auditorium, Christopher Ingold Laboratories, Gordon Street, Euston (just round the corner from the Institute of Archaeology), starting at 6pm.The series continues until February 25, full details from the Department of Egyptology, UCL, phone 387 7050.

The Extra Mural Department series draws to its close on December 4, when the speaker will be Professor Harry Smith-Edwards Professor of Egyptology at UCL, and the subject Memphis. At the Institute of Archaeology, Gordon Square, at 7pm; The series as a whole has been a rewarding one, with one of its highlights a lecture with the most uninviting title of all – The Carians in Egypt and the Decipherment of Carian Script. But the Carians, revealed John Ray of Cambridge University’s Faculty of Oriental Studies, were the Gurkhas and the SAS of antiquity, a rebellious, belligerent people, spreading wide from their homeland -in Western Turkey and selling their services as mercenaries to the highest bidders ­notably the Egyptian Pharaohs. The lecture was great entertainment as well as full of scholarly information – if John Ray speaks on the subject again in London, don’t miss it.

Early Hominid Evolution

Those who remember, a good many years ago, the sight of the distinguished anatomist Michael Day giving a demonstration of how early hominids walked to a packed lecture hall at the Institute. of Archaeology won’t want to miss a possible repeat. Professor Day is one of a wide-ranging panel of speakers in the post-Christmas Extra Mural Department series, starting on January 8 and continuing every Thursday until March 12.

Titles include Australopithecus and early Homo, Evolution of the Mind, Reconstructing Early Hominid Diet and Evolution of Loco-motor Behaviour, lectures start, as usual, at 7pm at the Institute of Archaeology, a-season ticket for the series costs l6 or individual lectures E2. Full programme and advance season tickets from Miss Edna Clancy, Dept of Extra Mural Studies, 26 Russell Square, WC1B 5DQ.

Diet and Crafts in Towns – the Evidence from Animal Remains

A one-day seminar at the Extra Mural Department, 26 Russell Square, on Saturday December 13. Tony Legge introduces, Harvey Sheldon sums up Tickets £10.50, from Edna Clancy at the above address.

Newsletter-189-November-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 189 November 1986 edited by Camilla Raab

DIARY

Thursday 4 November Lecture at Hendon Library “The Roman City Centre Project 1986” by Gustav Milne. This is a return visit by Mr. Milne, who is a member of the Urban Archaeological Unit at the Museum of London. In 1981.he gave us an excellent talk on the Roman Port of London, then being excavated. This month’s talk is about the excavations at Leadenhall Market in the City, which many members have visited recently.

Friday 12 December
PLEASE NOTE change of date from that on programme card) Christmas supper and tour at the Tudor Gatehouse of the 12th-century Priory of the Order of St John in Clerkenwell

Please see separate application form, and return it with your remittance as soon as possible. We hope to run a coach, and numbers are important to keep down costs. Let us have a very good attendance at this finale to our anniversary year!

Throughout November until 7 December HADAS 25th Birthday Exhibition, ‘One Man’s Archaeology’ at Church Farm House Museum, Hendon, by founder member Ted Sammes. Open on weekdays (except Tuesday), 10 am ­1 pm and 2 – 5.30 pm,Tuesdays 10 am – 1 pm. Sundays 2 – 5.30 pm. Admission free HADAS publications available at weekends. For details see October Newsletter.

ONE MAN’S ARCHAEOLOGY: A 25TH ANNIVERSARY EXHIBITION

The 25th anniversary is that of HADAS. The ‘one man’, Ted Sammes, who has mounted the exhibition at Church Farm House Museum in honour of our Silver Jubilee, has been interested in archaeology for over twice that length of time. He admits to being hooked on the subject since 1930, when his father took him to see Sir Mortimer Wheeler’s excavations at St Albans. When HADAS was formed in 1961, therefore, Ted as a founder member brought to it a considerable stock of knowledge and expertise

In Room 1 of the exhibition there is a picture of Themistocles Constantinides, our founder to whose interests in the missing history of Hendon we owe our existence. He looks down, appropri­ately enough, on a selection of exhibits from various excavations undertaken by HADAS since 1961. Pride of place goes to the Church Terrace dig of 1973-74, directed by Ted Sammes. It produced the evidence for Saxon Hendon in which our founder had so firmly believed, together with a wealth of fascinating material spanning the centuries from Roman occupation to the1900s. Ted’s booklet on this dig, ‘Pinning Down the Past’, is on- sale at the exhibition. – see final paragraph below.’

Other aspects of the Society’s work – and play – are vividly recalled by photographs and memorabilia: the processing of finds, graveyard recording, and the celebration of the Quincentenary of the Battle of Barnet, the many exhibitions mounted by HADAS, its publica­tions, its lectures and its outings. I note that the very first outing in 1961, to Waltham Abbey and Greensted, set off from the Quadrant, as our outings still do, but at the civilized hour of 10.30 am! Arrival back was ‘6 pm at latest’, and the cost was 10/­(50p).

One of the great delights of the exhibition is the opportunity it affords to see some of Ted’s magnificent photographs, both black-and-white and coloured. These are not confined to HADAS ‘events’ but range widely, for Ted has visited archaeological sites from Orkney to Majorca, from Eastern Turkey to Southern Ireland. The photographs include such gems as the terracotta figures from Ayia Irini in Cyprus, marvelously well preserved and so lively, The splendid line of marching gods from Yazilikaya, Eastern Turkey, the great Lion Gate at Bogazkoy, and the brilliantly coloured and graceful traditional boats of Malta. There is an interesting group, of ‘old and new’ views in the Hendon area; a charming sequence of photographs of castles, and another of old Mills. Ted has also included some items from his collection of old sepia photographs for example, views of Egyptian sites before the tourist hordes invaded them.

The opening of the exhibition on 18 October by the Mayor of Barnet;

Councillor Denis Dippel, accompanied by the Mayoress, was attended by HADAS Committee members old and new, headed.by our Chairman Andrew Selkirk, and by many of Ted’s friends from the archaeological world. These included. Ralph Merrifield, born in Hendon but, revisiting.it for the first time since early childhood, and Cherry Lavell, representing the Council for British Archaeology.

To coincide with the exhibition, Ted’s booklet on the Church Terrace excavation, ‘Pinning Down the Past.- Finds from a Hendon Dig’, with an ,introduction by Andrew Selkirk, has been published as HADAS Occasional Paper NO.6. Ted has selected items of special interest from each Period covered by the dig and has commented on their historical background, manufacture, purpose and use, and the light they throw on Hendon’s past. There is a mine of information on coinage and traders’ tokens, the production of pins, the manufacture of window glass, the history of delftware.. We are told the price of tea in 17th-century London, and invited to speculate on whether ‘clay-pipe makers also produced pipe clay wig-curlers. The booklet is eminently readable, attractively produced, and, modestly priced at £1.50. Get your copy now either, at the exhibition or from Miss Joyce Slatter .5, Sentinel House Sentinel Square, London NW4 2EN

SHEILA WOODWARD

MAIDENHEAD SOCIETY TO VISIT HENDON

On Sunday 16 November a party of Maidenhead Archaeological & Historical Society will be walking in the Totteridge, Mill Hill area in the morning.. In the afternoon they will visit the Church Farm House Museum, Hendon, to see Ted Sammes’ exhibition. Ted is Chairman of the Maidenhead Society:

GRAHAME WHITE HANGAR

The campaign against demolition continues. HADAS has had a letter in The Times (6 October) and we hope there may be a follow up. About 20 organisations concerned with preservation of Aviation history have been contacted, and most of them have made their protest too. We had publicity in the specialist press and in the Hendon advertiser.

There are now two issues: 1. the hangar itself, and 2. the other historic buildings at Hendon which are not even listed. The Department of the Environment, which is the ‘listing’ authority, has referred the matter of the non-listed buildings to English Heritage, If anyone who has not done so would like to add their protest, please write to the appropriate ministry and/or-English Heritage. BILL FIRTH

MINIMART

A great effort by so many Members made the day a huge success, not only financially but by the friendly spirit that everyone threw into it, both by helpers and by members dropping in to buy goods or have lunch. One member remarked that he’d not seen so many old members together for a long time. And a non-member was heard to remark “Everyone seems so friendly!’ .The general public, were in good numbers too about 150 ,paid at the door. Our takings to date are about £840 with more still coming in, so we shall easily achieve last year’s figure. Many thanks to all concerned. I hope you all think it was worth the effort.

WEST HEATH EXCAVATION Margaret Maher.

The excavation has now finally ended because the area to the NE of the site; which was the focus of this year’s work, has been subject to disturbance at some time from the 17th century onward.

Mesolithic deposits may still exist beyond the disturbed area but are inaccessible because of criss-crossing tree roots. Thus the modern limits of the site have been reached.

Backfilling and clearance of equipment took place on Sunday 28 September. The weather was fine and sunny and a marvellous group of-people turned out to do this heavy and unpopular job. My thanks to them all – Sheila Woodward, Alan Lawson, Helen Gordon, Lisa Maher, Peter Loos, Jean Snelling, Victor Jones, John Morfey, Howard Bouldler and Terry Keenan. Peter Wilson, though suffering from a cartilage injury, struggled to the site to bring welcome assistance from his son Simon and a friend Bradley Rothman; Laurie and Michael Sevell shifted the larger equipment to College Farm; and Daphne Lorimer paid a very welcome visit and toasted our endeavours. It seemed fitting that she who began the excavation in 1976 should also have been there as it finished.

I would also like to give special thanks to Sheila Woodward and Myfanwy Stewart. Their help throughout the three seasons was vital, and without it the excavation could not have taken place. They both worked whatever the weather conditions, and their support and advice have been invaluable. Others on whom the success of the excavation depended were the diggers. As over 100 members have worked there since June 1984, there is insufficient space to list them all. Thanks especially to those who were able to commit themselves to a block of time or for regular days through a season. Jean Snelling dug for all three seasons and June Owen kept the finds recording under able control for the same period.

Many others contributed to the success of the dig too – all the people who made or mended equipment, or who loaned or donated items, or who contributed special skills.

.

One last appeal for help now – it is too early to discuss results yet, as much processing remains to be done. A volunteer to mark finds would be welcome ring.me on 907 0333 if you can help.

THE LOST KINGDOMS OF THE MIDDLE NILE by Dr John Alexander

A sizeable gathering assembled at Hendon Library on 7 October and were warmly welcomed by Andrew Selkirk, making his debut as Chairman of the Society. He then introduced with obvious pleasure Dr John Alexander, who had enthralled members on previous occasions with accounts of his excavations at Ibrim in the Sudan and the history of the Safety Pin. Dr. Alexander is plainly a. practitioner to whom the trowel has become as mighty as the pen, and the fascinating story of the ‘lost’ Nubian Kingdoms came vividly alive. The three Christian Kingdoms of Nobatia, Makouria and Alwa were, all adjacent to the banks of the Nile and flourished from about AD 540 for over eight hundred year’s. Indeed, it was not until the fifteenth century that the southernmost kingdom, Alwa finally succumbed to the pressure of the fanatically Muslim camel-keeping Nomads from Arabia., Until the excavators from Britain and Poland arrived on the scene and the wind-driven sand of centuries started to reveal the largesse of history, these Christian kingdoms were largely unknown in what had become a Muslim Nubia dominated by Egypt. From the 1930s, however, the impressive strength and glory of these Kingdoms which supported at least fourteen Bishops (although there is no extant record of an Archbishop) began to be uncovered by archaeologists from Europe. A complex hierarchical organisation, owing much to the Byzantine and Coptic Churches came to light. Christian artefacts and symbols on pottery and wood, were found. Dr Alexander showed astonishing slides, not only of well-preserved Christian religious objects but also, at places such as Faras and Ibrim, of Cathedrals and monastic buildings (at Faras the walls of the Cathedral are still twenty feet high) in which wall paintings depicting Christian themes still retained a brilliance of a colouring and rich imagery unsurpassed for this period of history. Many of the churches were small, but clearly prosperous, in a riverine area where the use of the water-wheel had achieved a high standard of cultivation for millet and other staple crops. Surprisingly, Christianity had been permitted to co-exist with the idols and plural deities of Egypt. It was only in the later part of the period that church buildings began to be fortified, and ‘castle-like’ structures, such as those found at Ikmindi, appeared, although these could have been designed to resist the incursions from the Muslim Nomads from the south west rather than the Egyptians in the North. When Egypt became part of the Ottoman Empire in the seven­teenth century, nothing further was heard of the Christian kingdoms. Before that the Baqt Treaty had kept the peace sometimes tenuously between Christian and Infidel for several hundred, years, although the Crusades put a heavy strain on the relationship. .Dr.Alexander was not one who believed the collapse of Christianity in Nubia to be due solely to the crusades; external pressures from alien cultures had grown over several centuries. When the collapse finally came, the Sudan quite quickly became the pastoraI and primitive area that we know today. Traces of Christianity can still be discerned among the people, such as women who were in the habit of taking their children to wash in the, river and would make the mark of the Cross.

Of the secular organisation of the Kingdoms, little has so far emerged. Fragments of language (shown on slides) incised on wood, proved indecipherable. As burials were Christian, no rites of passage of the dead could be found, and there were no grave goods to be interpreted. We were shown a series of slides illustrative of the ‘rescue work’ which had been carried out at important sites such as Debira that had subsequently become submerged in the waters of Aswan. A project is on hand for the creation of a Nubian Museum for the finds which are now mostly – apart from a mummified bishop resting in Cambridge ­stored in the cellars of Cairo’s museum.

As Andrew Pares, who proposed a vote of thanks, rightly, said, the Society could not have had a better lecture to open its 25th Anniversary season. JOHN ENDERBY

VISIT TO WINCHESTER AND THE DOMESDAY EXHIBITION Reva Brown

The bus dropped us at King Alfred’s statue, and a magical day began. In the Guildhall a Craft Fair was taking place, and it was possible to tour the Fair with its undertones of a medieval market ­stalls of handcrafted articles made of wood, glass, wool or metal, all enticingly displayed.

We split into groups for a guided tour of Winchester, walking along the River Itchin, the city walls and gates. (Fronted by a metal grille, a little niche protected the fragment of Roman wall still existing.). We saw the flint-walled exterior of Winchester School (founded 1382 for 70 scholar and going strong with a ‘cast’ of hundreds and the house where Jane Austen died. We looked at the ruins of Wolverley Castle (1130) which was the Bishop’s Palace until it was destroyed in the Civil War.. The ‘new’ Bishop’s Palace standing beside the ruins of the old one is 1684. The small church of St Swithin was being prepared for the harvest festival and bedecked with flowers and greenery. A small stained glass window depicted St Swithin Bishop ofWinchester, tutor of Alfred, and at his feet the bridge over the Itchin which he had built to replace the. Roman one.The Cathedral deserved more time than we had available to us. The outline of the Anglo-Saxon church which the Cathedral replaced was marked out in the grass.

Our guides left us at the City Museum, the oldest museum in Hampshire, containing a range of artefacts from prehistoric stones to an Edwardian bathroom, and we met again outside the Great Hall for the Domesday Exhibition This achieved its aim – giving an understanding of why the Domesday census had been undertaken, how it was achieved (in only eight months) and the kind of England that it surveyed. Banners Over the entrances to the linked tents in which the Exhibition is housed portrayed excerpts from, the entries – one which caught my eye concerned the property owned by a woman jester (Where does one find but about court jesters, and how did a person become one, and how many were women?)

Also displayed along the walls of the Hall is the Bayeux Tapestry carved in wood by a French craftsman (a task of eight years duration) and at the end of the Great Hall, the medieval Round Table, ostensibly that of King Arthur. A young man minted a William I, silver penny, using the methods available in the eleventh century. Using the values of the time, when a sheep was 4p, it was possible to work out that the penny was worth around £20 in today’s money.

Each of us has taken home-different memories of a sparkling autumn day packed with sights and sensations. It says something for the quality of enjoyment and knowledge gained on HADAS trips that two… members who missed. the coach, made their own, way to Winchester to catch us up

THE WORLD ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONGRESS
Andrew Sinclair

The World Archaeological Congress, which took place at Southampton from 1st to 6th September, was one of the most controversial archaeological conferences for a long time. The cause was the banning of the South African delegates, this led to widespread withdrawals of support and as a result the official Congress has been transferred to Mainz next September; when the CBA polled its members as to whether it should withdraw, HADAS followed the majority of CBA members in voting for withdrawal.

In the event the congress took place, but on a somewhat reduced scale. Instead of 3,000 participants expected only 1,000 came; there was a good attendance from black Africa, South East Asia and the communist world, but there was no-one from Israel or the Arab countries:, nobody from Japan, and only a handful for America, and Western Europe. Some, at least in Britain, may have been put off by the high price – £200 just to attend (I only went because at the last minute I was offered a press ticket free!).

The congress was of the sort where there are many sessions running simultaneously, and one had to decide which to attend. The other main innovation of the congress was that they wanted to break away from the old formula of dividing the subjects by period and place. In recent years the Congresses have degenerated into nit-pickings instead of presenting major research delegates have preferred to give the most abstruse papers possible. The Congress therefore decided to introduce some general topic sessions; however these either tended to be overtly political – especially those on so-called ‘objectivity’ ­or they degenerated into gobbledegook the flavour was well expressed in titles such as ‘Multi-culturalism and ethnicity in archaeological interpretations’.

The other aspect that should concern HADAS was the lack of reference to local archaeological societies or their role today. The high price ensured that there were no amateur archaeologists present, but though references were made to the importance of popular archaeology, this was done by inviting one of the hippies along from Stonehenge to put his case. There was also a session on what was called ‘Cultural Resource Management’, when the various professionals decided how they were going to run our heritage for us –but there is no role for local societies in their management plans.

At the plenary session at the end they voted to set up a holding body, to negotiate with the official body; and if there was no agreement within the year, to go ahead and hold a further congress. Since however this is an issue on which compromise seems unlikely, it looks as if for the foreseeable future there are going to be two rival World Archaeological Congresses.

(ED. Members might also like to see Peter Ucko’s letter in Guardian 18 October)

NOTES FROM THE COMMITTEE Brian Wrigley

A document, ‘The Future of Hampstead Heath’ from the London Residual Body, was discussed. HADAS stressed the importance of consultation with local bodies on the future management of the Heath.

Redevelopment at Finchley Manor House. After a site visit, views will be presented to the Borough of Barnet. The building on the site encroaches on the moat, which is a scheduled site.

DOMESDAY EXHIBITION AT THE PUBLIC RECORD. OFFICE Jill Braithwaite

This fascinating exhibition was on for most of this summer, but unfortunately it closed on September 30th. It was an unusual, low-key exhibition, with an immense amount of very interesting information which took quite a lot of reading and digesting, so that one would have been well advised to buy and read the catalogue first, and then go round the exhibits.

The exhibition, as stated in the catalogue, had two main themes: Domesday England, its people, its landscape, its agriculture and the history of Domesday. To introduce the first theme there was a good video, lasting half an hour, using extant material and many a shot of Butser farm and West Stow village to give an impression of England at the time of the Conquest. This was useful, because due to lack of space there was not a great deal of visual material; it was mainly extracts from manuscripts with written commentaries. There were however two rather good audio-visual. exhibits, namely an extremely life-like figure of an Anglo-Saxon monk, whose whole face moved as he spoke (some kind of holographic projection we presumed), who delivered a recording, first in Anglo-Saxon, and then in English, of the rather disapproving passage in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle which describes the commissioning of the Domesday survey at Christmas 1085, when the king was at Gloucester; and another similar figure of a rather severe King William addressing his people in English. For the rest of Domesday England, we had to make do with a life-size model of an endearing, tousled ox pulling a plough (normally, apparently, it would have been drawn by eight oxen) and a lot of well researched descriptions of the land­scape, the towns, farming, diet, social order, etc., using informa­tion from both Domesday and archaeology.

Then came Domesday itself, First there was quite a large section devoted to ‘The Survey’, using photographs of extracts from contem­porary manuscripts, or slightly later ones, which describe how the Domesday survey was carried out, or provide corroborating evidence. England was divided up into circuits, probably seven, .and three or more high-born commissioners were appointed to each one. The main; donkey-work seems to have been done by officials of the shire and hundred courts who had to answer a set number of questions concern­ing each, manor: how many hides, villeins, slaves, mills etc. Much of the information was gathered from existing sources such as geld records, church records and estate accounts, some of which survive. Then, when the data collection was complete; the commissioners visited the shire courts, heard sworn evidence, and ensured that the information was compiled in the correct way (or tried to). All the surveys from the different circuits were then sent to Winchester, the principal royal city, to be condensed and collated into the complete Domesday Book. One set of records, however, those for the eastern circuit embracing Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex, never got included into the Great Domesday Book, and have remained in their original, less condensed and more detailed format to this day, known as Little Domesday. Why they were not included is not known very likely it was King William’s death.

Finally, Great Domesday itself. Amazingly, it was written by one scribe alone, in less than a year, from late 1086 to mid or late. 1087. The complete project, survey and all, had taken just two years: It is written on parchment made from the skins of between 500 to 1000 Dorset sheep and in a separate room there was an on-going demonstra­tion of parchment making, starting from the basic skin and ending with thin vellum or parchment sheets. Domesday always used to be bound as, one book, but it has recently been re-bound and divided into two volumes. Little Domesday, which has smaller size pages, has also been rebound, into three volumes, one for each county. All five volumes were on display in the exhibition.

The rest of the exhibition was devoted to ‘the Domesday Book in. use’ from the 12th century to the present day. ,This seemed to be the least interesting part of the exhibition, but perhaps we were running out of energy. Needless to say, computer buffs are having a heyday with. Domesday, now that the new translation: started by John Morris 20 years ago has finally been fully published in the Phillimore edition.

For those who missed the exhibition there is an excellent guide published by the National Domesday Committee, Domesday, 900 years of England’s Norman Heritage, price £3, which should be available in bookshops. It has a number of .very useful and readable articles about the making of Domesday,- ‘the first national account of its kind in the post-barbarian world’ and the historical events leading up to and following the Conquest.

CYPRUS WITH THE PREHISTORIC SOCIETY Enid Hill

Cyprus in the sun with its fine coastline and lofty Troodos Mountains in the centre made a very happy place for the Prehistoric Society’s summer outing. Several HADAS members were in the party, and we spent 5 energetic days visiting archaeological sites all over the southern part of the island. Unfortunately we were not able to visit the north because of the Turkish occupation – of which we had a stern reminder by the 20-foot high wall near our hotel dividing Nicosia into two parts.

Many of the sites were manned by their excavators, who very kindly took time off to show us round, We were especially grateful to Dr Karageorghis, the Director of the Department of Antiquities, who not only showed us his late Bronze Age defended site at Maa, on a promontory overlooking the sea, but also gave us a personal tour of the Museum of Cyprus at Nicosia. Many of us found it surprising that the earliest record of man in Cyprus was in the sixth millennium BC, but Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age sites, let alone the Archaic, Greek and Rome, are there in abundance. In particular, I enjoyed the sites of Khirokitia, a neolithic village on a steep slope in the foothills of the Troodos mountains, with its stone circular houses and long stone extended wall:: Kalavassos-Ayios Dhimitrios, a late Bronze Age settlement, which seems to have been a highly organised town with fine public buildings probably concerned with the copper trade from the mines a few kilometres distant, and Kition- under the modern town of Larnaca,- an ancient harbour town inhabited from about 1300 to 311 BC, when it was destroyed by earth­quakes. Here there were remains of the ‘Cyclopean Walls’ of the town, and five rectangular temples constructed of large ashlar blocks marked with ‘ship-graffiti’, no doubt because sea-going ships docked in the vicinity; to deal with exports of copper and possibly timber:

Those of us who are interested in Greek and Roman sites were pleased to visit Nea Paphos, the capital of Cyprus from the second century BC to the fourth century AD, when the area was devastated by earthquakes. Here we saw the city walls, the ‘Tombs of the Kings’ cut down into bedrock and constructed in the form of houses, plus the remains of two great houses – of Dionysus and Theseus, both with memorable mosaics, though the sight of a live Black Widow spider in a bottle found on the site a few minutes earlier was unnerving. Our final visit was to Kourion, where we had too short a stay, to see the Temple of Apollo, the theatre and the House of Eustolios. Our special thanks go to E.J. Peltenburg of Edinburgh University who. organised the programme of visits as well as showing us his own Chalcolithic site at Mosphilia in the Paphos area with its circular buildings, pit and chamber .graves – all set near a grove of bananas, lemons and pomegranates. The weather was hot, but during the middle of the day we would relax for a couple of hours in the shade of a taverna, while some of our members managed to swim in the sea.

UNIVERSITY OF LONDON DEPARTMENT OF EXTRA MURAL STUDIES

Lectures on Thursday evenings at the Institute of Archaeology, Gordon Square, at 7 pm (£2 at door)

November 6: Dr R.G. Robins, ‘Proportions and Style in Egyptian Art’

November 13: Dr J.A. Alexander, ‘Qasr Ibrim: Fortress of Nubia’

November 20: Dr D.T. Martin, ‘The Tomb of Horemheb’

November 27: J.D. Ray,- ‘The Carians in Egypt and the Decipherment of Carian Script’

December 4: Prof. H.S. Smith, ‘Memphis’

‘MUSEUM OF LONDON,
Saturday 8 November – DOMESDAY LONDON: THE MISSING PAGES Starts at.10.15 with John Clark on ‘The Making of the Domesday Survey’, followed until late afternoon with Alan Vince, ‘Saxon London and the Norman Conquest’, Gustav Milne, ‘Life along the Domesday Waterfront, Frances Pritchard, The Domesday Londoners’, John Schofield, ‘The Buildings of Domesday London’, John Clark, ‘Summing Up The Missing Pages’.

Tickets. £6.50, available from Citisights of London, Domesday 900-London, 102E Albion Road, London N16 9PD.

BRITISH MUSEUM LECTURES on Wednesdays at 6.15 pm in Lecture Theatre (free),

November 5: Prof. Barri Jones Hadrian’s Wall: New Discoveries

November 12:.Dr Tim Potter, ‘New Perspectives on Roman Britain’

November 19 Prof. Martin Biddle, ‘Royal Burials of Anglo-Saxon England’.

November 26: Dr. Warwick’ Rodwell, ‘The Archaeology of Churches

December 3: Prof. Peter Fowler, ‘Making our Countryside,: BC/AD”

OXFORD UNIVERSITY DEPT FOR EXTERNAL STUDIES conferences:

November 14-16: Art and Archaeology in Greece

November 22-23: Air photography and archaeology

December,. 12-14, _The origins of Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms

Two linked day schools, Making the Most of Statistics: An Introduction for local Historians’,

Saturday.15 November and Saturday 10′

January. 1987. Further details from Archaeology/Local History Course

Secretary, OUDES, Rewley House, 1. Wellington Square, Oxford OX1 2JA

RESCUE ARCHAEOLOGY – WHAT’S NEXT.

A conference will be held on this theme at the University of York on 19-21 December 1986.

An impressive line of 19 speakers are billed, including our Chairman. Fee is £20 -.nonresidential, Residential accommodation is available for an additional £42. Details: from Brenda Hobbs,.

RESCUE, 15A Bull Plain, Hertford, Herts., SG14 IDX.

This conference marks the final fifteen years of RESCUE; and is an opportunity to look into the future of rescue archaeology, and to assess its past achievements.

THE PAST IN THE PIPELINE (Archaeology. of the Esso Midline)

This is a glossy, coloured booklet published by The Trust for Wessex Archaeology. -This has been funded-entirely by the Esso Petroleum Company. The pipeline runs from Seisdon in Staffordshire to Fawley in Hampshire, in all crossing parts of five counties. There has been a major archaeological effort on Esso’s part throughout the pipeline route. They have financed radiocarbon dates, specialist reports, and the preparation of sites and monument data for five counties.

The booklet describes how the pipeline was built. Separate sec­tions deal with: Early Man, Iron Age farmer, After the Roman Conquest, Ancient Monuments, Wansdyke (a Saxon frontier), the Middle Ages, and, to conclude, living archaeology. It contains excellent material for teaching, especially the double-page spread of an Iron Age farmstead.

Free copies may be requested from: Corporate Affairs Department, Room T/11/22, Esso U.K. plc, ESSO House, Victoria Street, London SW1E 5JW TED SAMMES

Newsletter-188-October-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 188: October, 1986
TWENTY-FIVE NOT OUT

HADAS’s silver jubilee year is nearing its end. There’s, still a final flourish to come in the middle of this month – the opening on Oct. 18th of our exhibition “One Man’s Archaeology” at Church Farm House Museum. More of that later.

Four years ago, when we were 21, the April 1982 Newsletter published a year-by-year potted history of the Society. This time we hope you will enjoy a quick fly-past of some high spots in our 25 year existence. .

Starting point is the founding of the Society by a Graeco-Hendonian, Themistocles Constantinides, who badly wanted to establish Hendon’s Saxon origins. He gathered together a group of like-minded enthusiasts at Hendon Library in April 1961. From that meeting HADAS emerged, to be quickly equipped with a President, Vice-Presidents, officers, committee and 73 members. The first dig began almost at once, in the grounds and outbuildings of Church End Farm, which was then still standing. We dug each summer for 5 years, during which time we established a tradition of exhibiting at Church Farm House Museum by showing our finds there twice.

Those were the days when our archaeological belt had to be pulled very tight. How would today’s Hon.Treasurer feel if he had only £25.14s. 5d (old money) to juggle with at the end of the year? That was our credit balance in 1964, when we were 3 years old. When we were 10, in April 1971, we still had only £234,81 in the kitty. In 1972 we broke through to a four figure surplus The balance sheet presented at the 1986 AGM showed that our bank accounts (now plural, ‘please note), plus such assets as surveying equipment, amounted to £3980.13. Such figures would have seemed an impossible dream, as late as 1971.

When we were 4 on. April 1, 1965 – the London Borough of Barnet, created by the Local Government Act of 1963, came into being, taking unto itself the boroughs of Hendon and Finchley and the urban districts of Friern,Chipping and East Barnet, Our founders had, with foresight, given us the title of ‘Hendon & District.’ In the new, larger borough the ‘&’District’ took on a fresh meaning, as later digs in Friern Barnet, Finchley, High Barnet and Hadley were to testify.

In the early years. membership, like money, stayed stubbornly low, plummeting to a miserable 56 in 1963 and sticking at not much above 100 till 1972, In ‘73 it broke the 200 mark, in ’76 the 300 and in ’77 the 400. We stayed in the 400s until 3 years ago, when we began to slip back into the upper 300s (377 at the 1986 AGM). That sort of slippage seems to have happened in many areas of archaeology in the 1980s. The ’70s were heady times, both for, HADAS and for archaeology in general. The ’80s are not proving as propitious

Now for some of those high spots we mentioned.

Among them must be rated the recording of the tombstones in Hendon St Mary’s churchyard not only for itself but because it broadened our vistas and introduced us to a whole new area of work. We began at St Mary’s in 1970 and went on right through the decade. It was a happy experience. The church- yard was both pleasant and historic; its inscriptions led down many unexpected by-ways. Later we did similar recording in part of St James the Great, Friern Barnet; and there were two-‘rescue’ jobs – one at the Dissenters Burial Ground in Totteridge; the other in an early area of New Southgate cemetery,

The Quincentenary celebrations of the Battle of Barnet were, in large part, a HADAS brainchild, and the Society provided three of the 7-member organ­ising committee, including the Chairman and Hon Sec. The Committee spent 18 months on its plans, particularly those for the 3-week exhibition in the old Council Chamber in Wood Street, In the end the whole Borough, and many people outside it, became involved, Local Women’s Institutes and Townswomen’s Guilds embroidered 8 magnificent banners of the main commanders in the battle, as well as guidons, crests and pennons; local War-Gamers provided a spirited model of the entire battlefield, hillocks and ditches, mill and church, troops, horses, weapons, the lot, The Tower of London lent 15c armour and weapons and the British Museum lent mediaeval retainers badges; student calligraphers from HGS Institute produced, genealogies of the houses of York and Lancaster, and fine-lettered the eve-of-battle speeches of Warwick and. Edward IV. Lord Brook lent Warwick’s mace from Warwick Castle; and the University of Ghent made a special transparency; which we showed in a light-box, of their greatest medieval treasure, the 15c Ghent Manuscript. It was the illuminated heading of the chapter on the Battle of Barnet. HADAS members played a notable part both in setting up and in stewarding the book stall and exhibition, which was visited by 10,000 people..

Two digs stand out from among many; Church Terrace (1973/4) and West Heath (1976-81, 1984-6), Church Terrace established Hendon’s Saxon origins beyond doubt thereby fulfilling the vision of our founder and justifying the Society’s’ existence. Ditches of Saxon date, grass-tempered pottery and a rare Saxon pin was found. Only sad thing was that Mr. Constantinides had not lived to see his beliefs so triumphantly vindicated.

In l976 West Heath, with its attendant excitements, began, Apart from providing the London area with one of its most important Mesolithic sites, HADAS found itself appearing on ITV and on the BBC’s Chronicle programme; and moving up the academic ladder by providing training weeks for London University’s extramural Diploma and. for the Certificate in Field Archaeology.

1979 produced an unforgettable event: our Roman banquet, at which Roman food was served, Roman fashion, under Roman lighting, to guests attired in toga or tunic. (and even in centurion’s gear); the menfolk sported laurel wreaths, the tables stood under the eye of Roman household gods and the guests enjoyed Roman type entertainment(including readings from Homer) between the courses. As one member wrote afterwards “when we archaeologists let our hair down, we do it in style!

Skipping to 1984; we come to a day All Fools Day, naturally – when HADAS tangled with the clowns. This was the hilarious occasion (culmination of months, even years, of laborious and far-from hilarious HADAS work on the project of increasing the number of Blue Plaques in the Borough) when one of our most illustrious members, Spike Milligan, flanked either side by a clown in full dress (Mr Woo and Barney) unveiled a Blue Plaque on Finchley Memorial Hospital to the great clown Joseph Grimaldi who used to live nearby. Spike described it as the craziest opening ceremony of my life (a description which in itself was something of an achievement by HADAS)

Those are a few of peaks: in HADAS’s career so far, don’t forget, though, that you can’t have a peak unless there’s a good solid foundation underneath for it to spring from. So to end with here’s a reminder of the foundation which underlies our finer flights of fancy that foundation is our day-to-day archaeology, composed of many jobs done by many people- our research and field groups, our dedicated band of active diggers, our officers and all our members who deploy their talents on HADAS’s behalf. The jobs are manifold: they include the many smaller digs which don’t make headlines (except occasionally in the Newsletter) but all of which add to our knowledge. In 25 years we have dug on 26 sites all over the Borough of Barnet: no bad record.

Field exercises of various kinds come in this category -.resistivity meter­ing, field walking, street surveys, recording buildings and features. Then there is the job of spreading the knowledge we acquire as widely as we can by exhibitions, by publishing occasional papers, town trails, pamphlets by talks to schools and groups, even by getting the Newsletter into your letterbox each month. There is work on finds – pottery weekends at the Teahouse or flint Studies to back up West Heath reports; and research into maps, plans, photos and documents which precedes most digs. Last, but certainly not least, there is our programme of winter lectures and summer outings which holds the structure of the society together; and fund-raising efforts, like our inimitable Mini-mart, when 3 hours frenetic salesmanship usually earns our surplus for next year as well as plugging a few financial holes in current expenditure.

Taken one by one such ploys may sound bread and butter stuff: but you don’t grow into a healthy archaeological body unless you have your bread and butter. We’ve grown pretty strongly up to our 25th birthday: let’s hope we will continue to thrive in the years ahead which lead to a golden jubilee.

ONE MAN’S ARCHAEOLOGY

This exhibition, from Oct 18-December 7th at Church Farm House Museum, celebrates our 25th birthday and has been designed and organised by one of our founder members and vice-presidents, Ted Sammes.

It will be, so I’m told (I haven’t seen it yet, of course) a Ted’s-eye view of archaeology, describing how a younger Sammes was lured into the toils of this most addictive of hobbies and why it has provided a near life-time’s pleasure,”Toils” isn’t a half-bad word to describe what archaeology does to you: many is the time I’ve seen Ted wielding a pick-axe in a downpour, hacking through a layer of gravel compounded into the sticky clay of Middlesex – and if that isn’t toil, in pursuit of knowledge, I don’t know what is.

Though I haven’t seen the exhibition, Ted has kindly given me a preview by providing the manuscript of the brochure which will accompany it. I can assure HADAS members they are in for a treat: a visit (and probably more than one) is a definite must,

This is perhaps the moment to let you know that SUN OCT. 19 HAS BEEN EAR­MARKED AS A SPECIAL DAY FOR MEMBERS. Do come along then, between 2-5.30.pm to see the show, meet your HADAS friends and shake hands with Ted himself. He might even autograph his new booklet on the Church Terrace dig, which will be on sale- if you press a pen firmly into his hand.

,

Displays at the Museum will deal not only with aspects of HADAS with which Ted has been specially concerned, but also with the new horizons, here and abroad, which archaeology opened for him. He’s an outstanding photographer (as many of you already know, and as everyone will be able to see at the exhibition the places he has visited on trips abroad, camera in hand, read like a digger’s litany: Ayia Irini (Cyprus),. prehistoric temples in Ephesus, Catal Huyuk, Sogazkoy, Yasilikaya. Come and see them, and many more. Brigid Grafton Green

Ted’s booklet on Church Terrace – HADAS Occasional Paper No 6 – is called Pinning Down the Past – Some Finds from a Hendon Dig. Price isn’t yet finalized but will be around £1.50.

GLASS FROM THE END OF THE DAY

While you are at Church Farm House Museum, don’t miss a display downstairs of the John Franks Collection of English Cottage Glass. Here GERRARD ROOTS, Curator of the Museum, describes it:

“Until Dec 31 Church. Farm House Museum is holding an exhibition of this unusual glass sometimes referred to as ‘end-of-day glass” which was produced throughout the Victorian period. Made sometimes as apprentice pieces, but more often produced by small glass-making concerns by using up all the pots of coloured glass left over from their main work (hence end-of-day) cottage glass was primarily aimed at a working class market.

The shapes of the glassware on show illustrate in a popular manner changes in taste during the 19c, from the elaborateness of Gothic to the sinuous lines of art nouveau, whilst their method of manufacture ensures that the coloring of each piece is unique. Some of the glass is bizarre, some is most pleasing, none is without interest. I do hope that HADAS members will visit what is the most comprehensive display of this material to be shown in Britain in recent years”.

DATES FOR YOUR DIARY

Sat Oct 4. The outing to Winchester Domesday Exhibition is full, with a short waiting list. If anyone still wants to go please phone Dorothy-Newbury (203 0950) the night before sometimes there are last minute cancellations

Tues Oct 7. Opening lecture of the winter season at Hendon Library: Lost Kingdoms of the Middle Nile- Valley by Dr John Alexander

Many members will know Dr Alexander from his Diploma courses some years ago; others will recall his previous excellent lectures to HADAS on Quasr Ibrim and the History of the Safety Pin. He is Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Cambridge and we welcome his return visit.

LECTURE INFORMATION for new members. Buses 183 and 143 pass, the. Library, which is 10 minutes’ walk from Hendon Central Underground Station and a few minutes’ walk from the 113 (Edgware) and 240 and 125 (Quadrant Hendon) buses; There are 2 free carparks opposite the Library. Members may bring guests to one lecture, but if they wish to attend further lectures visitors should be invited to join the Society. Will new and old members please make every effort to introduce themselves to each other.

Getting to lectures is becoming quite a problem nowadays for those who don’t drive. Some older members can’t face the journey alone in these times of muggers and disturbance on streets and public transport. If you are a driver, can you help by offering a lift? Not necessarily regularly, as that can be a tie; but by giving members who live near you your phone number, so they can ring and ask if a lift is available? And when you are at a lecture, could you offer a lift home?

Sat Oct.1st, MINIMART, St Mary’s Church House, Greyhound Hill, NW4, 2.30. Goods and help still needed. Last minute offerings can be handed in on lecture night, Oct 7 but we would prefer to have them earlier for sorting and pricing: bric-a-brac, clothing, books, toiletries, unwanted gifts and jewellery. Please let us have them and help the Society’s funds. Food on the day will be most welcome: cakes, pies, bread, sausage rolls, jams, chutneys; sweets, fruit, herbs, Brigid Grafton Green will be delighted to know, on 455 9040, what goodies you hope to bring.

And a special SOS for 2 or 3 tough people to transport goods to the hall on Saturday morning between 8.30-9 am again ring Dorothy if you can volunteer.

Sat Oct 18 – Dec17. HADAS exhibition, One Man’s Archaeology, at Church Farm House Museum, Hendon (see above). Several members have offered to man our bookstall on Sats & Suns during this 7-week period. We have a rota -please ring Dorothy Newbury if you can add your name to it, even a couple of hours will help.

Tues Nov 4. Lecture, Hendon Library: The Roman City Project 1986. By Gustav Milne

Fri Dec 12. Christmas Supper and tour at the Gatehouse of the Priory of the Order of St John in Clerkenwell.

DOROTHY NEWBURY

A LETTER FROM 1821

(with some notes in brackets by Nell Penny)

Dear Reader,

Please take a short walk with me on May 31, 1821. I will be your guide to the ‘Burrows’ and Church End. I know the district well because I live there and I am Clerk to the Hendon Vestry. I have been told that Golders Green is named for one of my forbears. Today I am working as an enumerator for the national Census. At the front of my notebook I have copied down the questions I am ordered to ask at each door. They are:

1. The name of the householders

2. The number of families in the house

3. The occupation(s) of the head(s) of the household (s)

4. The number of males/females in the house and their ages

Filling in the details of the answers to the last question is going to take some time. I have to divide the householders into occupational classes: (a) agriculture; (b) trade, manufacturing, handicraft; (c) others.

The vestry has ordered the enumerators to ask three further questions, of ‘cottagers’ (as distinct from gentry, NP). What rent do they pay? How many windows has their house? Have they a dog? The motives for asking these further questions are not quite clear. Window tax is not payable on houses with fewer than seven windows. No cottager owns land to be taxed at about 4s (20p) in the £ and poor people’s dogs are exempt from the 3s (15p) tax. Perhaps the gentlemen of the vestry wish to find out which dogs have been worrying sheep and birds.

When we have finished we shall have called at 83 houses, finding 4 of them empty. Gentlefolk, among whom I count myself, live in 10 of the houses, but we do not hold ourselves aloof from common folk in a special district; I live in a house between those of a ‘taylor’ and a cordwainer. It is difficult to decide which persons can be classified under ‘agricultural occupations.’ I am noting down 19 such which means I have decided to class farmers and `yearly contracted farm workers together, but to enter day labourers as “others” along with gentlemen-and gentlewomen and those employed in what you might call the service industries,. Tradesmen are shopkeepers like Thomas Jackson who has a general shop in the Burrows, and Thomas Bennett the baker. Of ‘manufacturers’ we seem to have none, but of men ‘engaged in handicraft’ I can find you carpenters, blacksmiths, cordwainers, taylors, gardeners and a sawyer.

You say there is ‘a great deal of noise along the road? No wonder there are have two workhouses -You say you cannot see either of them? Our own parish house is a low building near Burrows Pond (the-modern flats at the Prothero Gardens corner of Watford Way/The Burroughs are nearest to the site now, NP), I have counted 35 inmates, including 2 infants, 4 young children and 18 men and women between 60-80 years old.

The other workhouse is the orphanage belonging to St Clement Dane’s parish, in 1815 that parish bought the lease of Burrows Place from Mr James Allen of Clerkenwell. The property consisted of a “messuage, gardens, stables and a coachhouse.” If you cannot see Burrows Place you must look for a house with a row of poplars in front of it. The house had 99 inmates – 31 of them infants and 38 children between 5-10 years. If you think it must be expensive for a London parish to maintain some of its poor in a village outside London, you must remember that 50 years ago, when Parliament was told that four out of every five children born in the City and Westminster workhouses died before they reached their first birthday, it was enacted that children under 6 years old must, be boarded out more than 3 miles from the City.

A much quieter establishment than the workhouses is Mrs Williams’ school. At present she has 10 boarders between 5-15 years. Mary Burneby looks after a few young children in her cottage with 5 windows; the parish may pay her to care for orphans and bastard babies. But we have three women who maintain themselves and their families by taking in washing. Widow Weston lives alone in her cottage with one window, but Widow Piggott has a family of two to support in her cottage with two windows (do windows, in these instances, mean rooms? NP). She pays £10 a year rent and keeps a puppy for the children.

Now I have finished my task and. I must go to the Greyhound Inn at Church End. Census enumeration is thirsty work, and I shall kill two birds with one stone. I will also deposit my notebook in the cupboard in the parish room at the inn – the one with the bow window.

I am, dear Sir or Madam,
Your obedient servant

JAMES GOODYER

Clerk to the Vestry
St Mary’s, Hendon

NEWSLETTER INDEX

HADAS is lucky in having two professional indexers among its members, who have been prepared to put their expertise at the Society’s, disposal, indexing, as well as being time-consuming, is a highly-skilled occupation.

The first 10 years of the Newsletter (1969-79) were admirably indexed for us by Freda Wilkinson. When she found, regretfully, that she must give up, Jean Neal took on the task, and produced the index for 1980, Now Jean has completed the 2-year index for 1981-82; and she tells us that1983-84 is nearing completion, -When it is ready we shall be as near up to the minute .as we’ve ever been, index wise.

That news will be rapturously received by those members who like to acquire a photo-copy of each index; and also by the various libraries that receive regular Newsletters and want to be able to refer to them quickly.

We have further cause for congratulation: HADAS also has a member who is prepared to type Mrs Neal’s manuscript indexes – another time-consuming job which needs expert handling. For that we are indebted to Deirdre Barrie, who is in fact typing. 1981-82 as this Newsletter is published.

Will any member who would like a copy of the latest index please let Brigid Grafton Green know (455. 9040)? It will probably run to same 14 or 15 double column A4 pages: a photo-copy may cost about 75.-90 pence, plus postage. At this stage we can’t be more exact than that.


FRAGMENTS. FROM OUR FINDS TRAY

The Repton dig (HADAS visited Aug ’84) unearthed a sculpture of a Mounted warrior who Martin Biddle thinks is King Aethelbald of Mercia. He ruled for 41 years & was buried at Repton AD 757. If true this would be earliest known sculpture of an English king.

Annual Museum of London Archaeo­logy Lecture will be by Harvey Sheldon, Dec 1, 6pm, on Work of Dept.of Greater London Archaeo­logy. Tickets from Museum Press Office.

LAMAS Conference at Museum of London on Archaeology of London Region to 1500: Oct 25/26. Powerful panel of speakers (many well-known to HADAS) from John Wymer on lower Palaeolithic (10.15 am Sat) to Bridget Cherry on mediaeval churches (4.45 pm Sun). Tickets £8.

TL dating on flints from Le Moustier (type-site of the Moueterian) has produced dates between 115,000 – 40,000, says a recent paper in Nature. This suggests a time over­lap between Neanderthal Man and Homo sapiens, and therefore the possibility of interbreeding

Museum of London’s autumn attractions include “Capital Gains” – story of the last 15 years of excavation in London (on until Feb 1 1987). Lectures and workshops tie in with the exhibition – including two workshops (Dec 4, 11): on environmental material illustrating medieval diet. LAMAS private view. (open to HADAS members as affiliates) Oct 29, 6.30-8.30 pm.Tickets £2.50 (send a sae) from Mrs Parnum, 28 Wolseley Gns W4 3LR).

“Common Ground” founded 1983, to promote the community heritage common plants and animals, local places and local links with the past – has launched its first pro­ject: making of parish maps by local groups. More information from Common Ground, 45 Shelton. St. WC2.

At 1.15 Weds, Oct 15-Nov 19 in’ British Museum lecture theatre, 6 lectures to celebrate the Brit­ish School at Athens, including talks on Knossos, Lefkandi, Mycenaea, etc. No tickets needed.

Digging inside Danebury hillfort has finished, though Barry Cunliffe plans excavations outside the fort next season. One fifth of the interior will be kept as an archeological reserve & not touch­ed for a century. A Museum of the Iron Age is opening at Andover for finds from 18 years excavations at Danebury.

At British Museum next month spe­cial Sat study days: Nov 1 pre­history, Nov 8 Roman Britain; Nov 29 Medieval Britain. Details from 636 1555 ext-511

Excavations at York this summer produced evidence for the ‘lost’ 8th/9th c Anglian city of Eorforwic which suggests it was a riverside trading town like London’s Aldwych and Southampton’s Hamwic. The ‘wic’ towns are one of the most exciting areas of British archaeology at present.

Shire Archaeology’s latest: Rock Carvings of Northern Britain by Stan Beckenstall, £2.50. Cup and ring marks, concentric circles, ducts and channels, spirals, peck marks, even what looks like an outside game of noughts and crosses.

Letter to The Times from Acting President of the Church Monument Society calls for more care for sepulchral monuments inside churches as well as in churchyards. He describes some as “being allowed to crumble away from lack of interest,’ and appeals for more people to try to save monuments in churches.

Our colleagues in Enfield Archaeological Society (who have an enviable record of publication) have produced “Theatres, Music Hall and Cinemas in London-Borough of Enfield” by Geoffrey Gillam (56 pp, numerous illustrations) price £4.30 inc; postage. From author, 23.MertonRd, En­field EN2 OLS.

Repair work on the shrine of St Alban, in St Albans Cathedral, is likely soon to provide a chance for Martin Biddle to examine the site under controlled archaeolog­ical conditions – a unique oppor­tunity to disentangle the history of the shrine and of the cult of St Alban.

University of Sheffield Archaeology Dept. offers weekend “Skill Schools:” intensive weekend courses (max 15 students), using its labs on Environmental Archaeology (Oct 24/26); Human Bones (Nov 21/23); Animal Bones (Feb 6/8). Fee £49 per week­end inclusive. Book with Dept. Archaeo­logy) Sheffield University, Sheffield S10 2TN.

Niall Sharpies, directing the Maiden Castle dig, has (says The Times) found 3 circular houses (c.200 BC) with stone ovens and paved entrance porches; grain-storage pits; 30,000 animal bones; and many small finds. English Heritage intends to build a “visitors centre” about a mile from the site;’ & a-flock of English Heritage sheep (15 in The Times, 12 in The Guardian) in care of their own shepherdess, are in future to ‘nibble-mow’ the grass.

From Ireland news that peat-cutting has unearthed, in a bog in Co. Longford, evidence of timber trackways similar to those found by John Coles in the Somerset Levels – a Bronze Age track dated c 1250 BC and another Iron Age, one dated by dendrochronology to 148 BC. Incidentally Somerset Levels Paper No 12 is now available, £6 plus 80p. Postage, from Dept. of Archaeology, University of Exeter (Queens Building), Exeter, Devon EX4 4QH.

HADAS AT THE OLD BAILEY

STEWART WILD reports on a visit on Sept 18 to the Central Crimi­nal court.

A select band of some 20 HADAS enthusiasts was fortunate to participate recently in an after-hours tour of the Central Criminal Court, Old Bailey, organised by Mary O’Connell. Visits to this august and historic building are normally limited to foreign dignitaries and persons with connections in high places, but through Mary’s professional contacts as an official London guide we were privileged to enjoy a fascinating tour conducted by the Keeper of the Old Bailey, Captain Ray Whitehouse.

We started in a memorabilia room below ground at the corner of the building where Old Bailey joins Newgate

Street. This of course is the site of the New Gate in the old Roman wall (a section of the wall can still be seen) and as Bailey means a fortified place, thus its use as a prison. The old Newgate Gaol was demolished around 1770 and rebuilt as a prison and sessions house in 1776. Outside opposite the famous Magpie and Stump public house, ­public executions were held; the last was in 1868. The current building dates from 1907 and was considerably extended in 1972; there hasn’t been a prison on the site for more than a century.

We saw the central gallery on the first floor, recently refurbished and showing no sign of the considerable damage caused by a flying bomb in 1943. Interesting comparisons were made between the original murals painted and dated in 1906 and these by the same artist (G Moira) painted 48 years later when repairs to wartime damage were completed in 1954.

Our next stop was No 1. Court, since. 1907 the most famous in the land, in its dock has stood the majority of the most infamous and notorious criminals of our time, from Crippen onwards. Captain Whitehouse proved an. excellent guide, full of knowledge and anecdote to hold our interest, Mary O’Connell stood in the dock whilst court routine was explained, but was released with a recommendation that this sort of thing be done more often!.

Afterwards we visited Court No 5, one of the 12 ‘modern style’ courts built in 1972, and then downstairs again to see the holding cells and transfer area where the accused are brought and kept pending their appearance in the docks upstairs, but (fortunately for us) never held overnight. Some members expressed disappointment that recent renovation had robbed them of the oppor­tunity to see any graffiti on the corridor walls. What a contrast between the prisoners’ quarters below and the law courts above.

The tour ended in the sumptuous Sheriffs’ dining room on the first floor with a hearty vote of thanks for Captain Whitehouse for giving us such a fine tour and to Mary O’Connell for making it possible.

NEWS ABOUT HADAS PEOPLE

One member who travelled far this summer – to the American Deep South and beyond is D MAIR LIVINGSTONE, who retired a year or two back from the Public Health Laboratory-at Colindale. One of her specialties is the study of mycoplasida. “It’s a little organism I’ve always been fond of,” she-explains. “It’s not quite up to being a bacterium, but it can cause a lot of trouble.” Apparently throughout the world people are studying mycoplasma for varying reasons. Dr Livingstone is interested in its effects in gynaecology but since it concerns animals, insects and plants as well as humans, its researchers.’ include vets, bee-keepers and plant pathologists, to name a few. Every two years they all meet at a different centre to tell each other what they’ve found out. Two years ago, it was Jerusalem, before that Tokyo this year it’s Alabama. After the US the Livingstones intend to go north to Vancouver Island.

Sad news about two members this month. CRAIGIE MEYER (a HADAS member for 15 years, who joined when she was Craigie Beswick) says that her husband FRANK (also a longtime member), had a nasty accident last May. He was knocked down by a car in Kenton Road and has not yet completely recovered from his injuries. We wish him a full return to health in the near future.

And ERIC WARD who has so often helped us with photographic assignments, reports that he is no better: indeed, although he manages in the house without a wheelchair, he uses one when he goes out. All his HADAS friends will feel greatly for him – someone so active must find it horribly frustrating.

A sharp-eared HADAS listener, tuning in to BBC Radio London on the morning of Sept.161 picked up a familiar voice – PERCY REBOUL being interviewed about one of his pet hobby-horses – the need for a museum of plastics. Percy is Chairman of the Plastics History Society, which aims to preserve the records of the discovery and use of plastics (first material which could be called plastic was parkesine, an early type of celluloid, invented around 1860).: Percy has promised to write a piece about the subject for the Newsletter -. so that’s a treat in store.

Some time ago we reported that NIGEL HARVEY,.near-founder member of HADAS, was carrying out a study of historic farm buildings for the Ministry of Agriculture (MAFF) and the Council for British Archaeology. Earlier this year his first publication for this project appeared: Historic Farm Build­ings Study: Sources of Information (published by the Agricultural Development and Advisory Service of MAFF at £5). It is designed as a working tool for those involved or interested in ancient farm buildings and is jam-packed with solid facts. Want to know what surveys of old barns have been made, where, when and by whom? This will tell you. Want to know what’s been written on the subject? The bibliography is extensive, with lists of modern books/booklets; details of county inventories nearly 2 pages giving titles and whereabouts of unpublished texts.

A delightful final appendix provides historical facts and quotations that you might like to have at your fingertips should you wish to argue about “repellent modern buildings.’ It is surprising to find that the first protest 1810, by William Wordsworth. It concerns a building that a Leicestershire farmer who had moved to the Lake District tactlessly built near the poet’s home at Grasmere. Wordsworth demolished it verbally as “a huge unsightly barn, built solely for convenience and violating all the modesty of rural proportions.”

LITA SILVER – a keen supporter of outings and lectures; who joined us 10 years ago, when we had an exhibition in an empty shop at the then brand new Brent Cross has recently moved to Chinley, near Stopkport Like many members who move, she’s decided to keep up her HADAS membership. She writes to say that her new home is near a good starting point for the Pennine Way and she would be happy to welcome any HADAS friends who may be in the area.

PETE and JENNY GRIFFITHS: were active HADAS members till recently pillars of the Roman Group, keen West Heathers and participants in most HADAS acti­vities. That was while they lived first in Barnet and, then London Colney. Now they have moved further out, to Litlington, a village hear Royston on the Cambridge/Herts border. They still keep up their HADAS connection although now, alas; we don’t see them nearly so often.

There is a wealth of local archaeology and history around their new abode – but not many of their neighbours seem to be interested. Jenny is hoping they may be able to change that. She has started by researching the history of their own house, which she describes as “originally 2up, 2down with a passage through the middle.” It has a suggested date of 16/17c. Though it has been remodelled outside, some early features remain within, including a huge walk-in fireplace and many original beams. You can even see the Tudor carpenter’s marks – like a little “3” on a mortice joint and a corresponding “3” on the tenon .that fitted it. The house has been extended at the back so when you walk along the passage to the master bedroom you are walking along the top of the old back wall..

The village is as interesting as the house at neighbouring Lithlow Hill there are the-remains of a round barrow; nearby runs Ashwell Street – a road that has caused much argument it the past about whether it is Roman or a branch of the prehistoric Ickneild Way, .Romanised later; ‘.and modern histories of Cambridgeshire record, that a large Roman courtyard villa was excavated on the outskirts of the village in 1822, in what Jenny suspects may have been a rather hit-and-miss excavation. Some finds from it are in the Museum of Archaeology .and Anthropology in Cambridge. Near the villa was a 3c Romano-British cemetery in a field with the evocative name ‘Heaven’s Walls.’ ‘Part of the villa/cemetery area has been destroyed or sealed under a modern housing estate; but part is probably still under open fields. It sounds the right sort of setting for a pair of HADAS enthusiasts.

DIGHT ME A PEACOCK

by

Muriel Large

An interest in medieval cookery was aroused by the chance find in a public library .of Lorna Sass’s book “To the King’s Taste,” in which the recipes of Richard 11’s cooks are set out with modern equivalents of measures and in­gredients, I was rather put off by recipes which began “Hack your chicken in pieces and cast him into a boiling cauldron.” It evoked a vision of a large castle kitchen, hot and steam-filled, with many cooks hacking and casting. The total effect was more of a battlefield than a temple of culinary art.

The interest was, however, further developed by the discovery of a booklet on sale at Goodrich.Castle (and no doubt elsewhere) on “Food and Cooking in Medieval Britain” by Maggie Black (English Heritage, £1.50). One or two extracts may be useful when planning the next dinner party.

The high spot, of course, is the peacock even though the flesh may be found tough and indigestible (it says). However, it must be served as in life in full plumage; the well-prepared cook will keep a cured skin with feathers; feathered head with beak, and tail feathers, handy in the drawer next to the food processor. To present the bird “as if sitting upright on its nest,” the head should be held erect by a rod thrust through the mouth and down the throat.

(If your supermarket is out of peacocks, you can always fall back on a Swan and as a guide to cost, we know that this was 3s,4d in 1380, The Bird must be presented garlanded and crowned, on a silver or gold stand with wings erect, neck arched backwards, head erect.” The effect should be stunning).

However, to return to your peacock, to dight him you

“breke his neck and kutte his throate and fle him….. draw him

as a hene …. and roste him,” When he is rosted ynowe take`him offa and lete him kele,

then wynde the skyn with the fethurs and the taile about the body and serue him forthe as he were alive.”

To accompany the fowl, what about buttered wortes (i.e. vegetables)?

“Take all maner of good herbes that you may gete and put them on the fire with faire water; put thereto clarified butter a great quantite. Whan thei ben boyled ynogh, salt hem; late none ‘otemele (oatmeal?) come therein. Dise brede small in disshes and powre on the wortes, and.serue hem forth.”

For a sweet course there are Pokerounce, i,e. honey toasts with pine nuts, a similar dish being called Poor Knights.

The book contains many other recipes as well as hints on how to behave at table, and for the whetted appetite there are further booklets covering food and cooking from prehistoric Britain to the 19c, to add a new dimension to life for the adventurous cook (with an understanding family …)

THE SEVEN AGES OF-COOKERY

As a follow-up to Muriel Large’s exploits with a peacock, here are details of the sevenfold series of cook booklets published last year by English Heritage:

Food and Cooking in Prehistoric Britain Jane Renfrew

Food and Cooking in Roman Britain Jane Renfrew

Food and Cooking in Medieval Britain Maggie Black

Food and Cooking in 16c Britain Peter Brears

Food and Cooking in 17c Britain Peter Brears

Food and Cooking in 18c Britain Jennifer Stead

Food and Cooking in 19c Britain Maggie Black

The booklets vary between 44-52 pages, and are illustrated with line drawings by Peter Brears. The first half of each deals with the culinary history of the period; the second gives recipes.

Prehistoric cookery is, understandably, the least convincing because there are no written sources however, Mrs Renfrew contrives to deduce a lot from archaeological evidence about what foods may have been available (taking climatic conditions into account) and how they might have been cooked and served. She doesn’t shirk the lower Paleolithic, in general terms; but when it comes to recipes she points out that there are “several practical restraints” i.e. mammoth steaks and rhino joints are hard to come.by.” So her prehistoric recipes are confined to “the early postglacial period… to the -end of the Iron Age.” In fact the recipes (some of which sound quite horrible) are based. on classic cookery writers such as Mrs Beeton and Elizabeth. David; on modern writers about hedgerow food; and on regional cookbooks from e.g. the Shetlands.

I to-and the Roman booklet a trifle disappointing. It will contain few surprises for HADAS cooks, since all the recipes are basically from Apicius. Mrs Renfrew has drawn heavily on the Flower & Rosenbaum translation (pub 1958 and republished 1974), not only for recipes but also for notes about ingred­ients and methods. – Experience in the Roman cookery courses run by Southampton University and our own experiments for Our Roman banquet suggest that a more practical selection of recipes might have been made; and it seems a pity to settle for anchovy essence as a substitute for garum when, as our cooks know, a good garum can be made and bottled at home.

The remaining booklets have much documentary material to draw on, and they follow an expected pattern. The booklets are obtainable, price £1.50 each, from English Heritage, PO Box 43, Ruislip, Middx HA4OXW. The set costs £9.95 plus £1, 50 postage; post on single copies is, 25p.

BGG

THE USE OF OBSIDIAN

The 1986 Bulletin of Experimental Archaeology has recently appeared it is as always, full of unexpected titbits, Here, for instance, is a piece about modern experiments with obsidian, from Fracture Mechanics, Ltd, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado. It is headed Surgery with Obsidian and Glass Blades:

For some years now we have learned from press reports that the use of obsidian and glass blades for certain forms of surgery has been successfully revived in the ‘United States. The fullest discussion we have seen is by Sharon McIlrath in American Medical News, Nov 2 1984. The starting point was the discovery by Don Crabtree in late 1960s of a technique of rapidly producing standardised obsidian blades; their surgical uses were recognised at once and tested in surgery by Crabtree himself in 1980. The Medical profession has accepted them and two Crabtree disciples formed separate commercial organ­isations (Fracture Mechanics Ltd and Aztechnics Inc.) to produce respectively glass and Obsidian scalpels to the required specifications. The blades are 12-15 cm long; parallel-sided and unretouched with a range of tip shapes; plastic coating serves as handle, and although they are sterile when supplied, they can be resterilised and – within limits – reused. Electron microscopy shows that they are 500 times sharper than surgical steel blades the finer edge makes a cleaner incision and facilitates healing. If they are correctly used, on soft tissues only, breakage is not a problem, but their use is at present specialised, they are more expensive than steel, but cheaper than diamond scalpels. The ‘medical profession is pressing for controlled trials to evaluate their uses. The direct prototypes of ‘these blades were used by Maya and Aztec Indians until the Spanish Conquest, when it is believed they were suppressed in favour of imported metal blades. The initiative in this revival has come from archaeologists, the production is commercial and (as the Aztechnics brochure puts it) “the resultant product is a perfect blend of stone age technology with space age demands.”

HADAS GOES SOUTHWEST

PADDY MUSGROVE reports on the September weekend in Exeter. HADAS members who set off by coach on Sept 18 for Exeter wisely were equipped with woollies and rainproof clothing to cope with all possible perils of Dartmoor and Exmoor. On Sept 21 they returned with sun-reddened faces after what must have been the best weather of 1986. The 30 who left London were joined in Exeter by Julius and Tamara Baker.also by the Morgans (now of Charmouth) and for the Dartmoor expedition, by the Spiegelhalters (now of Bideford),

On the outward trip to Mardon Hall, Exeter University there was just time for a rapid assault on Maiden Castle. From the height of the viewing ‘gantry’ there we were able to observe the large area excavated this year in the southwest corner, next to one of Sir Mortimer Wheeler’s trenches of 50 years ago. The gantry also provided an impressive view along the formidable southern defences.

Niall Sharples, director of this major investigation by the Trust for Wessex Archaeology, kindly took time to comment on some of the features, such as large storage pits, round house and post holes. This, the second year of the 2-year programme, has to finish by the end of September; its main purpose has been to study the occupation of the hillfort in the period immediately before its sacking by Vespasian in 43 or 44AD.

In Devon our escorts and preceptors on the moors were to be Henrietta and Norman Quinnell, but on the afternoon of our arrival we were whisked off for a lively walking tour of Exeter with Neil Holbrook, Asst. Director of the Exeter Museum’s Archaeological Field Unit. We climbed the oddly shaped Norman motte which is squeezed into one corner of the Roman-medieval town walls, and observed in front of the Cathedral’s West End the forum site and that of the earlier bath-house of the legionary HQ. Exetert Museum hope eventually to excavate this, together with a possible cockpit.

Rougemont Castle was built by William in 1068, but only the gateway remains. Its architect obviously gave the contract to a local firm; the-masons insisted on introducing their own touches to the Norman design, such as dis­tinctive ‘long-and-shorts Saxon quoins!

Two excavations are in progress in the City One is just outside the wails, where a 12ft deep ditch, frequently re-cut and extended, is close to a suspected Roman cremation cemetery. Another is the ancient manor house and farm of Hayes Barton, which can be traced back to the 12c. Used in the Civil War by besieging Royalists as a position for cannons, the buildings were demo­lished by disgruntled Parliamentarians in a sally across the river. With no subsequent building on the site, it is providing a splendid opportunity of studying an early manor house and farm as they survived into the 17c.

In preparation for our expeditions into Exmoor and Dartmoor, Mrs Quinnell gave us an illuminating talk on the rich prehistoric remains on the moors. Few of the hundreds of sites have been dug, let alone properly dated; the purpose of many of them remains obscure; many more certainly are to be discovered.

Some of the monuments were of a type unfamiliar to many in our party in particular the Dartmoor reaves (low prehistoric boundary banks, sometimes runn­ing for several kilometres) and the ubiquitous and enigmatic “stone rows.” In Exmoor at Five Barrows (where, in fact, there are 9 or more round barrows of various sizes and shapes) we found after much searching the double rows of smallish local stones, now partly buried in encroaching spaghnum moss, known earlier as the White Ladder. In Dartmoor, however, substantial granite boulders used for stone rows stood proud as noticeable landscape features.

Reaves and stone rows abounded, but perhaps the most intriguing site if only for its complexity, was Merrivale, between Two Bridges and Tavistock. Here are standing stones, a stone circle, many stone hut circles, cairns, barrows cists and two major stone rows – one single, another ia double row incorporating a cairn with a very small cist.

Another Bronze Age settlement was on the slopes of Leeden Tor where a near-circular stone enclosure neatly surrounds a group of hut circles in an area notable for long-distance reaves. Wambarrows, Winsford Hill and the Iron Age hillforts of Shoulsbury Castle Woodbury and Blackbury were other prehistoric sites visited, together with a deserted Dartmoor medieval village cosily set in the valley east of Hound Tor.

The village was abandoned in the 14c, probably because of deteriorating climate. The stone walls of the longhouses to be seen today probably date from the 12c, at which time they replaced turf houses which possibly went back to the 8c. Maurice Beresford claims that the standing remains of these houses are amongst the most noteworthy in the country.

Even on the journey home there were sites and sights, including the cathe­dral-like caves at Beer south Devon, where beer stone has been quarried since Roman times. Beer stone is to be seen today in Exeter and Winchester cathe­drals and is recorded as being used in Westminster Hall and Abbey, the Tower of London and London Bridge.

Pleasant event on Friday was a visit to the. Old Rectory at Clayhanger, home of Desmond Collins, director at West Heath 1976-81, we are most grateful to him and his wife far entertaining the HADAS party to tea in their charming old house and gardens. So far no mention has been made of Anne and Alan Lawson, yet it was they who made the plans, did the recce and nursed and cajoled us only as necessary. They were presented; very appropriately, with a copy of Desmond’s recent book “Palaeolithic Europe – a Theoretical and Systematic. Study” (pub. Clayhanger Books, of The Old Rectory, Clayhanger, Devon!)

Newsletter-187-September-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter No. 187: September 1986 Edited by :Christine Arnott
This is the time of year when plans for the forthcoming autumn and winter seasons have be considered. HADAS has a busy programme ahead and we hope you will all enjoy and take part in it. Below are listed some of the opportunities available in London that have recently come to our notice, plus current information from HADAS.

West Heath Digging continues until the end of September on the Mesolithic site and this is our final year for excavation. Please ring Margaret Maher – 907 0333 or Myfanwy Stewart – 447 3025 if you can come and support them, the site is open six days a week (excepting Saturdays).

Burnt Oak Car Park Site. A date has now been agreed- 25th August for the commencement of our 2 months access to the site, which means we must try to open some trenches in September – so please let me know at once if you want to be a “digger!’ or helper then I can keep you informed of the final details – Brian Wrigley 21 Woodcroft Avenue, NW7 2AH (tel. 959 5982).

That means there are two appeals for active participation in HADAS projects – please do come forward with offers of help in any capacity.

DIARY

THURSDAY 18TH SEPTEMBER PLEASE NOTE CHANGE OF DATE

Evening Visit to Old Bailey – Mary O’Connell, Redecoration is in progress at the Old Bailey and it is regretted that this postponement clashes with the Exeter departure. Only very small party can be accepted so if you wish to participate please return the enclosed application form quickly.

Thurs: – Sun 18-21 September Exeter Weekend Ann and Alan Lawson We have no waiting list at all and a possible place to fill. If anyone would still like to join this trip, phone 203 0950.

Saturday 4th October Winchester “Domesday 900″‘Exhibition The coach is full with a short waiting list. Please apply to Dorothy Newbury (203 0950) if you would like to be added to the list. There are usually a few cancellations.

Tuesday.7th October Lecture at Hendon Library. “Lost Christian Kingdoms of the Middle Nile Valley”- Dr. John Alexander

Saturday 11th October Minimart at St. Mary’s Church House – please send saleable items, offers of help, and above all, come and buy. (See attached leaflet) 455 2751 or 203 0950

Saturday 18th October – 7th Dec HADAS Exhibition “One Man’s Archaeology Church Farmhouse Museum, Hendon Ted Sammes

Offers of help to man our bookstall at the Exhibition on Saturdays and Sundays would be welcome. A couple of hours would help. Please ring Dorothy Newbury (203 0950)

Tuesday 4th November Lecture at Hendon Library. The Roman City Centre Project 1986 – Gustav Milne

FRIDAY 12TH DECEMBER PLEASE NOTE CHANGE OF DATE AND VENUE Christmas Supper and Tour at the Gatehouse of the Priory of The Order of St John in Clerkenwell. Please reserve this date.

DAY AND EVENING CLASSES 1986-87

Extra-mural Studies, The City University, London EC1 VOHR Telephone 01-253 4399 ext. 3268/9.

Britain Before the Romans – an extra-mural course of 10 meetings weekly starting either 7.10.86 or 13.1.87 or 28.4.87 – all lectures begin at 6.30 p.m. to 8.30 p.m. £20 for each 10 meetings session. This is designed to give an outline of the archaeology of early Britain and put recent discoveries in their context. Lindow man, the Yorkshire chariot burials, Hambledon Hill ritual site and Danbury hillfort will be discussed.

The Ancient World – Three part session of 10 meetings each beginning 8.10.86 – £20 each 10 week series (£60 altogether) – a fascinating programme.

The Splendour of the Pharaohs – Two 10-week sessions beginning 7.10.87 and 13.1.87, each, at £24.

Victorian London – Two 10-week sessions beginning 7.10.86, each £20.

Aztecs, Maya and their predecessors – One 10-week session from 7.10.86 costing £20.

The University of London, Department of Extra-mural Studies is offering a series of public lectures on Thursday evenings at 7.00 p.m. at the Institute of Archaeology from 2nd October 1986 – on British Archaeology in Egypt. The cost for the series is £16, individual tickets at the door £2.

There is also a 24 meeting course beginning on 22nd September 1986 from, 6:30 to 8.30 p.m. on Middle American Archaeology, costing £39 (retired £19 – unwaged £5). A tour of Mexico might be arranged for students in the summer of 1987. Extra-mural Studies, 26 Russell Square, WC1B 5DO

There is an extra-mural course at the H.G.S. Institute, NW11 for the Certificate in Field Archaeology covering Field Archaeology and then Post-Roman period in England, 24 meetings, beginning on 25th September 1986 from 2 to 4 Cost £46.

There is a non-diploma course on Wednesday evenings from 7.15­ to 9.15 p.m of 22 meetings on Aspects of Ancient Egypt costing £40. WEA – Barnet Branch – The Greeks and Romans – A. Rook, 10 a-m. to 12 p.m. 9.10.86 for 20 weeks. London Down the Ages – B. Fairfax, 9.30 – 11.30 a.m. 9.10.86 for 20 weeks. History of London, Robin Bishop, 8 – 10 p.m. 2.10.86 for 10 weeks.

WEA Golders Green Branch – The Archaeology of Roman Gaul.

Wed. 7.30 – 9.30 p.m- beginning 1.10.86. Tutor: Margaret Roxan: Cost £40 for 2 terms, concessionary £30.

In last month’s newsletter, mention was made of the major new exhibition at the British Museum entitled “Archaeology in Britain”. It has been warmly reviewed in the first number of the newsletter of the Prehistoric Society (to which many of our members belong) entitled “Past” and attention is directed to three new books from British Museum publications relating to it, “Archaeology in Britain Since 1945”, edited by Ian Longworth and John Cherry (£12.50 or £9.50 at the exhibition); “The Bog Man and the Archaeology of People” by Don Brothwell (£5.95); and “Lindow Man: the Body in the Bog” edited by I.M. Stead, J.B. Bourke and D. Brothwell (£15), a very full account from 53 specialists of the excavation and subsequent research programme.

Time is running out if you want to see the major excavation being carried out by the Department of Urban Archaeology of the Museum of London at Leadenhall Market off. Gracechurch Street, in the City of London. We have a lecture booked on November 4th in connec­tion with this project, but it is very worthwhile to go along before the end of September when the area has to be handed over to the developers. At present there is good visibility from the viewing gallery off Leadenhall Street, where helpful illustrations and diagrams are displayed. At lunchtime, lectures are given. One of the interesting facts to come to light is the amount of development in the area before 70 A.D. and from the viewing platform one can look down on the little street and the outlines of buildings from that early phase.

A HADAS EXHIBITION including a bookstall of Society publications was mounted by Isobel McPherson and Christine Arnott at College

Farm Open Day on Sunday 3rd August. In spite of heavy rain consider­able interest was shown by those attending.

Ted Sammes has drawn attention to the fact that Reading Museum has a replica of the Bayeux Tapestry, made in Leek, Staffordshire 100 years ago 35 needleworkers produced the replica from drawings loaned by the South Kensington Museum. All the worsted thread used was dyed with permanent colour by Thomas Wardle, the husband of one of the needlewomen. Basingstoke Museum has been loaned the exhibit to mark the 900th anniversary of the Domesday Book, but unfortunately only to 2nd August 1986.

Ted has also sent in a report on the A.G.M. of the Council for British Archaeology on 14th July at the Society of Antiquaries. Many subjects were discussed, such as “where does the power of the C.B.A. rest, in the members, the council or the executive?” – the outline of a code of practice to be agreed between developers and archaeologists – meetings with treasure-hunting communities – and questionnaires were agreed should be sent out to discover what is really needed in the field of publications. Finally the new president, Philips Rhatz, paid tribute to the work of Tom Hassall during the past 3 years, and Tom Hassall wound up by paying tribute to the loyalty and hard work put in by the very small number of C.B.A. staff.

OUTINGS

On 26th July, a full coach from HADAS made a return trip to Sutton Hoo. Michael Weaver of the Sutton Hoo Society gave a splendid Celtic rendering as he recounted the original discoveries and pinpointed the site where the various magnificent finds occurred. We saw the area currently under excavation to determine the limits of the burial area and learnt that excavation is bringing new problems to solve with strange burials coming to light.

As a variation from last time, we went on to visit Orford, now a sleepy haven for summer yachtsmen, although it was once a flourishing port on the sea. In the 12th century, Henry II began to build the castle that we can still visit today. In the 14th century it provided 3 ships and 62 men to take part in the siege of Calais. Gradually the estuary silted up, the bigger ships could no longer sail up to the quay, and the port declined, its importance lapsed, and it is now a sleepy haven. We enjoyed being shown round the “Town Hall” and the exhibition of the old weights and measures and standard yard, inclu­ding the old robes of the town worthies, from the days when it had local status as a “rotten borough”. We were blessed with a lovely summer day and everyone voted it a most successful outing.

JOYCE CORLET

THE “MARY ROSE” REVISITED

A full Angel coach. (note, I did not say a coach full of angels:) driven by the ever-cheerful Bob, had the pleasure of visiting the “Mary Rose” at Portsmouth and nearby Portchester Castle, for a repeat excursion on August 16th. It was pleasant to welcome a number of new faces on this trip who were friends of members. Thanks to Dorothy Newbury’s meticulous planning, all enjoyed immensely a trouble-free sun-blessed outing of great interest. The first visit was graphically described in the June Newsletter, so I will only say that the second party was equally thrilled and excited. Water at 2°C was still being sprayed over the awe-inspiring hulk of Henry premier warship ­the first of its kind – at the rate of 6,000 gallops an-hour, creating 95% humidity in the air-locked protective bubble. To those making their second visit, it was plainly obvious that in the two hours a day, which is the maximum length of time that the water spray could be turned off, much creative restoration work has been carried out, mainly to the orlop deck to strengthen the structure. Some of the 3,000 timbers salvaged by teams of divers (including, on several occasions, the Royal Patron, Prince Charles) working at a depth of 40 ft. in the silt of the Solent, were now being put back by highly-skilled craftsmen. This task our two knowledgeable guides told us might take up to fifteen years to complete. To me one of the most exciting of the recent finds to be seen immersed in a vast tank of water, was the enormous wooden rudder which weighed no less than 3/4 of a ton. The cost of the specially made water tank was being borne by a British company (strangely enough, the one for which the writer used to work) making roofing tiles. This was typical of the sponsor­ship being offered to the project by industry and without which the Mary Rose Trust could not undertake the frighteningly expensive cost of restoration. Looking at the fortuitously “cut out” outline of the ship,” it was hard to believe that her normal complement was 415 men, although on the day that she rolled over and sank as she was going into battle against the French in 1545, there were over 700 on board. Only a pitiful 37 were rescued from drowning. I shall remember for a long time. the simulated cries of the trapped men (purported to have been heard by King Henry a mile away on shore) in the excellent audio presentation of the event in the Exhibition Hall which also housed a panoply of fascinating artefacts recovered from the wreck. History, when treated in this way, is an emotionally stirring chronicle of human experience, and the accusation that it is as “dry as dust” can have no substance.

An hour or so to savour the evocative atmosphere was all too short, but the excellent salad or ploughman’s lunch in the Victory Buffet was too good to be missed, proving to be excellent value for money.

Regretfully, after taking many pictures of H.M.S. “Victory” to go round inside entailed a two hour wait – and a brief visit to the Royal Naval Museum enriched by many relics recalling Lord Nelson and Trafalgar – it was time (to the arranged minutes) to return to the coach for the short journey to the historic town of Portchester. In the ancient village, around which has been built a town with a population of 25,000, we found the “chester” (castle) of Portum, the best preserved of the nine Roman Forts of the Saxon Shore. The warm sunshine encouraged us all to wander at leisure. Some of us climbed somewhat painfully to the top of the Norman Keep, which housed an exhibition of some interest, to be rewarded by a panoramic view of the Solent Estuary with the Dockyard cranes tilting at the azure sky. Nearer at hand, the well-preserved walls of the Third Century Fort, still mostly at their full majestic height, formed the backcloth for the sight and sound of a cricket match in progress on the greensward that once provided a camp for some hundreds of French prisoners-of-war. No less than three weddings took place in the Priory Church during the afternoon, and the sight of a coach drawn by two bays added to the “film set” atmosphere. At the conclusion of the final wedding of the day, we were invited to sample a traditional HADAS tea kindly prepared in the Church annexe by the Assitant Curator of the Castle We were then taken unexpectedly on a fascinating guided tour of the Church by one of the Churchwardens. His knowledge, wit and eloquence, captivated us all. We saw and marveled at the finely embellished Norman Font, the upper section of which is intricately carved out of a solid block of Caen limestone. On the plain ashlar stone walls of the Church (restored by the command of both Queen Elizabeth I and Queen Anne after long periods of neglect) were hung two versions of the Royal Arms.

Other outstanding features included oak sixteenth-century altar rails and bench ends, while in the belfry one of the bells, which we heard rung for the weddings, dated from 1589 and bore the forbidding inscription “Obey God and Prince”! The Aumbry in the North Transept was the subject of an instant quiz in which readers may like to join. The Aumbry looked like a wall safe to the modern eye, but what was its original purpose? There was no mistaking the purpose of the recessed block of stone, now standing near the altar rails, which was found under the tiled floor of the nave. It was undoubtedly the coffin of a Roman child, thus encouraging the undocumented belief that the Norman Priory Church was on the site of a much earlier building.

Sadly, after a walk back to the coach round the impressive circumference of the Saxon Fort, it was time to leave the still sunlit scene and journey back swiftly along the motorways to Hendon. Our journey was enlivened by a raffle, with prizes miraculously conjured up by Dorothy Newbury and organised by Sheila Woodward that ensured that this memorable trip should not prove a drain on the Society’s funds.

JOHN ENDERBY

THE PREHISTORIC SOCIETY’S SUMMER CONFERENCE – THE PEAK DISTRICT Sheila Woodward:- a ‘native’ of Derbyshire sends this account

The Peak District has plenty to offer the prehistorian. On our first day we visited the famous Creswell Crags, type-site of the Palaeolithic Creswellian culture. The caves, now generally closed to the public to prevent further erosion of the valuable deposits, were fortunately open to us – the three shown being very impressive.

In Robin Hood’s Cave we were shown how uranium-thorium dating is being used to sort out the sequence of deposits spanning hundreds of thousands of years. In Pin Hole there is a current excavation perched on a cramped rocky ledge, one archaeologist works with tiny copper tools (no iron or steel – it upsets the dating), excavating one centimetre at a time, while a second archaeologist records. It is dark and damp and chilly, Nearby Dog Hole Fissure is, as its name implies., a mere crack, in the rocks, but it too has produced its quota of prehistoric evidence We listened enthralled as Dave Gilbertson recounted the story of “The Death of a Wolf’ – a real detective tale: for £1.50 copies may be obtained from the Creswell Crags Visitors’ Centre, Crags Road, Creswell, Nr. Worksop, Notts. This Centre is an imaginative enterprise, promoting enjoyment and understanding of the area, also housing archives and a reference collection. At the time of our visit they housed some splendid mammoth bones, only a few days previously unearthed at Kilton, near Worksop.

To those of us interested in the Mesolithic, Thorpe Common Rock shelter proved intriguing with its semi-circular limestone rubble wall built out from the rock overhand,

Henge monuments are also part of the Derbyshire scene; we visited Arbor Low, the most spectacular, and the similar but less impressive Bull Ring. Neolithic and Bronze Age cairns abound, and there was much tramping across heath and moorland to visit a good selection of them. Strangely whenever we arrived at a remote cairn or stone circle, up popped the excavator of the monument, like a rabbit from its burrow, to talk to us about it. Minninglow was especially memorable for its superb position, and on Stanton Moor the Nine Ladies Stone Circle has been much improved by the removal of its surrounding wall. On Big Moor, for all its wealth of cairns and funeral monuments, the most fascinating site is the Swine Sty Bronze Age settlement enclosure, excavated between 1967-77. It has well-preserved remains of a stone-built circular hut, and has also produced thousands of waste pieces from the manufacture of shale bracelets and rings – the earliest identified shale workshop in Britain.

The Iron Age was not neglected, nor the late Bronze Age, as we sought out hillforts: the unusual promontory fort of Markland Grips and the more conventional and magnificent forts of Castle Naze, Mam Tor and Carl Wark. Storm clouds threatened, but did not break as we clambered over defensive banks and ditches and admired the superb views from the summits.

We had ample opportunity to study finds from many of the sites when we visited Buxton and Sheffield Museums, both of which mounted special displays for our benefit. We also spent a most interesting afternoon in the laboratories of the Department of Archaeology at Sheffield University. We talked to the researches and peered down microscopes at tree-rings and snail shells, seeds and grains of sand and pollen, and marvelled at the scientific information available to the archaeologist.

The social side of the Conference was not neglected. Apart from the Conference Dinner on the last evening, we seemed to attend innumer­able receptions given by many kind hosts. We shall not easily forget the sumptuous buffet lunch at Sheffield Town Hall nor the majestic toastmaster, immaculate to the tips of his snow-white gloves, who kindly overlooked our rather scruffy appearance as he announced each of us in stentorian tones to the Lord Mayor and his Lady. The Derbyshire Archaeological Society gave a reception for us at the home of its president – and as he is the Duke of Devonshire! – Chatsworth House. The Duke, sporting a rather dashing Brigade of Guards boater, welcomed us with great affability, commenting modestly that the house and gardens were looking their best. The reception was held on the terrace. We did full justice to the delicious refreshments, the roses were glorious, and it was a perfect July evening. For the rest of the trip sentences tended to begin… “As I said to the Duke” .. Or “As the Duke said to me …”

Our final day was mainly devoted to a seminar, preceded by a visit to Buxton’s current excavation at Lismore Fields. Begun last year prior to a housing development across the line of a supposed Roman road, the dig has revealed no Roman evidence at all, but extensive evidence of late Mesolithic and early Neolithic settlement. A Mesolithic flint-knapping area, confined by a semi-circular slot that may have held upright timbers and 2 substantial rectangular Neolithic structures have so far been found. The site is obviously of consider­able importance, but further excavation is endangered by lack of funds. It was a most satisfying, enjoyable and informative conference with splendid organisation from Ken Smith, the local secretary.

In response to our appeals for contributions from members, we have received the following:

EDGWARE – THE STORY OF A SUBURB

No, it has not been written yet, but it might be one day. Having lived in Edgware all my life, it was not unnatural for me to become aware of my surroundings and of course various “questions” started forming in my mind. Why were these houses-different to those on the other side of the road? Why does the road stop here? And so on and’ so forth.

Well, I have been “at it” for three and a half years slowly unearthing the odd fact here and there. Very early on a few basic questions had to be answered. What is it I am trying to discover? Which period in time am I interested in? Finally, a definition of the area geographically speaking.

For various reasons it was decided to concentrate on the parish of Edgware. Roughly speaking it is triangular in shape with its apex at the south. The left-hand side is the Edgware Road, the “top” side is the south side of Barnet Lane, and the right-hand side is Dean’s Brook. As a slight digression I attempted to locate the boundary stones defin­ing the parish. Initially this meant much poring over many Ordnance Survey sheets, then going out to find them. On paper thirteen were discovered, and seven of them are still in situ including one which has never been officially recorded by the OS. The remainder have been removed over the passage of time. The ones which do exist have been sketched, dimensioned and a brief description of the location includ­ing an OS grid reference.

The period of interest is 1900 to 1939, purely arbitrary I realise in fact establishing ownerships of some land has taken me back to the early 1800’s, so one has to be flexible in one’s attitude and approach to research.

Finally and most importantly what is it that I am interested in the date when every road, house and shop was built and so to create a pic­ture of the growth of suburban development during the early part of this century. All planning applications are being catalogued and this information reveals the names of the builders and developers. As a by­product one also learns why roads were given the names that we know them by today.

Local rate books will also provide useful information, and here an example of the problem of researching Edgware comes to light for Edgware parish until April 1931 was part of Hendon Rural District Council, this administration was west of the Edgware Road and included Harrow-on-the-Hill, Pinner, Great Stanmore and Little Stanmore. Edgware was transferred to Hendon Urban District Council, which itself was granted municipal status in September 1932. It was only this year that the whereabouts of the Rural District Council’s ratebooks was tracked down to the Greater London Record Office, who had possessed them for over twenty years, had not properly accessed them and had destroyed about a quarter of them because of their poor condition. Various records are therefore held by the London Boroughs of Barnet and Harrow, related Middlesex records are in the care of the Greater. London Record Office, and no doubt others may be lurking at the Public Record Office, Kew.

As well as primary sources of material, there is much evidence that can be gained from secondary sources. I am attempting to record the various “mentions” of Edgware in books of an architectural, historical or topographical nature; copy any contemporary illustration or photo­graph; record any maps, estate and sale plans. A small collection of 35mm transparencies (currently standing at 400) is my modest start at recording houses, shops, developments and demolition of buildings, street furniture and general scenes. This is an opportunity to ask HADAS members if they have any illustrations, photographs, deeds etc. Even personal recollections may provide a missing link. Three years ago the local newspaper featured an article about the old rectory in Edgware, and that plans of the building surveyed in 1925 prior to its demolition were donated by the surveyor, now retired. After a couple of letters a visit to Scunthorpe followed where we met and further facts came to light.

As everyone is aware, research is a painstakingly slow process. I am a mere newcomer and still consider myself to be rather “green”. If anyone can provide information in the way I have requested or furnish me with material I may be unfamiliar with please do not hesitate to contact me by writing or telephoning at this address.

Jeremy Frankel, 83 Edgwarebury Lane, Edgware, Middx. HA8 8LZ 01-058 7709

**************************************************************************************

Please check that you have paid your subscription so that you will be sure of receiving the special “25 Years of HADAS” edition of the Newsletter.

A HOLE THE HEATH

The Thames Water Authority has been carrying out some work in the Gospel Oak area of Hampstead Heath which might interest geologically-minded HADAS members. Gospel Oak – in case you don’t know that district – is the southernmost tip of the Parliament Hill area of the Heath. It’s only about 1½ miles as the crow flies, from our Mesolithic site at West Heath, though it may seem more when you are negotiating the car-cluttered streets of Hampstead.

Just north of Gospel Oak station, on the edge of the open space, is a swimming pool; north of that again the water board is busy laying 3 miles of tunnelling intended to take some of the strain off an elderly sewer system. The work involves digging 40ft deep shafts into unweathered London clay, which was laid down some 55 million. years ago, in what was then a hot and humid environment, and has remained virtually untouched since.

It so happens that 150 years ago a Highgate CP, Dr Thomas Wetherell, a keen spare-time geologist, collected clay samples from a well that was being dug not far northeast of the present excavations. He noted that the clay contained minute fossilised molluscs – gasteropods and bivalves – which were later published in the Mineral Conchology of Great Britain. These included hitherto unknown species of foraminifera.

Samples from the 1986 diggings confirm and add to Dr Wetherell’s findings. You can now see under an electron-microscope details, including new fossil groups, which were invisible to Dr Wetherell’s more primitive equipment.

The new material is being studied at University College, where it is first dried, then soaked in a bleach solution and finally wet-sieved, leaving a residue of the tiny fossils for investigation. One study being undertaken is a comparison of the Gospel Oak samples with others taken from below the North Sea bed during oil exploration.

Condensed from an article in the Hampstead and Highgate Express of August 1st 1966.

LIBRARY NOTES FROM LIZ HOLLIDAY

Wednesday Lectures

The 1986 – 87 season of Library Lectures begins in October, and includes several topics -which may be of interest to HADAS members.

“Inca Heritage” on Wednesday, 22nd October at East Finchley Library. Hilary Bradt, author and traveller, presents her experiences of treks into the Peruvian Andes.

On Wednesday, 28th January at Hendon Library, Vivien Langston of the North Middlesex Family History Society, explains how to start tracing your ancestors in her talk “Tracing your Family History”

The full programme of Wednesday Lectures is given in a leaflet which will be available from all libraries early in September.

OLD ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPS.

Kenwood and Golders Hill in 1894 and 1915 are featured in the next reprinted Ordnance Survey, map published by Alan Godfrey.

The maps should be available from Hendon and Golders Green libraries and the Archives towards the end of September (price £1. A more detailed report will be given in a later Newsletter.

MAIDEN CASTLE

On Saturday August 23rd two HADAS members, Enid Hill and Sheila Woodward, attended the open afternoon at the current excavation at Maiden Castle. The visit was organised by Niall Sharples the Director and Andrew Lawson of the Trust for Wessex archaeology.

The excavations are intended to supplement the extensive evidence recovered by Sir Mortimer Wheeler, by using advanced archaeological techniques not available at that time. The 1985 results show a sequence of radiocarbon dates and mollusc columns from examination of the early prehistoric ditches.

This year they are concentrating on the Iron Age occupation of the hillfort, and have found several houses with well-preserved floor levels and large quantities of animal bones and carbonised grain. One gentleman present actually dug with Mortimer Wheeler and he related one amusing story of the time he was sitting by the Roman temple waiting for Mortimer Wheeler, when a workman brought him a gold Coin, followed by several more coins and a gold ring. All this happened while Mortimer Wheeler was struggling up the hillside, his car having been bogged down. He arrived too late to witness the excitement of the finds.

BURNT OAK CAR PARK SITE — Postscript to announcement on page I. Victor Jones, Brian Wrigley, George Sweetland and Alan Lawson have started a resistivity survey, and by the time you read this Newsletter will have completed a generalised survey of the main accessible area. This is showing up some general patterns with occasional high or low resistance anomalies which may or may not be significant, but will be worth further detailed tests. At one point at least, a more detailed survey has shown a small patch of noticeably low resistance which just might be a pit. A few more like this should give us a suggestion where to open trial trenches.

Newsletter-186-August-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 186: August 1986 Editor: June Porges

Forthcoming EVENTS

Saturday 16 August Trip to Mary Rose and Portchester

This is additional to our published programme to take the large overflow from May 10th. The coach is full – but no waiting list – so any latecomers please ring Dorothy Newbury (203 0950) and you might just get in.

Thursday 11th September: Evening visit to Old Bailey

Thurs – Sun 18-21 September Exeter Weekend Ann and Alan Lawson

The coach is now full but no waiting list. If anybody is still keen to go please ring

458 3827 or 203 0950 and we will notify you in the event of a cancellation.

Until 10 August and all September Dig on Hampstead Heath (see below)

Throughout August ‘Historic Hampstead 1000’

986 – 1986 Exhibition at Burgh House, Hampstead. (See report elsewhere in Newsletter)

Saturday 4 October Winchester ‘Domesday 9OO’ Exhibition

Application Form enclosed. Will members wishing to go on this outing return completed slip by end of August. The Domesday Exhibition requires numbers and cash several weeks beforehand for group bookings. Dorothy Newbury 203 0950.

Saturday 11 October Minimart St Mary’s Church House

Saturday 18 Oct – 7th Dec HADAS Exhibition ‘One Man’s Archaeology Church Farmhouse Museum

July 15 Feb 1987 British Museum Exhibition: Archaeology: New views of the Past

REMINDER…..REMINDER…..REMINDER…..REMINDER…..REMINDER

This is the last year the Society will be excavating the Mesolithic site at West Heath. If you’ve ever meant to dig there, or would like to dig again for old times sake – do it NOW. The site is open six days per week, weather permitting (not Saturdays) to 10 August and again in September Ring Margaret Maher on 907 0333 or Myfanwy Stewart on 447 3025.

OUTSTANDING SUBSCRIPTIONS

I had a ‘`pleasant, evening” recently going through the list of members to ascertain those who have still not paid their 1986/7 subscription. The next evening I spent preparing reminder letters, 70 in all. These are enclosed with your newsletter. If you have paid before this reminder, please accept my apologies. If you still have not this newsletter will be your last. PLEASE pay as soon as possible.

MISS PHYLLIS FLETCHER (Membership Secretary)

27 Decoy Avenue, London NW11 (Tel: 455 2558)

ARCHAEOLOGY IN BRITAIN AT THE BRITISH MUSEUM

This long awaited exhibition, subtitled New Views of the Past, proves to be well worth the wait. It covers the period 8000 BC to 1600 AD and demonstrates the expansion of archaeological activity in the last forty years, and by the use of objects, models, reconstruction drawings and audio visual presentations (a. chance to sit down!) demonstrates the Developments made and methods now used in the understanding of social history. It was satisfying to see records of places we have visited on HADAS outings and we came away fired with enthusiasm to go out and see more. Highlights are a reconstruction of the Garston Chariot burial and Lindow Man (or Pete Marsh) in person. Allow lots of time – entry fee is £1.50 but re-entry is permitted on the day the ticket is purchased so it is possible to take a break. The theme of the exhibition will be continued in a. series of lectures from 8 October to 3 December.

ALAS, POOR PETE

The following letter was published in The Times on 7 July:

Sir,

I am rather disturbed by the British Museum exhibition of “Pete Marsh”, alias Lindow Man.

The attitude seems to be that since this is a discovery of such age and importance, the

actual substance is overlooked. This is a man not a fossil, nor a photograph. It is tasteless and repellent to display his mortal remains, which should be given the respect accorded to the more recentlydeparted.

Yours sincerely,

Bryan Ewing, 28 Revenscar Road, Tolworth, Surbiton, Surrey

How do HADAS members feel about this?

MONEY AT THE BRITISH MUSEUM

The British Museum is currently running a free exhibition entitled “Money from cowrie shells to credit cards”, and if you work the cash machine you can have your own worthless souvenir!

This exhibition is very comprehensive, as its title implies, dealing with its origins, mints, methods of manufacture, uses and tokens. As is customary nowadays, there is an accompanying book which is also a. catalogue. It is full of illustrations which leave little need for further information – price £7.95. The introduction is written by Dr John Kent, Who was our mentor for the first excavation which the Society carried out at Church End Farm, Hendon. He is now Keeper of the Coins and Medals Department.

Visit this when you go to see the main exhibition of the year.

TED SAMMES

FAKES, FRAUDS AND PHYSICS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM

When one scans the nineteenth century registers of accessions to the British Museum one is struck by the sheer volume of material flowing in from collections great and small. Clearly each item cannot have been carefully examined at the time of its accession and often the true significance of many of the pieces has not been realised until this century. Unfortunately, as well as unrecognised treasures, there are also pieces of dubious authenticity. One task of the museum’s Research Laboratory is to carry out scientific examination of these as they come under critical scrutiny, and also of the objects that are currently offered to the antiquities departments for purchase.

Usually the questions are not simply whether it is fake or genuine but how much antiquity has been restored, whether new parts have been added, or if indeed the whole has been stuck together from a pile of ancient bits, or was the all-important inscription which gives the object its value made in antiquity or last week? Scientific examination with modern instruments can often help unmask restoration or false patination. Joins and repairs invisible in normal light show up clearly under ultraviolet light or X-rays. If an area has been painted over to disguise the repair or addition then, no matter how skillful the restorer has been in blending in and matching colours, ultra-violet light will often show that the restoration has been carried out, and X-rays will of course penetrate further into the object showing exactly what is going on beneath. These techniques are quick, completely non-destructive to the object, and virtually foolproof.

A knowledge of the composition of the materials used in antiquity is vital. For example, before modern times it was not economically possible to remove from silver the substantial traces of gold which always occur with it, thus any plate purporting to be ancient should contain a detectable amount of gold We have in the British Museum a silver pillar dial and compendium, mainly sixteenth century, bearing an ER monogram which provides a good example. Although an attractive item in itself, its main interest lies in the monogram ER on the upper cylindrical section. Did this pillar dial really belong to Elizabeth I? The case and contents were all of silver with a healthy dash of gold, but not the section containing the monogram. Closer inspection showed the monogram had been added with a modern vibro-tool.

So, not just materials but the technology by which an object has been made can give away the modern restorer. In antiquity, wire was usually made by twisting thin strips of metal into a spiral, on the same principle as drinking straws, giving a distinctive spiral groove to the wires. Modern wire is made by drawing rods through progressively narrower draw plates. This leaves very characteristic scratches or striations running parallel to the length of the wire. Their presence, easily detected under the microscope, immediately gives away the recent origin of the wire.

All ancient bronzes must have a good patina and fakers and restorers have long laboured to imitate nature. Fortunately, there are problems. Although it is usually possible to get an acceptable colour, this is achieved only by using minerals and pigments which would not form naturally, and a simple chemical test can reveal this. Fixing the patina is another problem. If it has been forming on the metal in the ground for thousands of years it will be firmly attached; if it has come out of a bottle it will need to be stuck down in some way. Very often swabbing a test section of the patina with the appropriate organic solvent can unstick the materials used, leaving clean metal beneath and revealing the object’s true identity. Here a difficulty arises out of the propensity of collectors in the past to improve on nature. A rich black patina was held to be the true antique ideal, and if reality could not oblige then it must be helped. Many perfectly genuine artefacts were accordingly stripped of their real patina in order to be given the appearance they ‘Ought’ to have had. One of the worst offenders was Richard Payne Knight. Of his enormous collection of classical bronzes, which passed to the British Museum in the nineteenth century, many show evidence of having been darkened. One can go along now to the gallery of Greek and Roman bronze statuettes where many of the bronzes from his collection are displayed (their registrations all commence 1824) and see the darker hue he so admired.

As well as deliberate forgeries there are also cases where good copies, made in all innocence for teaching or display, have been mistaken for the real thing. About 10 years ago a small bronze flat axe apparently of the Early Bronze Age was found in a school playing field in Northamptonshire. Stylistically the axe was acceptable and it had a good patina, but it was a type of axe rarely found in the Midlands and so, if genuine, was of some importance. Analysis showed it to be made of brass, i.e. copper and zinc, rather than bronze, i.e. copper and tin. Now brass was first introduced into these islands by the Romans, 2,000 years later than the supposed age of this axe. Almost certainly this was a nineteenth century copy, made for the school, that had been lost and forgotten in the soil of the playing field, acquiring during those years of burial a perfectly genuine patina, metal composition and patina are not the only features that can give away a fake bronze. If the bronze was cast on a fired clay core, then any remnants of that core can be tested by the technique known as Thermoluminescence. Thermoluminescence, or TL, is a property of crystals and, as the name implies, is light produced by heating. It is not a recent discovery Robert Boyle in 1663 presented observations to the Royal Society on a diamond belonging to a Mr. Clayton. One of his findings reads: ‘Eleventhly, I also brought it to some kind of Glimmering Light, by taking it into Bed with me, and holding it a good while upon a warm part of my Naked Body’.

In an elegantly logical sequence of experiments Boyle also tried rather more conventional forms of heat such as a candle flame and a heated piece of iron, and like any good scientist, he attempted to replicate his findings using other precious Stones, as Diamonds, Rubies, Sapphires, and Emeralds, &c. but found not any of them to shine except some Diamonds. The likely reason for this is that higher temperature and core sensitive light-detecting devices are generally needed to observe TL from most crystalline materials, including fired clay. For a ceramic object, the TL is proportional to the age of the piece (or, more specifically, to the time that has elapsed since it was last heated, i.e. when it was fired). It results from the action on crystals of high energy radiation from small amounts of uranium, thorium and potassium in the clay itself and in the environment.

Thermoluminescence of ceramics and bronze cores has been successfully detecting forgeries since the late 1960s, and in 1971 the British Museum purchased the first commercially available equipment designed for such work. Since then, TL has been applied to many objects offered for purchase such as a bronze boar and tiger from China, which was subsequently acquired; other pieces have received a less favourable bill of health. Objects acquired before 1971 are also subjected to TL. This second group largely comprises objects submitted by curatorial staff with an eye for stylistic inconsistency. One such piece was a supposedly Roman lamp doubts about the authenticity of this rather flamboyant object were unfortunately confirmed by the test.

Whole collections, large and small, can come into doubt. The sample size needed for TL is not large, hence testing of all five of the museum’s collection of samian poincons was possible all, unfortunately, proved recent. The 73 ceramics, largely anthropomorphic or theriomorphic Urns of the Capotec culture fared better on a percentage basis, with 20 found to be modern. One piece, genuine in terms of its TL, was quite categorically thought to be modern on stylistic grounds. Did this mean a total re-assessment of, not just some, but all stylistic criteria? A second sample, taken from the head, rather than the base, gave the answer. Two genuine, but stylistically incompatible, fragments had been skillfully joined together and sold as an intact object.

Authenticity testing by TL has found applications beyond art objects. Tiles apparently excavated in 1902 at the Roman fort of Pevensey were displayed in 1907 to the Society of Antiquaries in London by a Mr. Charles Dawson. The interest in these tiles stems from the inscription HON AUG ANDRIA, thought to refer to the Emperor Honorius and hence to be archaeological evidence of the refurbishment of the sea defences at the end of the fourth century AD that previously was known only from references in the poems of Claudian. In 1908 one of these tiles was presented to the museum by Mr Dawson, whose name is better known in association, whether culpable or not, with the Piltdown hoax. More than 60 years later TL showed it to be a forgery.

Happily, not every object doubted on stylistic grounds warrants the suspicion. At least two objects relegated (when, by whom, and why is not known now) to one department’s ‘forgeries’ cupboard have now been shown not to deserve their lowly status.

PAUL CRADDOCK AND SHERIDAN BOWMAN

This article is reprinted by kind permission of Paul Craddock and the British Museum Society from the July 1986 Bulletin of the Society. Some HADAS member may not be aware

of the Society’s activities, which include a programme of lectures throughout the year, private evening viewing and free entry during the day to special exhibitions, the always interesting Bulletin and a 10% discount off all purchases from the British Museum shop. Recent support for the museum has included a contribution of £5,000 towards the cost of a vacuum table for the Conservation division, a children’s’ guide to the British Museum and a projected one to the Museum of Mankind and sponsorship of a film “Clash of the Titans”. So it is away to give to the museum we all value so much as well as receiving.

Membership is £10 a year, details from the British Museum Society, the British Museum, London WC1B 3DG

(Tel: 01-636 1555)

CURRENT ARCHAEOLOGY CELEBRATES ITS CENTENARY…

The summer of 1986 has been a memorable one for me. First of all HADAS did me the honour of electing me its Chairman, and secondly we have just produced the 100th issue of

Current Archaeology. We have made this into a special gala issue and we have gone into colour and had a total redesign and five of my most distinguished contemporaries – Barry Cunliffe at Oxford; Colin Renfrew from Cambridge, Peter Addyman from York, Geoffrey Wainwright at English Heritage, and Martin Biddle, of Winchester and Repton fame, have all contributed their reminiscences on the archaeology of the past twenty years.

It seems only yesterday that we launched Current Archaeology. It was on 3 June 1966 that my wife and I got married and we spent a deliriously happy summer going round and round the country visiting excavations and introducing ourselves to archaeologists. I think many archaeologists felt that we were somewhat rash launching a magazine like this from scratch, but luckily for us the first issue in March 1967 went down very well and we rapidly reached the 5000 subscribers that we needed to make the magazine viable. Now 100 issues and three children later we not only survive but thrive, and we can look back on 19 years of happy memories.

For our 100th issue we have printed 10,000 extra copies and we hope to distribute them as widely as possible. If any member of HADAS does not already subscribe to CA just drop us a line to 9 Nassington Road, NWS 2TX, or give us a ring on 435 7517 and we will be happy to send a free specimen copy and help clear away these piles of magazines that are littering my study….

ANDREW SELKIRK

ANGLO-SAXON CEMETERIES: A REAPPRAISAL Letter to the Editor:

Reading through my copy of the July newsletter I came across your advance notification of the Fausset conference and thought you would like to know of HADAS involvement! I hope to be speaking at the conference on the use of Roman objects in pagan Anglo-Saxon graves (with reference to the Faussett collection) and at the end of the year, in a separate volume, my contribution to the Mayer Centenary Publication should be out on “Mayer and British Archaeology”. For those of your readers who don’t know Liverpool, and who have heard only bad things of it, this is a fine opportunity to see some of the greatest architecture north of London (Albert Dock – largest grade one listed building; St George’s Hall – largest end finest Neoclassical building in Europe) and participate in the largest Anglo-Saxon gathering in Liverpool since 1854! Many thanks for your fine newsletter and keep up the good work.

Best wishes

Roger White (University of Liverpool)

GRAHAME-WHITE HANGAR

Contact with various bodies has continued. An interesting suggestion seems promising. Following an approach by GLIAS the Ministry of Defence is investigating whether demolition of the west end of the hangar might allow the east end to be saved. The most dilapidated part of the hangar is the west end with a Belfast truss roof. This is interesting but not unique – for instance the aircraft hall at the nearby RAF Museum is based on two such structures. Conversely, the east end with the CW offices is unique and historic.

BILL FIRTH

PREHISTORY IN SNOWDONIA

Many of you will have visited the Snowdonia National Park Study Centre or know of the excavation at Bryn y Castell directed by Peter Crew, the resident archaeologist. This report is to bring you up to date with the final season of the excavation at Bryn y Castell and to tell you of future work.

Over the first six seasons of work at Bryn y Castell the major part of a hillfort was excavated, revealing the remains of a drystone rampart with two entrances, in the north and north east, not necessarily in use at the same time. The north east entrance had been blocked in at some time. A unique snail-shaped stone structure was excavated in the north part of the hillfort which contained iron smithing debris. Two smelting furnaces were found in the southern part of the fort and another furnace outside the rampart by the north entrance. Two other structures were found within the fort. Almost the entire internal surface of the hillfort had been covered with cobbles, and concentrations of slag and smithing debris occurred. Another area, Site A, to the north east and below the hillfort was excavated and also contained iron smelting and smithing slag and furnaces. Finds on the sites included unique fragments of glass armlets, gaming boards, gaming counters, pot boilers and other utilized stones.

Radiocarbon dates and archaeomagnetic dates indicate occupation in the late prehistoric period, to about 70 AD, and then at Site A only from 150 – 250 Al).

The final season completed the excavation of the hillfort and revealed three structures, two of which were stake-wall round-houses. The stakeholes were difficult to recognise and excavate, partly because the surface beneath the cobbles was very stony and partly because much of the subsoil was very variable in both texture and colour. One structure had four entrance post holes, two of which were especially well preserved with in situ packing stones, which supported posts for the framework of a shallow porch. These stake wall round houses are the first of their kind to have been recognised in north-west Wales, where timber buildings of any kind have rarely been recognised and stone founded buildings have long been accepted as the norm. It is likely that at least one of these structures represents a domestic element at Bryn y Castell.

Finally, the hillfort was backfilled, reseeded and reconstructed. The “snail” was rebuilt and its interior filled with cobbles, as were the interiors of the other structures, the site must now look very impressive and well worth a visit.

Needless to say, there is still work to be done before the final report can be published. The iron objects are being conserved, the armlets analysed, work continues on the local geology and soil phosphates, but the major task remaining is on the iron-working debris and metallurgical analysis. We will look forward to the outcome of those labours in the final reports, which will be published in a variety of formats.

I suspect few sites can rival Bryn y Castlell for the pleasure of digging there. My memories of the site are mixed: the magnificent views of mountains and estuary when one rested from “cleaning the cobbles”, the thunderstorm viewed from inside a metal but (!), the occasion when the sun shone for a whole week and a generous director who treated us very gently, and even fetched ice-cream from the valley.

Peter Crew has started another excavation this summer for 3/4 seasons on a putative 2nd millennium settlement site at Crawcwellt on the eastern slopes of the Rhinog Mountains. Remarkably this site is producing even better iron smelting/smithing evidence than Bryn y Castell and (stop press!) the first glass bangle has been found! Unfortunately you have missed this summer’s seasons which ended on 12 July, but you may like to make a note in your diary for future years: usually the season lasts a month from mid-June. Those who haven’t visited the Snowdonia National Park Study Centre at Maentrwrog may like to know that very comfortable accommodation is available and evening lectures on associated topics take place. ELIZABETH SANDERSON

THE PRINCE REGENT – Patron of the Arts and Sciences

An exhibition on this theme is now open to the public at Regent’s College, Regent’s Park – the premises are those formerly occupied by Bedford College. Besides a wealth of portraits, cartoons, letters, newspaper articles, architectural drawings and personal memorabilia, there are a set of the plans for the development of Regent’s Park and a handsome wallmount of Richard Horwood’s 1794 Fire Insurance map of the Whole of London. Two private collectors have lent early nineteenth century clothing, and the BBC has made available costumes designed and made for productions of Pride and Prejudice and Mansfield Park. The Jane Austen Museum has lent a purse crocheted by the novelist herself, and there are photographs of letters between her and the Prince’s Librarian, the Revd. James Starrier Clarke, suggesting that she should dedicate a book to the Regent – Emma was duly so dedicated – and that she might try her hand at historical romance – a proposal which Miss. Austen did not take up. There is some remarkable material from the Mender and Mitchenson Theatrical Collection, and the Royal Institution has reconstructed one of Faraday’s early experiments with electricity and has lent one of the first miner’s safety lamps designed by Sir Humphry Davy. There is something for everyone here, and for all the family, from children to grandparents.

The exhibition is open daily till 26 September, Monday to Saturday, free of charge, from 12.00 noon till 6.00pm. Refreshments are available in the Refectory. Members are urged to take a walk in Regent’s Park and to enjoy the exhibition on the way.

ANN SAUNDERS

HAMPSTEAD’S MILLENNIUM

The Newsletter last month reported that Hampstead was celebrating a thousand years of its recorded history this year, and reviewed the exhibition on the Medieval Manor of Hampstead, held recently at the elegant Burgh House, New End Square, NW3 (Tel: 431-0144).

This month sees the opening of another exhibition, entitled Hampstead 1000, at the same address. This has been devised by Malcolm Holmes, archivist of the Camden Arts and Libraries Department and Christopher Wade, Curator of Burgh House Museum, and will run until 28 September. (Burgh House is open Wednesday to Sunday inclusive 12 noon to 5pm, entrance is free, and there is a Buttery serving delicious lunches and teas at reasonable prices),

This exhibition consists, of about 80 items, mainly topographical concentrating on the post medieval periods – and distinguished, as might be expected, by the evocative and artistic quality of many of the exhibits (some lovely water colours); and by the fascinating diversity of its inhabitants and their activities over the years. Items of particular interest include a geological map of the area (superimposed upon a 1984 Geographia/Ordnance Survey), a rubbing “from a fragment of medieval brass from St Mary’s Kilburn. Supposed to be the memory of a Prioress c. 1390 and to come from Kilburn Priory”; illustrations showing local coinage minted during the Commonwealth and Restoration periods, a section on the wells of Hampstead (hence Well Walk and Flask Walk) and some stunning photographs; “They came to Hampstead” with addresses and a location map – an astonishing concentration of talents. What kind of Who’s Who could HADAS muster for our areas? It might be an interesting exercise. I did not spot any specific references to Hendon (or Finchley) in this exhibition, and items of archaeological interest were naturally rather scant. The first caption, alongside the illustration recording the granting of the 986 charter by King Ethelred to the monks of Westminster Abbey, reads as follows:

“By 985 Hampstead was a small village in a clearing of the vast primeval forest of Middlesex. The earliest known inhabitants of the area were the forest hunters of about 7,000 BC whose camp sites have recently been excavated on the West Heath. A Bronze age settlement on this desirable hill-top may be presumed from the barrow on Parliament Hill (fancifully known as Boadeclea’s grave). But there is little to show of the Roman occupation except the straight line of Kilburn High Road, which is built on the Roman Watling Street).

The recorded history of Hampstead begins with the Anglo-Saxon charters and grants of which King Ethelred was only one, and continues with the Domesday Book of 1086. This showed that ‘Hamestede’, the Anglo-Saxon name meaning ‘homestead’ centred on a small farm which was valued at 50 shillings.

In the Middle Ages, Hampstead Hill sprouted two windmills and a chapel (later a Parish Church) and a small Priory was built down in Kilburn. At the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII the Priory was suppressed, and in due course the manor was transferred from the Abbey to lay hands.

Hampstead remained a peaceful rural community until the end of the 17th century.

There is no catalogue; but a handsomely produced illustrated history by John Richardson entitled Hampstead one thousand AD 986-1986 (Historical Publications with the London Borough of Camden £7.50) covers to some extent the same ground. This is on sale at Burgh House together with other publications which include Hampstead Town Trail by Christopher Wade (Millennium Publications, 60p). Other souvenirs on sale at Burgh House include some attractive tea towels featuring famous Hampstead writers. Proceeds from the Millennium celebrations will be donated to St John’s Church Restoration Fund, the North London Hospice and Save the Children Fund.

The celebrations continue until November but seemingly no further events with a historical/archaeological content are being planned. Is HADAS thinking perhaps of a prologue exhibition to the 986 saga, with special emphasis on the West Heath dig and that famous Bronze age barrow? ANN. KAHN

THE AMERICAN MUSEUM

Keen archaeologists, such as members of HADAS, who have visited Bath to study our Roman past, will also have enjoyed its elegant crescents and terraces built in locally quarried honey-coloured stone. Perhaps, though, they may have missed a more recently established place of interest – the American Museum at Claverton Manor, which this year is celebrating its 25th anniversary. Its aim, according to the guide book, is “to interpret the history and arts of the United States’.

A series of furnished rooms presents a picture of domestic life from late 17th to mid-19th centuries, and of cultural traditions of English Puritans, Spanish Colonists of New Mexico and American Indians. There are displays of glass, pewter and silver, and a textile room devoted to quilted coverlets and rag rugs. Unfortunately it is not possible to appreciate fully the beauty and variety of these, as they are housed in a room too small for more than a few of them to be spread out.

There are further exhibits in the grounds – a herb garden and shop – a milliner’s shop with a colourful collection of bandboxes decorated with illustrations of events of the time, e.g. a balloon ascent in the 1830s – the Mount Vernon Garden, a replica of George Washington’s garden in Virginia – and, in the converted stables, a Folk Art Gallery.

If, after seeing all this, you are ready to sit down, there is an attractive dining room where light refreshments are served, including delicious American cookies. If you are lucky enough to have a fine day for your visit, you can eat there while sitting on the terrace, admiring the magnificent view over the Limpley Stoke Valley.

JEAN McPHERSON

RECENT RE-ASSESSMENT OF THE RUINED CHURCH AT STONE-BY-FAVERSHAM

Members who visited this site in June will be interested to hear that Paul Craddock has sent to Ted Sammes copies of this article, which according to the latest investigations establishes that the first building on the site was a Romano-British structure of the fourth century AD. Please contact Ted (062 86 4807) if you would like a copy.

HELP!

On 18 October a major exhibition organised by Ted Sammes will open at the Church Farm Museum to celebrate the 25th anniversary of HADAS. The exhibition will be entitled One Man’s Archaeology and the highlight will be the finds from the Church Terrace excavations conducted by Ted Sammes. Here on a site not far from Hendon Parish Church not only was Roman pottery and tile discovered, but also grass tempered pottery of Saxon date and a very important and rare Saxon pin, providing some of the earliest evidence for Saxon Hendon.

To accompany the exhibition HADAS is producing a 24-page booklet, for which Andrew Selkirk is providing an introduction, describing the excavations and their importance for the history of Hendon, while Ted Sammes is providing a description of the many important objects discovered in the excavation. However, help is desperately needed in publishing this booklet, both on the editing side and from anyone who can draw the objects or from photographers who could print good photos from the original negatives. We also need help in the layout of the booklet and in instructions to the printers. If any member of HADAS would like to help in any of these ways, could he or she give Andrew a ring on 435 7517?

HENDON’S SAXON PIN

On the subject of the Saxon pin mentioned above, Ted Sammes writes:

“Visiting Martin Biddle’s excavation in the cloister area of St Albans Abbey in 1983 I was surprised to discover that a similar one to ours had been found there. This he was tentatively dating to the 7th century AD. When we as a society later visited his excavations at Repton I was able to show the pin to him and his wife Birthe. There is considerable doubt about the dating of these pins, many have been found in wrong context. Of these double inturned spiral headed pins some 30 are now known, including two from York; a date range from 6-8c AD is probably reasonable. Martin Biddle has since started a review of all known examples and ours has been duly drawn and recorded for his survey. This pin came from the Church Terrace Excavations of 1973-4.”

ANOTHER HELP!

It is said that everyone has one novel in them; this may be questionable, but I think every HADAS member has one article for the Newsletter in them. Members are on the move all the time: abroad and in Great Britain, visiting places, sites, museums and exhibitions. Please tell us all about your activities – it is interesting for members who can’t get about and may be an inspiration for those who can. The name of next month’s editor is always given at the end of the Newsletter.

JUNE PORGES

YET ANOTHER HELP! MIN1MART – SATURDAY 11 OCTOBER

The Minimart is our only fund raising effort of the year, and with the splendid support we get from members this effort certainly keeps the Society going financially, and our subscriptions low. Without this funding we would not be able to provide the excellent newsletter we all enjoy, hire the library for our lectures, pay for first class speakers, mount exhibitions, or run our excavations. We give a service to the public in our efforts to preserve the history of the Borough. We have made extensive churchyard surveys and records, mounted frequent exhibitions at Church Farm House Museum, HGS Institute and even at Brent X and have published books and pamphlets about the borough. All this we do from our own efforts and the only help we get from the public of Barnet is when they attend our Minimart and spend money. So members, please keep up the good work. Don’t part with anything saleable between now and October. Send it to us for the Minimart. Ring 203 0950 or 455 2751 DOROTHY NEWBURY

In the March Newsletter (Committee Corner) it was reported that we hoped to be able to do some trial-trenching this summer at this site which is between Roman Watling Street and Thirleby Road where Roman pottery was found. We now have permission to investigate, for 2 months (extendable) from a date to be agreed. The area is, of course, too large for us to trial-trench the whole, so we are planning a resistivity survey and a metal-detector survey first, in the hope these will indicate likely areas to try trenching. We would then expect to arrange one or two week-end digs (planned so as not to clash with West Heath or other Society events!) which may well include some pick-and-shovel work as well as careful trowelling and sieving.

Apart from being near known Roman traces, the site may be interesting because it has not, as far as our historical research goes, been built on or ploughed so should have been undisturbed for some centuries at least; of course this may be because it was land that was never much use, and hence we may find few human traces! However it’s land now open, in our area, which surely we should have a look at before it’s covered in concrete.

If you are interested in digging here please get in touch with Brian Wrigley,

21 Woodcroft Avenue, NW7 2AH (959 5982). It will help in planning, to know how many diggers we are likely to get.

BRIAN WRIGLEY

OBITUARIES

It is with great sadness we announce the deaths of these members:

HUGH CURTIS – a member since 1978 who studied for the Diploma at HGSI, and the Institute of Archaeology, as part of a group of HADAS members.

RENE DEYONG who died in a motor car accident. Her death will be felt by the groups in her community to which she made such generous contributions. The HADAS trips will be the poorer, as will be Margaret Roxan’s Roman class in the Hendon Library on Wednesday evenings.

ESTHER SHARPLEY (mother of June Porges), who enjoyed lectures and outings, and whose last engagement before going into hospital was the HADAS Christmas Party.

Newsletter-184-June-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 184: June 1986 Edited by: Liz Holliday

PROGRAMME NEWS

Saturday 14 June Outing to Faversham and Rochester Dr.Paul Craddock

Itinerary and application form enclosed. If you wish to join this outing please complete the slip and return it with your cheque as soon as possible to Dorothy Newbury.

Saturday 26 July Outing to Sutton Hoo and Orford by Sheila Woodward

Saturday 16 August Repeat visit to “Mary Rose” and Porchester

Second visit arranged to meet demands As with the trip last month, numbers have to be given and payment made six weeks beforehand. Will all members wishing to come on the re-run please complete the form enclosed and send it with their cheque to Dorothy Newbury (or send form only if cheque already sent). A few empty places on the coach are anticipated, so anyone who would like to bring a friend is welcome to do so.

Thursday 18 to Sunday 21 September Exeter weekend

The coach is now full but if anyone would like to put their name on the waiting list, please ‘phone.

Saturday 4 October Outing to Winchester and Domesday Exhibition

BRIGID GRAFTON-GREEN AND THE NEWSLETTER ENID HILL on behalf of all HADAS members

Reading the May issue of the Newsletter, Brigid’s final one as editor, it seems impossible to imagine how the Society will cope without her services after 16 years. Brigid always said that she felt affection for the Newsletter and this has resulted in her readers having a high regard for the letter too. Those members not able to attend lectures or outings value the Newsletter particularly, as it has kept them in touch with the Society. I cannot think of any society newsletter which has provided such a full coverage of events, people, and special features – something for everyone, and this is surely the mark of an outstanding editor. It is sad that Brigid feels it is time to give up the job and the Society owes her gratitude and thanks for doing such a magnificent job for so long.

FUTURE-ISSUES OF THE NEWSLETTER

Alas, it has not been possible to find any one member able to wear Brigid’s editorial hat, so in the forthcoming months a panel of associate editors will be taking it in turn to edit each Newsletter. Aided by our trusted band of typists, we hope to ensure that production continues without too many hiccups!

Each month the name of the editor for the following month will appear and all members of the Society are invited to submit articles, news, views and comments for publication. Please don’t be shy!

Brigid has set us a high standard to follow and we hope with your help to maintain the quality of the Newsletter we all value so much.

VISIT TO “THE MARY.ROSE” & PORCHESTER CASTLE Report by REVA BROWN

The first thing that struck me, when confronted by the “Mary Rose” ‘fragment’, is its huge size. Although I has watched the television programme about its raising from the seabed, I had no. real idea of how much of the ship had been salvaged.The Trust does an excellent job of getting it all to make sense. Groups are taken into the building where there are two tiers-of gallery from which to view the ship. The guide explains what one is looking at and tries to conjure up what it was like to live in and work, the ship and her guns. All the while, as a background to his reasonable voice, water sprays over the ship, encasing it in a surrealistic mist, and leaching away the minerals which have impregnated the wood and preventing disease-bearing organisms from taking a hold.

The exhibitions of artifacts found during the excavation is housed in another building, and is excellently presented. There is a little theatre where a fifteen-minute film is shown, telling the story of the finding, excavation and the raising of the Mary Rose. The artifacts range from the magnificent guns to the sewing kit of one of the sailors – all well displayed with explanatory cards. There is also a lifesize model of a portion of the ship showing how the gun decks would have been used.

The souvenir shop was filled with an assortment of goodies, ranging from T-shirts and engraved glass goblets to jigsaw puzzles and posters; something for every pocket. Portsmouth Dockyard contains other treasures for which, regretfully there was no time for: Nelson’s “Victory” and the Royal Navy Museum.

And then on to Porchester Castle, which was another surprise to me. The information on the outing sheet had said: “a large Roman fortress, dating to the late third century which has practically the whole of its walls and bastions still standing, and as the coach arrived, there the massive walls were. But from the inside layers of history were visible all around. In a corner of the great grassy square, a local team was playing cricket.. In another rose the large Norman keep. On the ‘ground floor’ is a small but clear exhibition, explaining the Roman defences of the forts of the Saxon Shore, of which Porchester Castle is one. French prisoners of War in Napoleonic times had been housed in the keep and then in tents or buildings placed in the huge grassed enclosure. In another corner diagonally opposite the keep, is the church which was originally the Norman church of an Augustinian priory. The proximity of the church and the military hadn’t worked, and the monks had moved. The priory buildings are gone, but the church remains. At the entrance to the churchyard a man was repairing the Lychgate his radio playing modern pop songs – another layer of history laid on top of the mainly Victoria gravestones around him.

Marion Newbury was the perfect guide, seeing to it that things ran (seemingly) effortlessly until despite the uninspiring weather, the day had run its thoroughly enjoyable and inspiring course. On behalf of us all, many thanks to HADAS and to Marion for A Grand Day Out.

.

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING ON MAY 20

Wearing her Vice-President’s hat, Brigid Grafton-Green took the chair and in welcoming members expressed regret that Brian Jarman, who has been our Chairman for so many years, was unable to continue in that office & was unable to attend the Meeting.

Victor Jones, the Hon. Treasurer, clearly took pleasure in reporting a healthy balance on deposit, whilst pointing out that this reserve was important as it would be needed for future publications; there were some sharp intakes of breath when he said “We owe a great debt…..” but with some relief we found he was referring to the hard work of the ladies organizing the Minimart, which had raised a substantial sum He drew attention to the fall in receipts for the sale of publications – is there, perhaps, a volunteer somewhere in the Society who would under-take the active management of this operation, which could benefit our funds ?

A vote of thanks to our Honorary Auditor, Ronald Penney, was passed with acclaim.-

The Vice-Chairman’s report had been circulated with the May Newsletter and the substance of the various reports on research and Group activities have been Newsletter items from time to time.

Two members of the Committee who are retiring after long and much appreciated service to the Society, Brian Jarman and Daphne Lorimer, were elected Vice-Presidents, joining Rosa Freedman, Brigid Grafton-Green, Daisy Hill, Sir Maurice Laing, Ted Sammes and Andrew Saunders. With much applause, Andrew Selkirk was declared elected as the new Chairman; the other Officers and Committee members are:-

Vice-Chairman: John Enderby

Hon.Treasurer: Victor.Jones

Hon.Secretary: Brian Wrigley

Committee:- Christine Arnott, Jim Beard, Gillian Braithwaite, Phyllis Fletcher, Liz Holliday, Margaret Maher, Isobel McPherson, Robert Michel, Dorothy Newbury, June Porges, Ted Sammes, Myfanwy Stewart.

Percy Reboul (who had an urgent engagement to show some slides as soon as the formal meeting was over), demonstrated that brevity is the soul of wit in proposing a vote of thanks to the long-serving Committee members, who were retiring – Brian Jarman, Brigid Grafton Green, Daphne Lorimer, Sheila Woodward and Nell Penny; this was carried unanimously.

The last half hour of the AGM was enlivened by a slide-show presented by several members. Percy Reboul showed slides he had made of the watercolours by Agnes Beattie Holgate of Old Hendon in the 1850s and Paddy Musgrove took us back to Dale Fort in Pembrokeshire, scene of a recent HADAS visit, for another look at the impressive dig there. Bill Firth’s excellent slides of the Grahame White buildings at RAF. Hendon made us realize how much of importance is at risk there. Metal detectors were shown as responsible tools on the battlefield of Little Big Horn – the major interest of Derek Batten, while Barbara Howe, who had helped pioneer archaeological tourism in Albania, showed some of its vast and largely neglected, Greek and Roman sites.

Altogether – a splendid reminder of the range of Society interests as well as a visual treat.

CENTENARY CELEBRATIONS AT ST.JOHN THE EVANGELIST, WEST HENDON

A small, but very interesting collection of church records, news clips and photographs is on exhibition at St. John’s from “how until the end of June (Sundays only; possibly at other times by arrangement). Anyone interested in the development of West Hendon would find it well worth a visit. A short, lively history of church and parish by Clifford Morsley is on sale.

The original ‘tin tabernacle’ was opened on 1st May 1886 and almost immediately funds were collected and work begun on a substantial perm­anent building. This has been modernised and impressively, though simply, decorated recently – a nave and vast south aisle with filled arches on the north side where a second aisle was planned but never built.

The large vicarage, in the style of an old Middlesex house, was dedicated in 1900, well provided with grounds and trees which today form a green oasis overlooking the sunken section of the Mc%

Originally, St. John’s was a mission outpost of St Mary’s, Hendon but with the rapid expansion of West Hendon to house workers on the railway, at Schweppes’ from 1899 and the growth of housing and shops, it ,became a thriving parish with missions of its own in the new districts of Colin-dale and Burnt Oak. These grew, eventually, into the new parish of St. Matthias and St. Alphage. The records chronicle these outposts and the baptisms of fairground children from the winter site on the Broadway and from single mothers at the Burnt Oak Workhouse, figure among those from more settled households.

St.John’s is still a lively force in West Hendon society, under the present vicar, the Rev.J.R.Warner. Numbers have dropped since the days when the church barely housed its congregation but hard work and enthusiasm is’ not lacking.

One-last thought what happened to the original corrugated iron church? It was a substantial building, seating 250, but after less than twenty years it was demolished, we learn; to make space for the church hall. This is a very short life for one of these remarkably tough ‘pre­fabricated’ buildings, many of which were sold and resold, dismantled and re-erected and often survived to celebrate their own centenary. Does anyone know what happened to St.John’s ‘tin cathedral’?

WELL RECORDED!

Recently we heard from the Borough Library that builders had uncovered a well off Colney Hatch Lane, and this could not be found, recorded on any available old maps. John Enderby sprang into action, armed with trowel, rule and camara. He uncovered the domed brick capping of the well, which was well-preserved; measured and photographed it.

The site had been a yard concreted over; below the concrete and its underlying hardcore, John found a Yorkstone flagged floor. The top of the well appears to have been below this floor although one cannot be certain of this, the stone floor having already been broken through in the original discovery of the well-. The cap, 8 inches thick, was 32 inches below existing ground level, and the stone floor was 17 inches below ground level. The well shaft was approximately 62 inches diameter and the hole through the cap, 17 inches diameter. The builders’ trench alongside the shaft exposed the outside to a depth of 14 feet without reaching bottom. No exploration of the interior was possible, as it was filled to within 18 inches of the top with sticky clay.

From its depth below the buried stone floor, the well may be of considerable age; it is thought to be possibly similar to a number of 18th or 19th century wells known in Finchley. Further exploration is not now possible, as it has been filled and covered over in the continued building operations. Still, we have now got a record of its position, with photographs, and we are grateful to Michelle Lamb who reported it to the library and to Horgans, the contractors on site for their co-operation.

THE LOST HOUSES OF HARINGEY

A new book available from the Hornsey Historical Society, “The Lost Houses of Haringey” records the history of eight mansions which once stood in the green fields from Highgate to Tottenham. All were demolished at the end of the 19th century as London expanded. The book is available from Hornsey Historical Society, The Old Schoolhouse, 136 Tottenham Lane, Hornsey, N8 7E1, price £2.95 plus 32p postage.

The Newsletter would like to take this opportunity to welcome our new Chairman, Andrew Selkirk, who is known to many HADAS members as the Editor of Current Archaeology. His interest in archaeology began at school.. He read Greats at Oxford, where he was President of the University Archaeological Society.

We are delighted that Mr. Selkirk has agreed to be our Chairman, particularly in view of his many other commitments.

THE STAGE MANAGER’S TALE From PERCY REBOUL’S collection of

Reminiscences by people who worked locally

I was born on 26th December 1896 at Old Street in the City in 1898 my father bought some shops and cottages in Summers Lane, Finchley and we moved to Finchley where I went to Albert Street School. I am what they call an old Albertian. I left school in 1910. Dad was the manager of Maws, the druggists, in. Aldersgate Street and my mother was the daughter of Joseph Eva of the Barbican. He was a carman and contractor and a freeman of the City of London.

I remember Finchley when it was Finchley – when it was practically all fields and when there was a racecourse at Granville Road and Kingsway where you could do your courting. They took down the rails just after they built the tram station. I also remember when the Finchley Football team played where the Cottage Hospital stands today – that was before they moved to Summers Lane. I was unemployed after the First World War and used to go to see ‘Father Feed ’em All’ (relieving officer). I was there one day with a pal of mine called Ivor Richards when they offered him a job at the Golders Green .Hippodrome. He said he wasn’t interested so I went in his place, using his name at first because they had already filled in the card: When I got to the theatre, Nobby Clark, the stage door keeper, gave me directions where to go to get to the stage. There was only a tiny beam of light on that big stage and I don’t mind admitting that I had the ‘wind-up’ and was going to leave when suddenly the lights went up and it looked better! The stage manager, Mr.Dyer, saw me and I got paid 4/- a night and 3/6d for matinees – 31/- a week.

I knew nothing about the stage. On the Saturday night of my first week, as the curtain came down on the last call, they said to me “Do you want to get the show out and the new one in?” They explained that you get 1/10 for the first hour overtime or 7/1d over that hour.

At first I was put on erecting the braces that secure the scenery to the floor. Each scene has its own pack of scenery and you had about 3 minutes to change the scenery. The first thing you do is to put down a stage cloth, rather like n carpet, so that you can mark where the scenery goes. Later I learnt to handle the back cloths suspended from the flied which were lowered down by hand with ropes.

The Hippodrome had a different play every week except when you got a season of opera, grand or light-opera – the Doyle Carte, for example. Sometimes, when there was a long first act you could sit and watch the play. I also used to do a bit of prompting for which I got paid 4/- night extra which made 8/- The actors sometimes left out whole pages it depended on what they had to drink.

.

I worked twice on the stage with Charles Laughton. First time was a walk on part in ‘Payment Deferred’ where I played the part of Sergeant Higgins of Scotland Yard. He dislocated my thumb in a ‘brawl’. I then had a speaking part in ‘On the Spot’ in 1932 where Charles Laughton played a Chicago gangster called Tony Pirelli. Every time his gang ‘shot’ a person, Laughton used to go to the side of the stage play an organ & say “Another one dead!”. .I was supposed to be his chauffeur and I had to accuse him of having an affair with my wife. He shoots me (and I’m going to quote you now a line from the play and when lying on the carpet with blood coming from six bullet wounds, he says “Don’t spoil my carpet you bastard” and puts two more shots into me! I don’t think the audience minded the bad language because that’s how Chicago gangsters were – expected to talk! You got 4/- to 7/- extra for playing a part and when I played the part of Sgt. Higgins, where I wore a uniform, I used to go home in the trousers rather than wear my own out.

Plays that stick in my mind are ‘The Merry Widow’ with Carl Brisson and. Evelyn Laye and Harry Welchman in ‘Silver Wings’ which was about flying in the First World War. Here we had an actual plane which ‘crashes’ on the stage killing the pilot. It was suspended on fine wires.

On the special effects side, in a thrilling drama where there was a thunderstorm, a big metal sheet would come down (from the flies) and we would rattle it to produce thunder: The rain was a box with wires in it and stones rolled around inside. Horses were done with coconut shells:

We used to start work about 9am and I would get a 2d fare on the open-decked tram from Finchley to Golders Green. On a typical Monday there might be a scene rehearsal in the morning where you start with the last scene and work back to the first scene which you left up for the performance. Golders Green had the record for quick change. When the final curtain came down; we would strike the last act scenery, have a fag and finish about 11.15p.m. We would get home on a late tram, call in at Bob’s coffee stall in Finchley for a tea and a wad, and then go home.

When I got on a bit I worked longer hours but would take home on average over £10 a week, which was a lot of money. But if you want to be on the stage, you’ve got to drink and you’ve got to mix with the artists. In 1934 I got the sack, I had been drinking and blotted my copy book by being drunk and ordering the Rouse Manager off the stage. I used to go back from time to time but not at the same money.

From 1919 to the. ’30s were the happiest days of my life. There seemed to be more enjoyment. In 1926 we went through the General Strike without closing. The only time we did close was when Mr. Woolf bought the theatre and we closed for three weeks because he was producing the pantomime ‘Aladdin’ and we were busy making the scenes. Golders Green Hippodrome was famous for its pantomimes and for nearly every year after 1929, when the panto finished, we put on ‘Lilac Time’.

The audiences were very large, especially when Gracie Fields played in ‘The Tower of London’ in 1930. Other artists that pulled them in were Jessie Matthews, Evelyn Laye, Gertrude Lawrence and Jack Buchanan, who was one of the best.

I remember Madame Pavlova who used to be most generous. Every night she gave each of the boys half-a-crown for a drink. I used to love ballet and used to put up the scenery for her ‘Dying Swan’. I’ve got a little story about Gracie Fields. At one matinee she said “come here a moment and pull back the stage curtain a bit. Can you see that parson down there in the fauteuils? You know my song ”Sally” she said to me “you just see when I bring out the word Cor Blimey. I’m going to emphasise it and you’ll see that parson get up and walk out” Which he did. He walked out disgusted:

Chorus girls in those days only got £2.10.0 a week and a gent got £3.10.0 and they had to find their own make-up.

The single biggest thing that sticks in my mind was that I was a bloody fool to get the sack – I was so happy there. When the ‘Hipp!, was going to close they sent for me. Many went, but I didn’t bloody well go! And there was £10 for me! Everyone who had ever worked there was called back and given a bit of a ‘do’ on the stage.

PETRIE MUSEUM OF EGYPTIAN ARCHAEOLOGY

The Department of Egyptology at University College London possesses the great collection of Egyptian antiquities formed by Sir Flinders Petrie. Over the years the collection has been augmented by many generous gifts and is now an outstanding collection of artifacts that illustrate the culture, technology, craftsmanship and life of the ancient Egyptians. The collection is used by research scholars from all over the world, but…it is also open to the public and special parties.

The building which orginally housed the Petrie collection was dest­royed during the war and ever since it has been accommodated in a converted warehouse. Unable to re-build, University College is appealing for funds to brine the present building up to standard and increase amenities for users. The Department needs to raise £10,000 towards the cost of £82,000 and appeals for contributions to help conserve this great collection for future generations. Donations may be sent to: The Petrie Museum Appeal, Department of Egyptology, University College London, Gower Street, WC1E 6BT

THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE LONDON REGION TO 1500

A London & Middlesex Archaeological Society conference at the Museum of London on Saturday 25 & Sunday 26 October 1986.

This two-day conference is an opportunity to re-examine our understanding of Greater Londons archaeology. On Saturday 25th October: Prehistoric & Roman periods. Speakers include John Wymer, Clive Bonsall, Jon Cotton, David Field, Dr.Ian Kinnes, Jean MacDonald, Dr. Stuart Needham, Mark Hassall, Harvey Sheldon and Dr .David Bird.

On Sunday 26th October: Dark Age and Medieval Periods. Speakers include John Mills, Dr Alan Vince, Dr Derek Keene, John Schofield, Dr John Blair and Bridget Cherry.

Early booking is recommended. Tickets for full conference now available but single day tickets only on sale from 1st September. Tickets cost £10 (£8 LAMAS members); £5 single day (£4 LAMAS members). Send stamped, addressed envelope to Mr.N.Fuentes, LAMAS Regional Conference, 7 Coalecroft Road, SW15 6LW (‘Phone: 788 0015). Cheques payable to London & Middlesex Archaeological Society. Tickets supplied on a first come first served basis

ALL ABOUT DATING

We have mentioned before the handbooks on dating for archaeologists which are

being published by the European Science Foundation. The first was on Thermoluminescence, the second on Dendrochronology. Now a third, on Radiocarbon dating, has come out it is by W.G.Mook and H.T.Waterbolk of Groningen University.

The booklets are free, and are highly recommended. Considering the complexity of their subjects, they are most lucid. They are obtainable from the CBA, 112 Kennington Road, SE11 6RE. *Include 50p for post/packing on each book.

Did anyone notice a brief letter tucked near the end of a correspondence column of The Times on May 13th? It was from Mr E Rosenstiel of Putney, and this is what it said:

“The worries about the consequences of the unprecedented disaster at Chernobyl to life on the planet rightly overshadow possible effects in other fields.

Understandably, I have so far seen no reference in the media about the likely interference of the massive discharge into the atmosphere of carbon-14 on the dating of fossils and historic artefacts.”

Have any of our scientific members got views on that aspect of Chernobyl?

The journal Nature mentioned recently; (vol 320 p129-133) a new technique for assessing prehistoric climatic change, using organic molecules found in deep-sea sediments. These molecules are the only, trace left by many past organisms. Often they are transformed beyond recognition, but some – the fatty lipids remain relatively intact and can give clues to ancient environment.. Research in this goes on-at Bristol and Kiel Universities. The Bristol researchers use a domestic analogy to explain what happens fatty lipids also occur in margarine and butter. Their behavior there illustrates how ancient fatty lipids may indicate climate. Margarine, high in unsaturated fats, spreads straight from the fridge; butter, high in saturates, doesn’t. Modern organisms in cold conditions alter the composition of their lipids so that most are unsaturated; in warm conditions the proportion of saturated lipids goes up. Thus the organism can adapt and doesn’t go rigid in cold conditions. A test of molecules in a deep-sea core showed a variation in fatty lipids which correlated well, over 500.000 years, with what is known about temperature changes from another technique: the measurement of oxygen isotopes. This means that scientists may now have two methods – always useful, as a cross-check for this kind of measurement.

PUTTING A FACE ON IT

Special summer exhibition this year at the Museum of London is “Let’s Face It:” a history of facial appearance in London over the last 250 years. The exhibition runs -from June 10-September 28. It is described in the hand-out as from patches and plumpers to perms and punks’. –

The June Museum Workshops (Thursdays, 1.10pm) take up the same theme: on June 5, Behind the face: the Human Skull and the Changing Age of Man; on June 12, From Shaving to Make-up: the Tools of Facial Beauty; on June 19, Roman Faces, Roman Portraits; and on June 26, Hats. Lectures (Weds and.Fris, 1.10 Pm) are similarly face-orientated, on eight-subjects such as “The English Face, as Photographed’ and Making Faces: the history of Boots’ Cosmetics.’

Newsletter-183-May-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 183: May, 1986
PROGRAMME NEWS

Sat May 10. Visit to the Mary Rose and Portchester. With Marion Newbury

This outing is heavily overbooked; a re-run has been planned for Sat. Aug 16. Application forms will be enclosed in the June Newsletter; meantime, will anyone wanting to join the re-run please phone Dorothy Newbury (203 0950)0. This information is essential to enable us to open the trip, if needs be, to members’ friends in order to fill the coach. Will members who applied too late for the May trip also please confirm that August 16 suits them as an alternative?

Tues May 20 Annual General Meeting (notice enclosed). Following the AGM several members have offered to show their own slides in 5 or 10-minute slots:

Percy Reboul Old Hendon

Derek Batten Custers battlefield excavation, USA

Paddy Musgrove Wales

Bill Firth Hendon Aerodrome

Barbara Howe Albania

We may not be able to show all the above: how many will depend on the time taken by AGM business.

Sat June 14
Trip to Faversham/Rochester with Paul Craddock

Sat July 26 Trip to Sutton Hoo/Orford with Sheila Woodward

Thurs-Sun Sep 18-21 Exeter weekend with Ann & Alan Lawson

This trip is almost full – just a couple of empty seats left on the coach. We would like to fill these, so if any member still wants to join the trip please ring either 458 3827 or 203 0950.

WEST HEATH IN MAY

There will be digging at our West Heath site throughout May. The original plan was to dig for three weeks in April, then take a rest and start again in June – but April, 1986, has hardly been good digging weather: so work will continue through May.

The site: will be open-every day except Saturday. If you’re proposing to dig, please let, Margaret Maher (907 0333) or Myfanwy Stewart (443025) know, just in case there are any last minute changes of plan.

With the start of the dig – even a showery April start – the saga of West Heath wild life has begun again (for the first chapter in this enthralling serial, see Margaret Maher’s “Animal Crackers” in last September’s Newsletter). Already two very fat lady toads are in residence in the hide used for tools, which they are sharing with a very small baby rabbit. Last year Margaret be­lieved the large toads were macho men; now she’s discovered the fat ones are the ladies and the males are skinny and look rather immature. The toad equi­valent of henpecked, perhaps? No frogs have put in an appearance yet – that’s a joy to come.

All diggers over 16 will be most welcome at West Heath, whether new recruits or old hands: but please give notice of your intention to come, especially if you are new to digging: you’ll need some advice about equipment, etc.
NEW MAPS FOR OLD

Barnet Borough Library is currently selling a set of six interesting maps: they are reprints of large-scale Ordnance Survey maps of the last century. They originally saw the light of day in the 1890s, when they were at a scale of 1:2500, or 25 ins to the mile. For purposes of this 1986 reprint the scale has been reduced to 1:4340 or about 15 ins to the mile,

Moving spirit behind a project for reprinting 19c large-scale maps for the whole country is Alan Godfrey of Gateshead. Various areas – mainly the north – have already been published. Now a start has been made on the London Sheets luckily for us northwest London (and the Borough of Barnet specifically) is being dealt with early in the programme. This is partly because our History Collection has been able to provide good, clear originals from which Alan Godfrey can publish. The first six local maps, at £1 each, cover Cricklewood, Golders Green, East Finchley, North Finchley, New Barnet and Muswell Hill.

On the reverse each Map carries a note about the area covered, mentioning some of the buildings and features: the notes have been compiled mainly by the two LBB Archivists, Pam Taylor and Joanna Cordt. The reverse also carries, for 4 of the maps, excerpts from local directories for the same area at about the same date; the remaining two – Golders Green and Cricklewood – carry parts of earlier OS maps – 1868 for Cricklewood and 1880 for Golders Green.

Other local maps will follow in the series. Mid-Finchley is in preparation – covering an area southwards from Fallow Corner and taking in part of Church End Finchley. Friern: Barnet, Welsh Harp and Edgware are all gestating; so is an area bordering on Hampstead, south of East Finchley and east of Golders Green, which will cover Ken Wood and North End.

Hendon is on the agenda too, though a few problems have arisen because the original Hendon maps are not in tip-top condition. Members who live in Hampstead – and we have a lot – may like to know that Camden Local History Library has begun annotating its sheets so these ought to go into production in the not too distant future.

The maps cost £l each, from selected local libraries. Should you be in any doubt about whether your nearest branch library is ‘selected,’ we suggest you telephone Central Library in the Burroughs (202 5625) and check.

When he has dealt with the 1894-6 edition, Alan Godfrey hopes to do the same with the editions of the 1860s (though the further back you go, the trickier it is to find good, clean copies) and then the 1911 and 1930s editions.

IS THIS A DAGGER THAT I SEE BEFORE ME? DAPHNE LORIMER

ruminates on some of the more outrageous possibilities of archaeology

The trouble with digs is that one finds things; and the trouble with find­ing things is the devastating effect that it can have on the errant imagination. No matter how firmly the hatches are battened on the would-be scientific mind, nor how carefully thought is canalised into the paths of rectitude and fact, there comes a moment (all unbidden and often in the coffee break) when little tendrils of fancy escape, take root and, like some gaudy tropical bloom, burst into a joyous, unsubstantiated and fantastical reconstruction.

Turning out memorabilia to go north revived many of these lighter archaelogical moments, many of them from HADAS. Who remembers, for instance the Medieval Chicken at Church Terrace? Were its bones the remains of some Saints Day feast or did it fall victim to that fox whose bones were nearby who was, incidentally, rather a poor thing and had broken his leg at some time? He must have been rather slow off the mark – in any event, he paid for his crime. Perhaps, on the other hand, he was rescued as a cub from a trap, nursed with loving care, grew up with the chicken and died, a much loved pet, to be buried near his friend..

Then there were the bones of the hand buried all by themselves, outside consecrated ground. Legitimately, they could be considered the bones of a thief but who was he? Could he have been a Medieval Hendon Peasant who, on a cold, hard winter’s night, driven to despair by the cries of his hungry children, poached a red deer from Hendon Woods to feed his starving family? At least, as the hard-faced minions of the Abbot of Westminster stretched his hand on the block, he knew they had food in their bellies (the deer bones are there to prove it)

Farther afield in the Mendips, is a Romano-British farm. There, in solitary splendor, in the middle of its yard the excavator’s trowel revealed the entire fragments of a broken bowl. Who dropped it? What was in it? .Was some maidservant taking refreshment to the inspecting steward from the villa in the valley below? (He’d come to do the accounts, no doubt, and probably left his stylus behind). Did she get into trouble? Perhaps it wasn’t the steward, but her young man who was to be the recipient of illicit refreshment, in which case retribution doubtless followed, swift and sure.

The skeletal analyst has an even better time not only can withers be wrung by battered babies, dental abscesses and other diseases (which really do fill the mind with pity) but speculation can have its lighter moments. On top of the mound of Howe Broch outside Stromness, Orkney, were found a number of human bones, neatly chopped into lengths and buried just beneath the turf, had we found a murder? The bones were old – but had some 18c or.19c villain-strangl­ed, poisoned or stabbed his victim, butchered his body with a handy axe and buried the evidence of his crime? The other happy theory, by the way, was cannibalism. Speculation ran rife, but fact was regrettably prosaic – a little detection proved the bones to be Viking and the damage to be due to the plough and reburial by the farmer.

Some people take up archaeology in pursuit of science, some in pursuit of history. What both produce are just the bare bones, the mere skeleton of our past. Is it such a crime to put flesh onto the bones and, in our lighter moments, to cloth them in dreams?

WHAT’S TO BE DONE WITH THE LONGEST BUILDING IN EUROPE?

Last month the Finchley Society kindly invited HADAS to take part in a meeting they had set up with the authorities of Friern Hospital, led by Maurice Jeffrey the hospital administrator. Five members of the Finchley Society, a representative of the Middlesex Polytechnic and one from HADAS were in the visit­ing party. The objects of the meeting were twofold: to learn what the present plans are for the building and its grounds; and to investigate what action can be taken to ensure that the historic, architectural and environmental importance of Friern Hospital is fully recognised in any future plans for developing this – the largest single site ever likely to become available in north London..

Some time ago, as HADAS members will know, a decision was taken by the Area Health authority to phase out Friern Hospital over a period and by degrees to integrate its patients into local communities. When the phasing-out is complete, the huge building (originally Colney Hatch Asylum), mainly dating to 1831, will become redundant. The hospital stands in 114 acres of ground (in which, inci­dentally, there are many splendid and some rare trees).

Three separate parts of the hospital are listed as of architectural and historic importance first, the enormously long frontage of the building, with its square interval towers and its central coppertop cupola surmounting an imposing pedimented and arcaded entrance and 5 stained-glass windows of the original chapel; secondly, an octagonal colonnaded pumping house and water tower which stand’s on a commanding mound in the grounds, under which is a reservoir filled with water pumped up from an artesian well; there is still in’position in it various parts of the original machinery – for example, a water level recorder (made by Glenfield & Kennedy of Kilmarnock)’ which was in operation for a century from 1868; and thirdly., the entrance lodge.

Although the hospital lies entirely within the London Borough of Barnet, no patients are referred there from Barnet, which sends its psychiatric cases to Napsbury, in Herts. To Friern go patients either from Haringey, Camden or Enfield. The Borough of Barnet, however, is the planning authority which will have a final say in any decisions about the future of the building and grounds.

The Health Authority has submitted two planning applications for the site, one which LBB has turned down. On the other, which the hospital calls a ‘notional’ application, LBB and the Health Authority propose to carry on talking, in order to explore all the problems and possibilities. One encouraging fact is that LBB has said it will not agree to the demolition of the Listed building.

The original programme for closing the hospital has now been modified. One part of Friern -the area of Halliwick Hospital, whose buildings lie to the west and are independent of the main building – is to be kept, with some 250-300 beds, for Haringey patients; and also for those in the specialized units which are Friern’s pride. These are for the treatment of for instance, disturbed adol­escents, geriatric patients and other particular groups. They have the reputa­tion of being among the best in the country.

The proposed time–table for running down Friern Hospital goes something like this: 50 patients will move out by March 1987: that is, two wards will be closed in the next year. The 10-year plan of removals is intended to end by. 1993, by which time 500 patients will have gone, leaving in Halliwick 250 of the present total of 750. The phasing out is being done by withdrawing towards the centre: the outer wings will close first, and will be left empty. After 3 years the time-table is already 12months behind schedule.

So much for the present situation to estimate future use of the area and buildings, it is first worth looking back at its history. This is something HADAS is in a position to do, hanks to one of our members, David Tessler, who lived nearby and became interested in the hospital in the late 1970s. David was a dental surgeon; he went abroad in the early 1980s, but before that he had done a good deal of research and had arranged a display on the history of Friern at an exhibition of industrial archaeology, called Here Today, Gone Tomorrow, which HADAS mounted at Barnet Museum from October 1978 to January 1979, He also took a number of photographs of the hospital, inside and out.

Mr Tessler was greatly helped by Dr Richard Hunter, the historian of Friern Hospital, Dr Hunter was the author, with Dr Ida Macalpine, of Psychiatry for the Poor: Colney Hatch Asylum 1851-Friern Hospital 1974, a medical and social history. The author kindly presented HADAS with a copy of his book, so members can borrow it from our library.

Through Dr Hunter’s kind offices we were able to borrow from the hospital for the 1978-9 exhibition various historic objects – such as a set of Victorian keys (every internal door was lockable and senior staff carried master keys); an early glass enema syringe; and the engineer’s report of 1851 estimating gas requirements, which led to the decision to build the hospital’s own gas works in the SE corner of the estate, with rail access from the adjoining Great Northern railway station, now New Southgate and Friern Barnet, opened in 1855.

Early photos, also from the hospital collection, showed nursing uniforms of Victorian days, the carpenters’ shop with brush making in progress, the hospital fire brigade and pictures of secure accommodation, which carried this caption:

“Padded cells were used for the disturbed patient’s own protection. Three types.of secure accommodation were:

A. a horse-box type of arrangement where the patient could be viewed under minimum security;

B. a half-padded dell, with fully padded door and secure windows;

C. a full-padded cell: the inside had a protected window and a peep hole in the door, which could be disguised from outside.”

This subject of securing; or confining, patients is one on which Friern has always held enlightened views, right from the start. Nowadays TV companies occasionally ring the hospital to ask for the loan of a straitjacket for a film. They are told with considerable pride, that Friern has never possessed such an object, not even in 1851.

David Tessler wrote a brief account of Friern in the HADAS leaflet accom­panying Here Today, Gone Tomorrow. In it he said: ‘The foundation stone of what was England’s finest – and Europe’s largest ­mental hospital was laid by the Prince Consort in 1849, in an entirely rural setting northwest of London. It opened in time for the Great Exhibition in July 1851, with accommodation for 1250 patients, as the Middlesex County Pauper Lunatic Asylum at Colney Hatch. As plain Colney Hatch it became synonymous with mad­ness, as Bedlam was in previous centuries. Among the documents in the hospital archives is the first Admissions book, for 1851. The entry for one Patient gives, as reason for admission, over-excitement engendered by a visit, to the Great Exhibition.

Colney Hatch was planned as a largely self-supporting community with its own farm and kitchen garden, well, gas-works, brewery, laundry, needle room and up­holsterer’s, tailor’s, and shoe-maker’s shops, even its own graveyard where there are over ‘2000 unmarked paupers’ graves. Most of the labour was done by the patients, which kept down their cost to the rate-payer while providing varied occupational therapy. As next to nothing was known of the causes of mental ill­ness, treatment was on general lines by good food, fresh air, rest, exercise, occupation and amusement.

In 1889, on the creation of the LCC, Colney Hatch became a London County Asylum. During World War I more than 3000 patients were accommodated (1986 note: the oldest patient at Friern now suffered shell-shock in WWI). In 1937 it was re-named Friern Hospital to remove old associations. In 1948 it was taken over by the National Health Service. As medical knowledge grew, many of the diseases which filled it vanished and treatment for the remainder improved. In conse­quence the need for such a large and isolated establishment declined, and continues to do so.”

When David Tessler wrote that in 1978, Friern contained 1000 patients. Today there are 750; by 1993 there will be, in Halliwick, well under half that.

A partial tour inside the hospital (it would take Weeks to see it in detail) and a half-perambulation of the exterior had been laid on for the Finchley Society visit last month. Evidence was everywhere visible for the historical signi­ficance of the building itself and also for the social and medical history of England in the, last 130 years. Here are a few examples:

We saw two empty wards, immediately above each other, one on the ground, one on the first floor. They were being decorated before patients were moved back into them. Today each ward holds 25 beds. Originally these wards were more than four times as large, laid out on an open plan and entirely occupied by beds, with up to 200 patients. Now the space has been partitioned off to form a complex of sleeping, treatment and leisure facilities which include a TV room, ­a library and so on.

Down one side of each ward doorways opened into small rooms – some for staff purposes, some for patients. It’s an interesting commentary on the changed attitude to patient care that at the outset these individual cells were used for ‘difficult’ patients; today they are a reward for patients who are doing well.

We saw the famous corridor which is the longest in Europe, one-third of a mile, running through the building from end to end straight as a die, with innumerable rooms and passages opening from it. Its walls are covered in rather battered cream paint, as is the ceiling, which is worth closer inspection be­cause of its curious construction. ‘It is arched, and made of cream-painted; dimpled bricks, giving a honeycomb effect. Modern architects, we were told, view it with surprise, and remark that it is like the very latest techniques for minimising noise in a passage constantly in use by hundreds of feet and trollies of every degree of squeakiness.

A discussion of the ceiling led to the whole subject of bricks, always interesting to an archaeologist. Friern Hospital is brick-built, the exterior walls being of yellow-grey stocks. The ceiling bricks in the long corridor, however, where. the paint has flaked away, show through as terracotta Coloured, the depressions in them evenly and carefully shaped. They were obviously purpose–made.

The Architects Report Book for the management committee of 1843-50 throws some light on the stock-bricks, if not on the bricks for the corridor ceiling. It has an entry giving the number of bricks required by May 4, 1849 6 million grey stocks and 1 million facing bricks. That was before building started: the final tally must have been astronomical.

Maurice Jeffrey told us that the stock bricks for the walls had been made on site, and the clay was said to come from Whetstone. Paddy Musgrove, who was one of the Finchley Society contingent suggested that the clay might possibly have been dug from some water-filled disused claypits near Oakleigh Park.

We saw from outside, through windows onto the corridor,- the new chapel, opened by Margaret Thatcher in 1981. A regular Friday feature is a hymn sing-in so we didn’t go. The new chapel replaced the vast original chapel, now much too big for services and used as a store. It is a lesson in the modern growth of religious tolerance. Until a few years ago the hospital had both chapel and synagogue: this new chapel, with a change of sacred vessels and other accoutre­ments, serves both Christian and Jewish congregations;

The hospital authorities are alive to the historic interest of the building they administer. Maurice Jeffrey told us that the day before our visit he had met representatives of the Museums Association to discuss the setting up of a small museum of psychiatric medicine in the hospital itself; and we know, from the material Dr. Hunter lent us 7 years ago, that there are plenty of objects and documents which are worth displaying.

Footnote: in the Transport Gazetteer which Bill Firth compiled for the December 1980 Newsletter he noted ‘In Friern Hospital wall at New Southgate station there is a bricked-up arch through which the line serving the hospital ran. No other visible evidence now stands

HADAS PEOPLE

Good news comes this month from DAN LAMPERT who, with his wife HELEN, has been a member since 1974. He’s had a successful hip operation and is walking around like a man re-born. Two days after surgery he was out of pain; two weeks later he was using just one stick. An early reaction when he realised how successful the surgeons had been was to ring Margaret Maher and offer to do some West Heath surveying. “You can’t imagine how thrilled I was,” she says, “because he does a superb job laying out the site.” Not surprising, really, as Dan is a civil engineer by profession.

Though we don’t often see JOANNA CORDEN at HADAS functions, many members will know her work as one of the two Borough Archivists in the Local History Collection at Egerton Gardens. Joanna took maternity leave just before Christmas and is now the proud mum of her third baby – a daughter, born on Feb 1 and a sister for Joanna’s two sons, 8 and 5. The naming of the young lady apparently caused much heart-searching: she’s finally emerged as Louise.

On the first Tuesday of April HADAS met at the Library for the last lecture of this winter; In the half-hour of coffee and chat which preceded the lecture ANDREW SELKIRK, a member of 10 years standing and a great supporter of lectures, turned up with a copy of his new book. It had a colourful dust jacket and is called The Riches of British Archaeology, published by Cambridge. The members to whom he showed it fell upon-it with glad cries, demanding to know when it had come out. It wasn’t till you flipped through the pages that the penny dropped it was April Fools Day. Andrew had managed to get an advance copy of the dust jacket but not of the book, which isn’t printed yet. It will be on sale in the autumn at around £15. Meantime, the jacket suggests there’s a feast in store.

LEST WE FORGET

The members who make up the mosaic of HADAS are, in background and in interests, of infinite variety.

It was sad to hear last month from a long-standing member, Louise do Launay, of the death of her husband, Jules. Both joined the Society years ago when they were living at Edgware. Sometime later they moved to Canterbury, but retained HADAS membership. One of my memories of the de Launays, both American-born, is their great generosity. The day they joined – in October, 1973 – they made an immediate donation to our map fund; later they presented the Society with its first Polaroid camera; and there were other benefactions.

Jules de Launay came originally from South Carolina. He was a mathematician, physicist and Rhodes Scholar. On retirement from scientific work in 1971 he took up history, genealogy and archaeology. When they first joined HADAS both the de Launays were doing the Diploma at the Institute of Archaeology.

Dr de Launay published 3 volumes of his own family history, and then settled down to study, transcribe and partly to publish the parish records, until then unpublished, of 18 parishes in the Weald of Kent, because ‘the area was a nursery for many of the early emigrants to the New World.’ This was a truly mammoth task, and one for which many a local historian will be deeply grateful in years to come.

We leave the last word to Louise de Launay, to whom we send our deepest sympathy. She writes: “On Saturday 12 October 1985 the Dover Lifeboat … took me with four friends … 12 miles out into the Straits of Dover to scatter Jules’ ashes; this was his desire (his body had been willed to medical research). A quiet, autumnal day, soft grey-green water, seagulls, the White Cliffs in view…”

BROCKLEY HILL WALK

Ten members of HADAS met at Piper’s Green Lane on. Apr 13, to try to walk the western half of the proposed route of the new water pipeline which is to be installed across the Brockley Hill area in 1988. The weather, for once was perfect, and Mr Shepherd of Bury Farm had kindly given us permission to walk across his fields.

The main purpose of the walk was.to work out as accurately as possible where the pipeline would run and how close it would come to any known areas of Roman activity or find-spots; to familiarise ourselves with the general lie of the land; and to identify any particular areas that might repay further investigation, either through field walking immediately after ploughing later this summer or with a resistivity-survey.

We walked in the general direction of the pipeline, while keeping as close to the edges of the fields as possible, from Brockley Hill/Watling .St (A5) east­wards across Edgware Way (A41) towards the Ml as far as the corner of the old trackway known as Clay Lane, where part of a ‘Roman arch’ was once said to have been seen protruding from the ground; :(Nothing is visible now, alas). The views were fantastic, and it was a lovely and uneventful walk, despite muddy conditions and some tricky plank-walking.

The pipeline itself neatly avoids all known find-spots, whether by accident or design, but several areas it crossed did look as though they might be well worth field-walking this autumn, and one or two particular spots might also be surveyed with the resistivity meter. Late August and early September seem to be the only times when the fields are likely to be ploughed but not yet sown with winter crops, so we shall try to arrange some dates for field walking then. We very much hope there will be some members not on holiday who will be able to come and help. GILLIAN BRAITHWAITE

DINING ROOMS IN ANCIENT GREECE

We apologise deeply. indeed, we grovel because this Newsletter does not carry a full report of the final event of our winter lecture season – Professor Richard Tomlinson’s lucid, enthusiastic and entertaining talk on April 1 on his excavations (which have taken place over many years) at the earthquake-prone Greek temple site of Perachora. Owing to a misunderstanding between our Programme Secretary and the member who she thought she had lined up to report the lecture, the necessary notes were not taken – and the editor discovered the fact only on deadline day.

It’s the first time this has ever happened to the Newsletter, which is one cause for sorrow; but the fact that makes it much sadder is that several Members leaving the hall that night were overheard muttering ‘That’s the best HADAS lecture we’ve ever had, Alas that there should be no detailed record of it.

Professor Tomlinson is a most endearing character, with a superb grasp of his subject and a total ability to put it across to his audience, As Julius Baker, who gave the vote of thanks, said: ‘Aren’t his students lucky to have him; Professor Tomlinson holds the Chair of Classics at Birmingham University, and was at one time the youngest professor on the campus. Another pertinent HADAS comment was I could go that that place tomorrow and find my way round it because the slides were so good and he put them in such clear order. Incidentally, they were beautiful into the bargain.

One point we did take some notes on, because it was so intriguing, was that the Perachora temple had a dining room associated with it and that ever since he first unearthed it,. Professor Tomlinson has ‘collected’ dining rooms. In fact, he confided, there are several persons in the higher echelons-of archaeology who do that – a sort of inner coterie of dining-room buffs. Excavation gave the first Perachora dining room a dating in the 5th century BC. After one of the periodic earthquakes had destroyed it, a rebuilding took place in the 4th c BC and the temple emerged with two formal dining rooms ­presumably for ceremonial meals on the feast days of the goddess.

Built-in stone couches went right round the walls of the rooms. There was evidence for 3-legged tables in front of each couch. These had been of wood and had long vanished, but the single leg at one end had fitted into a niche in the cement floor. This was discovered because when a slight snowfall covered the site, the snow in the circular niche-marks melted more quickly and they showed up.

GREATER LONDON-RECORDS

HADAS researchers work from time to time at the Greater London Record Office (which contains the collections of the former Middlesex Record Office) in Clerkenwell. You will be glad to know that the Record Office hasn’t vanished in a puff of smoke with the GLC. In fact, it seems to be in business much as before at 40 Northampton Road: same opening hours (Tues-Fri, 10-4.45, late opening by appointment on Tues up to 7.30 pm), same rules, pretty well the same staff.

There has been a change at the top, of course, from the GLC to the Corpora­tion of London. What effect that’s going to have will become apparent only with the passing of the months. Right now, however, the news is: no change.

THE NEWSLETTER SETTLES ITS DEBTS by Brigid Grafton Green

As the retiring editor of the Newsletter, this seems the right time to pay some of my debts: I’ve amassed quite a few in the 16 years during which – with a few intervals – I’ve been editor. I want to thank all the members who have helped, month by month and year by year, to make the Newsletter what it is. You will be surprised at how many there are.

First; of course, thanks to you, dear readers, for reading it ! And for telling me, either ‘by letter or word of mouth, what you think of it – brickbats when you disapprove but some bouquets, too.

The first issue came out it October 1969, describing itself as ‘a venture which we hope … to’ send members at about 6-weekly intervals.’ Daisy then our secretary (she’s now a Vice President) produced 4 issues before she handed over to me in May,1970 both as secretary and editor.

On the editorial side much gratitude is due to Christine Arnott and Celia Gould both tried their hands at editing for short periods in 1972. Later a number of associate editors emerged, prepared to take over occasional issues Enid Hill, Liz Holliday; Isobel McPherson, Liz Sagues, Philip Venning.

Because some of them were non-typists a small corps of volunteers grew up; ready to cut stencils: .among them, Olive Burton, Helen O’Brien, Deirdre Barrie, Joan Wrigley.

Then there was distribution. The late Mr Banham did that until he became ill at the end of 1972; then the late Harry-Lawrence took over. Both of them-wrote every envelope by hand: That wasn’t too bad when membership was teetering between a hundred and 200: but by 1977 it had gone well into the 400s and Harry was getting writer’s cramp. Nearly 500 envelopes twelve times a year (we’d become a monthly in 1973) take some writing, and Harry wasn’t getting any younger, either.

Our then treasurer, Jeremy Clynes, took a hand by organising, towards the end of the seventies, an addressing machine, which was run at first by Raymond Lowe, and later – as it still is today – by Enid Hill. Machine addressing needs an accurate mailing list – and that’s where our membership secretary, Phyllis Fletcher, steps into the picture, with her monthly up-dates of names and addresses. Between them she and Enid keep the mailing list on the straight and narrow.

And so to production. Early Newsletters were each side of a single sheet by 1973 we settled down to a steady 4 pages. As HADAS grew, as its members’ interests widened, as we began to have more fingers in more pies, so the News­letter, mirroring the Society’s own growth, increased in size. The first 6-page issues came, appropriately, in the year that HADAS ‘took off’ in membership and other ways – 1976, the year the West Heath dig started. From then on the News­letter was as long each month as it needed to be to cover our news.

Quite early on we had acquired a secondhand duplicator which, although a capricious beast, has done us proud. Its first keeper was Philippa Bernard, who gave it a home at Totteridge and coaxed it out of its moods like a mother. In January 1977 Irene Frauchiger took it into custody, housed it in her garage and for the next seven or eight years rolled off and collated every newsletter, ‘stuffing’ the envelopes and stamping and posting them , a mammoth job, in which she was often helped by another member of long standing, Trudi Pulfer, HADAS’s debt to them is enormous.

Occasionally the machine used to break down and the whole operation went into crisis. We were extraordinarily lucky to have a Travelling Engineer of our own ­Christopher Newbury, who would dash out to Edgware to do running repairs. When Rene moved into Hertfordshire we faced an even worse crisis. Edgar Lewy tried rolling off a couple of issues but couldn’t come to terms with the ‘capricious beast. Then, as she so often does, Dorothy Newbury stepped in. Now the dupli­cator lives at the Hillary Press (where there is the added advantage that the Travelling Engineer need travel no longer!) and Dorothy has taken over where Rene left off. To her (and not for this only) our debt is huge.

I must mention two envelope ‘stuffers’ who help from time to time: Nell Penny and Eileen Hawarth; and also Nell’s regular and most willing ferrying of envelopes and material to and from Rene’s house in Edgware over the years. Nor must I forget to thank those who, for years, have distributed Newsletters in the Garden Suburb, saving the Society pounds in postage: first Raymond Lowe and his family; now Ann and Alan Lawson.

Finally, a very warm thank you to Freda Wilkinson, who put her considerable indexing skills at our disposal and produced fine indexes for the first 10 years or so of the Newsletter’s existence, turning it into a useful local history tool.

we must also thank Jean Neal, another skilled indexer, who is currently wrestling with bringing the index up to date.

I said at the start that you’d be surprised how many members have had a hand in producing the Newsletter. I think I have mentioned 29 names – and inevitably, I’ve forgotten someone. Apologies to her/him!

I can’t end without thanking my faithful – my very faithful – contributors. Not everyone enjoys writing reports, notices or articles – but in the last 16 years I remember only two members who turned me down flat when I asked them to write for the Newsletter – and no doubt both had good reasons. All the others – some­times looking pretty rueful about it – have bent willingly to the task. As a very, grateful editor, thanks!

I said above that sometimes the Newsletter received bouquets from its readers

– and here’s a nice one which arrived recently from Laurence Bentley:

“As one who is little more than a subscribing member of HADAS, I cannot

let the news that you are resigning the editorship pass without letting you know how much I have enjoyed the Newsletter to date. In fact on several occasions when I thought my limited contact with HADAS affairs justified the ending of my-membership, the Newsletters next issue persuaded me how little I should like to be without it. Pithy informative and intriguing, and I hope your successors will follow this example realise, of course, that good editors need good contributors, and I still recollect with particular delight the note on Dracula’s origins in Hendon churchyard and the mathematically neat explanation of rods, poles and perches …”

Thank you, Mr Bentley! Your appreciation warmed the cockles of the editorial heart.

GRAHAMS-WHITE AIRCRAFT HANGAR STILL THREATENED

In the February Newsletter (p9-10) we mentioned that the Grahame-White hangar at RAF Hendon, an important part of early aviation history, was under threat of demolition by the Ministry of Defence. At that time HADAS wrote urging Barnet to refuse the demolition application.

Now Laurence Bentley has asked us to enter the fray again on behalf of this historic building. .He writes:

“The old Grahame White hangar at .RAF Hendon is still in danger. It is a listed building (Grade II) .but has been allowed to fall into a state which the Ministry of Defence think is ‘uneconomic to repair. This building is unique, as far as I am aware, and represents an historic stage in this country’s history as an industrial nation. The building is rather like the hangars converted into the RAF Museum with the major difference that at one end there are three stories of offices stacked up against the inside of the wall. It must have been here that the drafts­men drew the plans of the early machines, foremen collected them take them down to the shop floor, and the draftsmen and their chiefs could watch the construction through their office windows. Readers of Neville Shute will immediately understand the atmosphere.

To me, and I hope to others, this is just as important as it would be to find intact the dockyard of the Mary Rose. If others care, action should be taken quickly, because the signs are that this building will be neglected until it has to be demolished and replaced with something more profitable.

The greatest irony is that it would be ideal for an addition to the RAF Museum: here is the place where the Museum should exhibit its early craft tools and equipment, with room for an appropriate plane or two ‘in the course of construction’ too. What an opportunity this should be! But it won’t happen unless people make a fuss, and quickly!”

Bill Firth who organises the HADAS Industrial Archaeology group, has also been fighting this battle:. He has just had a letter from the Ministry of Defence indicating that they intend to go on with the demolition because they can see no alternative. What they do not appear to be prepared to consider is the alternative of letting the RAF Museum have the hangar and the land on which it stands at a price which the Museum could afford – instead of, insisting on the full commercial value.

However, while the building still stands, there is still hope – and the more so because the Borough of Barnet (bless its heart!) has stood firm on this appli­cation, as it did on the last one: the Planning Department has told the Ministry that LBB cannot agree to so historic a building being demolished. Barnet cannot actually stop MoD demolishing if the latter is hell-bent upon it, all the bor­ough can do (and has done) is to indicate how strongly it disapproves.

And this may be where the element of public opinion could be important perhaps the Ministry will, think again if it sees that both the local authority and local public opinion are strongly against it. Individual HADAS members who object to the proposed demolition may be encouraged to take a hand – perhaps by writing either to their MP;’ or to the local paper; or to a national newspaper or an aviation journal.

WORLD ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONGRESS, SOUTHAMPTON, SEPTEMBER 1986

In the last Newsletter our secretary summarised the issues behind the Council for British Archaeology’s ballot of its members on whether or not CBA should support the above Congress.

As a CBA member, HADAS had been asked to vote. We took a show of hands at our meeting of April 1, and in addition asked anyone who could not attend on April 1 to vote by telephone. There were 2 options on the voting paper: (1) for CBA to continue to be associated with the Congress; or (2) to withdraw com­pletely from it.

HADAS cast its vote for the second option, by a narrow margin of 2 votes (total poll 58). The final result of the whole CBA membership is not known as we go to press: it will be published in the next CBA Newsletter (now British Archaeological News).

Incidentally, the vote at the HADAS meeting showed how high feelings run on this issue,. A number of members would clearly have enjoyed spending most of the evening debating it, had we not had the Delights of Professor Tomlinson’s: lecture dangling before us. Perhaps it was as well there had to be a guillotine; otherwise, as one member remarked, one half of the room might not have been speaking to the other by the end!

We even had a phone call, by the way, from a non-member wanting to vote!

SITE-WATCHTING

Recent applications for planning which, if granted, might have some archaeological interest, are:

Land adjacent, to Primavera, Tenterden Grove NW4

206 High Street,’ Barnet

(amended plan: we have noted this before)

342 Ballards Lane, N12

(nothing known here of archaeological interest but basement development means destruction of all potential evidence).

1140-48 High Rd & land between 3 Horshoes RH

and 300 Friern Barnet Lane

St Patricks RC Church, 167-75 The Broadway NW9

42 Galley Lane, Arkley

Members who notice signs of building activity on any of these sites are asked to ring John Enderby (2032630) and let him know.

DISCOVERING CLERKENWELL. MARION BERRY describes the first

HADAS outing of 1986

.Discovering Clerkenwell is the title of a Heritage centre leaflet, and it’s just what Mary O’Connell did for the 40 or so members who joined the HADAS walk on April 19 Our first general impression was of unrelieved commercial squalor (except for the many pubs) with pockets of dreary bomb damage. But Mary started off by taking us back in time to the Fleet River flowing peacefully to join the Thames and the Drovers Road bringing sheep and cattle to the great market on the Smoothfields; and we soon found this apparently ugly region was full of surprises – not to mention stories.

Why, for instance, does the Castle Inn sign carry three golden balls? Because George IV, incognito in large cloak and hackney coach, rushed into borrow cash from the landlord for his gambling debts at a nearby cockpit, leaving his watch as a pledge. The messenger sent next day to ‘redeem it carried a permit for pawnbroking.

And do you know the story of Thomas Britton, the singing coalman, who lived in a little house in Jerusalem Passage, the old postern gate of Grand Priory? Handel came to his musical evenings, his portrait hangs in the National Portrait Gallery-and Britton Street is named for him.

We visited the crypt, left intact after the Priory church with its round nave was destroyed in the Peasants Revolt of 1381. It is in marked contrast to the large rectangular church above, rebuilt in the 18c and now used for Invest­itures. The Order of St John considers it was never really dissolved, only rendered dormant after it was expelled from England at the Dissolution. It was revived in 1831 to uphold the Hospitaller tradition, culminating in the founda­tion of the St John Ambulance Brigade in 1877, with a Royal Charter from Queen Victoria in 1888.

Some time was spent at the Heritage Craft Centre, housed in the old Penny Bank premises, and at the gatehouse (1504), sole remaining Priory building. It is surprisingly large, with its great hall and many rooms, forming a museum. After a welcome tea interval we set off for St James Church, built 1792 on the site of the church of a Benedictine nunnery; vestiges of the cloister pillars can be seen outside. The gallery had an extra tier to accommodate children from the Welsh school, which has now become the Marx Memorial Library.

A warm vote of thanks went to Mary O’Connell for her good guiding and her fluent, knowledgeable and really audible commentary.

ARCHAEOLOGY IN LONDON SHEILA WOODWARD reports on the Annual Conference of London Archaeologists

Property developers move fast nowadays and archaeologists must be equally speedy to salvage even a fraction of the evidence which will vanish under the bulldozer with so much activity it is difficult to keep track of what goes on, even within London: the conference provides a welcome chance to update oneself.

This year’s conference on March 15 followed the established pattern. The morning session provided a rapid round-up of recent excavations. Jon Cotton talked about the dig at Stockley Park, Dawley, northeast of Heathrow. Although the top levels had been destroyed, it was still possible to recover traces of an Early/Middle Iron Age settlement. A conveniently routed helicopter service was used to obtain some excellent air photos.

John Maloney reported on a series of City sites and the identification of several previously unknown Roman roads. There have been opportunities to examine the area behind the Roman waterfront, stretches of the Roman wall and military ditch near Aldgate, and the site of the Priory and Hospital of St Mary of Beth­lehem, otherwise Bedlam. The adjacent cemetery produced a gruesome reminder of the grim legends about Bedlam: a human neck vertebra was found with a human tooth firmly embedded in

Museum of London staff talked about recent acquisitions. One fascinating find from Billingsgate is a late medieval straight trumpet, of the type used ceremonially and in battle and, significantly, on warships. Made probably in the 14c of copper-alloy in 4 sections, it is of highly sophisticated craftsman­ship. It was obviously valued, as it shows signs of extensive repair over a long period. The trumpet was found, not during the Billingsgate dig, which covered only one-sixth of the site, but during the ‘watching brief’ for the remaining five-sixths. One trembles to think what evidence may have been lost.

Bob Whytehead’s watching brief on the Jubilee Hall, Covent Garden, was of particular interest, as it has provided the first evidence of Middle Saxon London. Although 18c building had destroyed much of the earlier evidence, enough remained to confirm the existence of thriving commerce between the mid-7c to mid-9c. Imported and locally made pottery, glass, loom-weights, iron slag and crucibles, a clay-lined furnace, an 8c sceatta all point to an area of manu­facture and trade, Why the commercial centre should have been sited along the Strand at this period rather than in the City, is still a matter for speculation.

Scott McCracken concluded the morning with a report on excavations at Kings­ton Horse fair (paying special tribute to the assistance given by local amateurs). It included the bizarre history of a medieval undercroft, probably of the 14c, which was discovered during work in 1900, was infilled in the 1920s, rediscovered during current excavations and is now threatened with removal to an area beyond the range of the present redevelopment, to be followed by scheduling!

The afternoon concentrated on recent monastic archaeology. Four speakers took us on a tour of some 9 abbeys and priories. These religious houses were vast and complex structures and the excavators can only nibble at tiny fragments of them; nevertheless, slowly and painstakingly a dossier of information is being compiled.

Most prestigious site is Westminster Abbey where excavations bequeath Sorter undercroft have revealed a road or courtyard and adjacent structures probably dating from the 10c. Bermondsey has yielded fairly abundant medieval material. The infill of drains and culverts is always a happy hunting ground for archaeo­logists. At Bermondsey it produced a gilded bronze crucifix with traces of red enamel inlay, and at Barking a wealth of finds including bone combs, skates, a whistle, chalk figurines, a gold ring, pottery, fishbone (mainly salmon and herring) and even fish scales and fins – a reminder that for centuries Barking had the largest fishing fleet in the country.

During the lunch and tea breaks there was just time to visit the various displays. HADAS was showing finds from the Church Terrace dig of the 1970s. Ted Sammes has researched the provenance of the imported wares and .his accompanying map added greatly to the interest of the display.

COMMITTEE CORNER

The 1985-6 Committee met for the last time on April 24. This Newsletter reaches you slightly later in the month than usual because it has been held up for this brief report.

Arrangements for the AGM were discussed. Six members of the Committee are retir­ing this year the Hon. Sec has already had some new nominations for 1986-7.

HADAS representation on other bodies. Ann Kahn has kindly accepted nomination by HADAS to the Finchley Conservation Area Advisory Committee; and Dawn Orr similarly for the Hampstead Garden Suburb CAAC. June Porges will continue to represent us on the Avenue House Advisory Committee.

Excavation As well as the West Heath dig, HADAS hopes to trial-trench on 2 sites this summer: the Stapylton Road development in Chipping Barnet and the Watling Avenue car park, NW9; On the first, we await completion of-some Borough negotiations; on the second, we await permission. Meantime documentary research continues.

Our 3-showcase display at Church Farm House Museum on the Roman kilnsite at Brockley Hill has now, after a 9-month showing, been dismantled.

There was extensive discussion on the future of the Friern Hospital site and the threatened Grahame-White hangar at RAF Hendon

A WARM WELCOME to these new members who have joined HADAS recently:

Mrs J S Adams, N12; John Batchelor, Finchley; Jean Brearley, Golders Green; Anne Cheng,*’Edgware; Renate Feldmeier, HGS; Jeremy Frankel, Edgware; Mrs C Glass, NW9; Janette Harris, HGS; Mr Jolly, Hendon; Patricia Kitto, N Finchley; Catherine Mann,* Radlett, Dr P E O’Flynn, E Finchley; Lisa Samuel* New Barnet; Elizabeth Sheridan,* Highgate; Mr T Vaughan & Lucy,* Whetstone; John Watkins, HGS. *= junior member

Newsletter-182-April-1986

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 4 : 1985 - 1989 | No Comments

Newsletter 182: April 1986

GOING FOR SILVER

Although we are celebrating HADAS’s Silver Jubilee all through this year (as we’ve said before you can’t have too much of a good thing), this is the month in which our 25th birthday actually occurs. It was in April, 1961, after a public meeting, that the Society was set up with a President, Vice-Presidents, officers and committee, and a membership of 73. Later that year the first dig began at Church End Farm, Hendon.

In our 25 years we have dug a lot of holes, shifted a lot of spoil, backed

a lot of causes, seen a lot of places, learnt a lot of archaeology (with a spice of history thrown in) and blazed quite a few new trails.

One part of our HADAS activities which has been particularly satisfying has been co-operating from time to time with other like-minded societies in the area whose aims and sympathies run tandem with our own. That our friendly feelings towards them are reciprocated is shown by this letter which arrived last week from the Mill Hill Historical Society:

The Committee, Officers and Members of the Mill Hill Historical Society wish to congratulate the Hendon & District Archaeological Society on the celebration of their first 25 years.

We have watched with interest your well founded progress and have been impressed by the breadth of your activities, your wide contacts

and the energy and enthusiasm you have brought to the tasks you

have undertaken.

.Perhaps your most notable local achievements have been the persistence with which you have pursued the matter of the local plaques and your long-running dig at Hampstead Heath.

As with all of us you have had to operate in a period of rising costs which make all voluntary organisation difficult but we are confident that your celebrations will prove to be a tonic and that you will continue your valuable academic research and friendly approach for many years to come.

We wish you well. .Yours sincerely

R S Nichols (Chairman), John W Collier (Secretary)

What a pleasant letter to usher in our birthday! HADAS really appreciates it, and thanks the MiII Hill Historical Society warmly for their good wishes. They know what they are talking about, too – they have served this area his­torically for more than twice as long as we have in fact, since 1929.

WORLD ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONGRESS, SOUTHAMPTON, SEPTEMBER 1986

This Congress is formally the 11th Congress of the International Union of Prehistoric & Protohistoric Sciences -(IUPPS). ‘The Congress takes place every 5 years, and the 1986 one was to be in Britain, and intended to attract widest international support, so it was named the “World Archaeological Congress.” Its supporters included the Council for British Archaeology (CBA).

As a result of pressure from anti-apartheid groups, the organiser reluct­antly decided not to invite participants from South Africa and Namibia, black or white; their announcement of this made it clear that their decision was reluctant and taken under duress. Following this, a number of prominent people and bodies withdrew their support from the Congress, basically on the principle that exclusion of people for political reasons was against the academic princi­ple of freedom in the exchange of ideas.

The CBA at a full Council meeting on Jan 13, considered whether to with­draw support, and decided by 34 votes to 29 to continue support.

Since then, the IUPPS itself has withdrawn its recognition of the World Archaeological Congress, and proposes instead to hold its 11th Congress in Mainz in 1987. The UK organisers intend still to go ahead with the arrange­ments for the Congress in Southampton in 1986. In the circumstances, CBA are balloting their members, of whom HADAS is one, to ask whether we wish the CBA to continue to be associated with the World Archaeological Congress as planned

OR

we wish the CBA to withdraw completely from the World Archaeological Congress

Brian Wrigley

Before HADAS casts, its vote in the CBA ballot, we want as many members as possible to have a chance to state which option they prefer. There is a HADAS meeting on Apr 1 at which we hope to take a show-of-hands vote. Those who cannot be present on Apr.1 can record their preference by telephoning Brigid Grafton Green (455 9040) before April 4.

HADAS DIARY

Tues Apr 1 Recent Excavations at Perachora Prof Richard Tomlinson

Professor Tomlinson has taught in the Dept. of Ancient History and Archaeology at Birmingham University for nearly 30 years, becoming Professor and Head of Department in 1971. He is a member of the Managing Committee of the British School at Athens – which celebrates its Centenary this year – and Editor of the Annual. Perachora was first excavated by Humphrey Payne in the early 19300, Professor Tomlinson carried out supplementary digs in 1964, 1965 and 1966 – he talked to HADAS about those excavations some years ago. The site is a small sanctuary dedicated to Hera, close to the Isthmus of Corinth. His recent excavations have led to the discovery of a new building which he thinks has a certain historical significance.

Sat Apr 19 Afternoon walk in Clerkenwell Mary O’Connell (application form enclosed)

0at May 10 Trip to Mary Rose/Portchester Castle with Marion Newbury

(Application form enclosed please return promptly as Mary Rose require numbers & cash now)

Tues May 20 Annual General Meeting (see note below)

Sat June14 Trip to Faversham/Rochester Paul Craddock

Text Box: Sat July 26 Sutton Hoo/Orford Sheila Woodward (members who intend to join this trip may like to know that from Apr 29-May 2, 3.30pm each day, there will be a film on the Sutton Hoo ship burial in the lecture theatre of the Assyrian Basement at the British Museum

Thur.-Sun Sept 18-21 Exeter Weekend with Ann & Alan Lawson (application form enclosed)

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING. After the business part of our AGM – which usually isn’t a long-drawn out affair – we are hoping to have another of our informal slide shows, when members bring along pictures of interesting places they have been to or unexpected things they have done during the past year. The slides needn’t necessarily link up with HADAS events – though recent outings often provide lively photos.

Have you any slides you would like to show – and comment on? They needn’t take more than 5 minutes and 10 minutes would be a maximum. If you have, please ring Dorothy Newbury and she will be happy to reserve a slot for you. The more members take part, the more variety there will be: so give Dorothy a ring now, while you think of it – on 203 0950.

WEST HEATH

Don’t forget there’s digging at West Heath this month.

As announced in the last Newsletter the site will re-open on Apr 7 for 3 weeks, as well as being open throughout June and July. Any member who plans to dig is asked to let either Margaret Maher (907 0333) or Myfanwy Stewart (449 3025) know, as precise days/times will depend on demand. Margaret asks us to apologise for her phone being on the blink last month – she hopes it didn’t put off any potential processors so that they gave up in despair. Her phone is all right now.

All volunteers over 16 will be most welcome, both old friends and beginners: but it’s essential for ‘first-timers’ to ring to discuss equipment, gear and dates in advance.

BROTHER FOR A MASCOT

This second phase of West Heath started on June 16, 1984, and one of the first visitors – because his Dad, being a master carpenter was rebuilding the West Heath site hut – was a young man, just on 7 months old, named Philip Hugh King. He was immediately adopted as the West Heath mascot, ‘and he puts in at least one (sometimes it’s more) ritual appearance each season to make sure that his diggers’ work is keeping up to scratch.

Now we, have much pleasure in announcing that our West Heath mascot has a brother, born this spring; Edward James, second son of Jenny and Dave King. -It’s reasonable to predict that West Heath this year will be a very lucky dig armed with two mascots: Incidentally, Edward James entered the world at 9lb10oz; our director at West Heath could only mutter to herself in awe

“What a “whopper!”

HISTORIC, BUILDINGS AND ANCIENT MONUMENTS

Select Committees of the House, of Commons have already hit the headlines this year the Committees for Defence and for Trade & Industry both played leading roles in the Westland affair.

The Environment Committee is hardly likely to have any such potentially hot potatoes to handle but it has just embarked on an inquiry that is of considerable interest to archaeologists, amateur and professional alike, and to any local society like HADAS. It concerns Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments. This is the official letter in which the Committee Office of the House of Commons invites evidence:

“The Environment Committee has recently begun an inquiry into historic buildings and ancient monuments. The object of the inquiry is to review the whole field and specifically to examine the following:

1. the way in which buildings and monuments are identified. as being of historic interest or value;

2. the system of grants and other forms of financial assis­tance to encourage the proper maintenance and repair of historic buildings;

3. the arrangements for public access to historic buildings and monuments;

4. the financing, operation and effectiveness of the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England, the National Heritage Memorial Fund and the Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England.

The Committee would be glad to-receive written evidence from your organisation. It would be helpful if you could explain your con­stitution, your current work programme, your objectives and some­thing about your financial resources,

Your evidence should be forwarded to me to reach me by the end of March at the latest. If I can offer you any assistance or advice on the form of your memorandum or the suitability of items you propose to insert into your paper, please do not hesitate to contact me or Tony Larsen (219 3290).

The letter is signed by one of the joint Clerks to the Committee, Andre Gren; Tony Larsen is the other joint Clerk.

This is an inquiry in which we feel the amateur view should be represented if the Committee wishes to arrive at a true picture of British archaeology; so our Hon Secretary is working on a HADAS memorandum which we to be to put forward.

It is interesting that two of the 11 MPs who compose the Committee represent North London Constituencies the Chairman, Sir Hugh Rossi, sits for Hornsey & Wood Green, and Sydney Chapman, one of our own four Borough of Barnet MPs, represents Chipping Barnet.

ENHANCED SCHEDULING.

Talking of Ancient Monuments, you may like to know of the latest develop­ments regarding scheduled sites.

Six years ago the Dept. of Environment began updating its List of Buildings of Architectural and Historic Interest (we’ve reported.in the newsletter from time to tithe on how that updating was going so far as our area is concerned). Re-Listing, which will have cost some £7,000,000, will be completed next year.

Now a similar project is under way for Scheduled sites. English Heritage ­which advises the Secretary of State for the Environment, who does the actual scheduling, announced at the end of February what it called a “scheduling enhancement programme”. Its aim is to Schedule some 45,000 new sites in the next ten years, giving England some 60,000 scheduled sites in all, out of a known total of some 630,000 sites. Nearly half a million £s has been earmarked for the first year’s work. The aim is to schedule

“those sites and monuments of national importance, which are estimated
at about 10% of the total. There are eight criteria for scheduling a site including its archaeological potential; its period; its rarity; its vulnerability, its diversity of features; and its relationship to other contemporary sites.”

There are at the moment two scheduled sites in the Borough of Barnet: some of the fields bordering the east side of the A5 at Brockley Hill; and the remains of the moat in the grounds of the Manor House, East End Road, Finchley. We hope that the emphasis by English Heritage on the national aspect of the new sites they propose to schedule will not blind them to the importance also of scheduling some sites which are of local concern. We also hope that an opportunity will be given to local societies to take part at some point in the scheduling enhancement programme.

THE ROMAN GROUP

This notice heralds the re-birth of HADAS’ ‘Roman Group, which has been dormant for the last few months.

Please mark the morning of Sunday, Apr 13 in your diaries now for a walkabout at Brockley Hill, We will meet at the Pipers Green Lane/Brockley Hill corner a 10 am. We hope that new members unfamiliar with the Borough’s best known archaeological site may welcome this chance to get to know it; and that members of longer standing may care to renew their acquaintance with it.

We also intend to walk part of the west end of the proposed water pipe­line route. Even though the pipeline won’t be coming through the Borough until 1988 at earliest, it’s an area we ought to get to know between then and now like the palms of our hands.

So please join us on April 13 – you will be most welcome. It would help us to plan if you could let Gill Braithwaite know your intentions in advance ­ring her on 455 9273,

HEALTH SERVICES IN 18c. HENDON by NELL PENNY

In the last quarter of the 20c there is much argument about the extent and expense of the National Health Service. In 18c Hendon poor law overseers records are the tools for constructing the story of how the parish cared for its poorest inhabitants when they were ill.

Throughout the century the overseers’ accounts detailed payments made to ‘weekly pensioners’ and to ‘casualties.’ The usual dole was 2s -or-2s6d a week, rising with inflation to 3s or 3s6d at the end of the century. It is not possible to separate the sick from the old or the ‘children in care’ among the pensioners, but most of the ‘casualties’ seem to have been ‘sick.” Payments often went on for 6 months or longer, and often enough ended with the expenses of a pauper’s funeral.

In 1706. Edward Chalkhill and his wife were buried for 19s.; two shrouds and two coffins cost 14s, and 5s was spent on beer for the bearers. Later ‘Old Danell’ was buried for I7s – ‘ a shroud, coffin, bread, cheese and beer for the bearers.’ At the end of each financial year the Vicar was paid for the pauper funerals he conducted at 2s a time and the parish clerk got a small sum for ‘the use of the black cloth.’

Perhaps the overseer asked the parish doctor to decide whether a poor person was really ill and deserved a dole and maybe a ‘cough bottle.’ Certainly the parish paid a doctor or a ‘surgeon apothecary’ in most years between 1710 and 1835, mr Ingram was contracted for 12 guineas a year in 1711; by 1798 Dr Rodgers was paid 20 guineas. Mr Kent was the doctor between 1808 and 1814 at 28 guineas a year, but in the latter year the parish had to

pay him an extra £10 because the parish officer, dismissed him without notice. Mr Holgate, who lived in Brent St, was the last parish doctor. In.1835 he was paid 50 guineas.

Special medical treatment merited separate entries in the overseer’s accounts. 1n 1706 -1setting one man’s leg and another’s arm’ was expensive at £5. Bleeding, to which there are ten references, was cheaper if performed by the workhouse master at is a time. Alcohol was sometimes provided for the ‘ sick poor; 6d bought half a pint of wine for a sick woman in the workhouse, and Richard Marshall, ‘being sick,’ was provided with strong beer. A parish boy was dosed with ‘Jesuits Bark’ costing 2s. Jesuits’ Bark was a form of quinine – a powder made from the bark of the- South American cinchona tree. This remedy for fevers had been introduced into Europe by Jesuit missionaries. Now and again the overseers paid for orthopedic treatment. They supplied a wooden leg which, with alterations, cost 10s; and in 1757.they paid £1-11-6d for a ‘leg iron for Sarah Lawfords boy.’

I feel we should cheer the gentlemen of the vestry for the care they gave to Robert Debnam in 1795. He lived in the workhouse and was nearly blind. When it was discovered, that Dr Matthew Phipps of London was offering to operate on Debnam’s eyes without a fee, the vestry meeting voted £2.10.6 for Debnam’s fare and his maintenance in London. At their next meeting they told the clerk to write to Dr Phipps thanking him for his generous and humane treatment in restoring Debnam’s sight. There is no record of what Debnam thought of an operation without an anaesthetic.

Smallpox was endemic in the country throughout the 1814 and very often killed its victims. Hendon did not escape the scourge the disease was rife between 1750 and 1780. Whole families were nursed by dames paid by the parish. Widow Shaw was paid £3.1.7d for nursing three men with smallpox. Burying a man with smallpox who died in the fields cost £1.5s. In 1772 the overseers relieved a boy in the ‘pest house, I have not been able to find out where this isolation unit was, but after 1783 the parish was paying Mr Bond £5 a year rent for a pest house, so smallpox must still have been active at the end of the century.

I don’t think the parish was interested in normal births in poor families or in the workhouse, although payments to midwives increased throughout the 18c; ‘for fetching and carrying the midwife, 2s’ and ‘the midwife 5s’ are common entries in the overseers ledgers. When a birth was difficult the parish could be generous even to a tramping woman. In 1722 Edward Cooper was the overseer for the North End of Hendon. He paid Mrs Timms 5s ‘for nursing a travelling woman who lay in my house.’ He paid himself 10s for giving the ‘ woman houseroom for. 4 weeks ‘necessaries’ for her included ‘candles, soap, beer, butter, sugar; bread, cheese, oatmeal, meat, bacon and Venice treacle.’ (The OED defines Venice treacle as an antidote to poison and a balm for treat­ing malignant diseases). If a doctor attended a confinement in the early 19c the parish paid him. a guinea.

Special care of the mentally ill poor was rare and very expensive. In 1705 the case of Samuel Murrin fills a page of the overseers accounts: “expended to getting him into Bedlam.6s; for going after Murrin 5s; for looking after him 7s.6d; for giving Goody Murrin 1s6d for having him cried; expended in having him to the doctor £1.7s; spent in going to the Lord Mayor and the chief officer of Bedlam about Murrin £1.” Bedlam was Bethlehem hospital for lunatics in Lambeth, which had been founded as a royal charity in the 16c. When the parish had to put Widow Bennett into Bedlam it was just as expensive.

“horse hire and standing going to meet the committee 5s.1d; going to see Henry Hoare Esq; and the Turnkeys to see if any vacancy 5s.6d; 5s paid into the Treasury box at Bedlam; paid the two nurses and the two Turnkeys their fees 5s”

In the 19c the parish seems to have relied on private asylums to house difficult mentally ill patients. Mr Warburton of the White House in Bethnal Green had 300 patients and for nearly 30 years. Hendon parish sent one or two paupers there at a cost of 12s a week.. But in 1802 the vestry decided that ‘John Page be immediately sent home from the Mad House at Bethnal Green, the expense of keeping him there being considered too much.’

Reminder for those so thoroughly ‘into’ our new money that they have forgotten the old 6d=2½p; ls=5p; and so on. ‘1 guinea = £1.05.

SITE WATCHING

The following sites have been the subject of recent planning applications. If permission is granted, it is possible they might be of some archaeological interest:

Land west of Diploma Av & Rear & Side of 216-244 East End Road Finchley;

Land Adj. Borderside, Hendon Wood Lane

Former Trafalgar House site The Hyde, NW9

Land adj. Railway Tavern, Hale Lane NW7

Rising Sun Public House Marsh Lane NW7

Hadley Lodge, Hadley Common

3-7 East End Rd. N3

139 Elmshurst Cresent, N2

13-15 Moxon Street, Barnet

133-5 High St. Barnet

Land adj. Pymlico House Hadley Green, (Pymlico House is a listed building)

206 High Street Barnet

Would members who notice any signs of development activity on the above sites please let John Enderby know.

LONDON ARCHAEOLOGISTS CONFERENCE

Owing to the vagaries of the postal service in Edgware – members in that area believe that No One Anywhere is Thinking of Them” as they have had no recent collections or deliveries -.we are unable to publish in this issue a report of the 23rd Conference of. London Archaeologists, which, took place on March 15. Sheila Woodward had kindly agreed to cover it, but alas her report is held up in the post.

However, that will be a pleasure in store for the next Newsletter, as the report will undoubtedly surface by then. To be continued, therefore, in our next ….

THE EFFECT OF ALEXANDER Report on the March lecture by GILL BRAITHWAITE

Dr .Malcolm Colledge; our lecturer last month, is an old friend of HADAS and he had a full house for his talk on March 4. It was concerned not so much with Alexander himself, as with the effect of Alexander’s momentous conquests upon Western Asia, and particularly upon the art forms in that region.

For thousands of years in prehistory the main cultural trends were all one way, from east to west, as ideas spread from the Fertile Crescent westwards through Greece into the Balkans and the Mediterranean. With the development of Greece as a colonial power, and the foundation of the Ionian cities in Anatolia, this trend started to be reversed. Around 600 BC Greek ideas began percolating through Anatolia into the heartlands of the vast Eastern Empire now ruled by the Achaemenid dynasty portals with Ionian columns were attaches to traditional oriental ‘broad-room’ temples, naturalistic draperies softened the stiff stone relief sculptures and a number of Greek stone-working tech­niques became widespread, such as the use of the claw chisel for roughing out marble and limestone, or the use of iron clamps to fix stone blocks together.

But for the purpose of Dr Colledge’s lecture, what was most interesting in all this was the interaction of Greek and oriental ideas in the realm of art, and the consequent development of an independent hybrid art form that borrowed from both worlds but was original in its own right. The birth of semi-realistic portraiture seems to have been one result of this interaction between East and West, something that was unknown to either the Greeks or Persians before this. This is best seen in coin portraiture. The Greeks had invented coinage, but no rulers were portrayed on the early coins. The Persian coinage, when it was introduced around 500 BC was based on Greek models but the standard coins issued in the different capitals bore semi-realistic portraits of the deified emperors or their various satraps on the obverse, with their names conveniently printed on the reverse. With the aid of these coins it is possible that some of the three-dimensional Persian statues of this period, found mainly in Anatolia, may be identified.

With the advent of Alexander, the influence of Greece was greatly inten­sified. New Greek-type cities many of them called Alekandria, with a grid- plan, an agora and an acropolis, sprang up right the way across the Empire, even as far east as Ai Khanum in Bactria. Theatres, stoas and Greek-style temples were introduced into many of the old Persian cities. This trend con­tinued under Seleucis, one of Alexander’s generals, who became the ruler of Western Asia and founded the Seleucid dynasty. Oriental traditions persisted, however, alongside. The old ‘broad-room’ temples with the entrance on the long side continued to be built, while elaborate, labyrinthine royal palaces of Persian style occupied-a dominant place in the city plans. Coins issued on the old Persian standard by Alexander and the Seleucids retained the portrait heads of the deified rulers, but portraits became ever more naturalistic, as did portrait sculpture. Again it seems likely that some of the Hellenistic statues found in Western Asia can be identified on the basis of these coins. Meanwhile the new hybrid Greco-oriental art style continued to flourish, becoming increasingly florid and ornate.

In the third and second centuries BC the Seleucid Empire disintegrated. The Parthians began to move in from the northeast. Oriental traditions became more dominant, -but the hybrid art style -lived on, even in the remote, now Parthian city of Ai Khanum where semi-naturalistic sculptures with a definite Hellenistic flavour were still being commissioned. By the first century BC and the Roman conquest of the eastern Mediterranean, the rather baroque art style of Western Asia was well established, but already a new element was appearing the influence of the steppes. Dr Colledge left us with some un­forgettable portrait sculptures of warrior chieftains with fierce Asiatic features and baggy silk trousers, eloquent symbols of the new forces from the East, those nomadic hordes from Central Asia and beyond, who were soon to threaten the eastern frontiers of the Roman Empire.

MORE DATES FOR YOUR DIARY

This is Domesday Year – as if you could escape the fact! A special Domesday Exhibition opens at the PRO Chancery Lane, on Apr 3, Continues till Sept 30 Mons-Sats. 10am-6pm„ July 13-19 is earmarked countrywide, by the way, as Domesday Week.–

Many thanks to Alec Gouldsmith for letting us know about a Centenary conference on ancient Mining and Metallurgy at University College of North Wales at Bangor from Apr 10-12. It is in honour of the centenary of the British School at Athens (with which our April lecturer Professor Tomlinson, has links). Twelve international speakers will talk on “early Greek mining, metals and metallurgy and contemporaneous British activities.” Conference fee £7, accommodation in college £43 (inc. all meals). Should you take a last-minute decision to attend, contact J Ellis Jones, Dept of Classics, Bangor, Gwynedd LL57 2DG.

The British Association for Local History (to which HADAS is affiliated) will hold its Annual Conference (combined with its AGM) in our neighbouring borough of Enfield this year – at Trent Park on Sat Apr 19, 10am-5pm. The venue has been chosen in honour of the Edmonton Hundred Historical Society’s 50th anniversary. Tickets, including lunch, are £5.50 from Dr J Burnby, Mill Managers House, Cromford, Derbys DE4 3RQ, and. HADAS; members might find it well worth attending – some very expert speakers have been lined up. Many members will know David Pam, a prolific writer on Enfield history and author of the recently published History of Enfield Chase; and there are also Dr Joan Thirsk, historian of agricultural economics; Professor Dodgson, who will speak on Domesday; and Dr David Hey, who has made packmen and packhorse roads his specialty.

ANOTHER KIND OF OMNIBUS by Brigid Grafton Green

One of my pet journals – it appears twice yearly – is called Omnibus. It is published by JACT (Joint Association of Classical Teachers), financially helped by the two societies for the Promotion of Hellenic and of Roman Studies. The first issue, in March 1981, announced that it would be ‘a magazine for sixth formers and others interested in the ancient Greeks and Romans.’

It is an often deliciously tongue-in-cheek publication on every aspect of the classical world. Sixth formers are encouraged to participate actively in cleverly designed competitions which sometime produce hilarious results. It explores some fascinating subjects and doesn’t hesitate to take the micky out of anything it considers pompous or pretentious.

The current issue is No 11, March 1986. It contains – among other goodies – an interesting piece on papyrus, by Dr Ignace Hendriks.of. Groningen University.

Dr Hendriks points out-that papyrus wasn’t an exclusively Egyptian writing material: it’s merely that, because of the dryness of the Egyptian climate, the remains of papyrus are found almost exclusively in Egypt. He reckons it was used widely in the ancient world. The first papyrus document, from an Egyptian tomb, was dated c 3000’BC. by.AD 800 papyrus had been superseded by the new-fangled Arab material, paper.

The process by which the tall stalk of the papyrus plant was turned into a sheet on which a scribe could write was described by Pliny in his Natural History (XIII, 74-82) and that text is the only more or less trust worthy description of the manufacturing process that exists. It’s a text, however, that has always been considered-‘difficult’ by scholars, and has seemed to contain many inconsistencies.

Now Dr Hendriks believes that for, centuries scholars have mistranslated it. As a result they have believed that papyrus was made by cutting the stalk of the plant lengthwise in strips, laying a row of strips with the fibres running vertically and another row on top with them running horizontally, ‘ pressing or hammering the two so that they fused and drying them.in the sun, thus producing a sheet of papyrus.

Many scholars have tried to provide evidence for this strip process by close examination of the thousands of papyri that exist in museums and libraries; strangely enough, they have never been successful. Dr Hendriks thinks that is because there have never been any strips to find, he believes a papyrus sheet was made in a different way Here is his description of his own experiments (which come very close to experimental archaeology):

“I got myself a stalk of papyrus from the Botanical Garden of the University and tried ‘my idea out: the result was a number of sheets of papyrus made according to a new principle – and of not bad quality.

What is this new principle? To put it in a few words: a piece of stalk is peeled off without interruption till nothing of the pith remains. In this way a sheet of peeled-off papyrus is obtained which, together with a second piece forms a sheet of writing material after pressing and drying. I baptised this ‘the

Groningen method:’ it is, in my opinion, closer to the text of Pliny than the strip theory. First, cut a piece from the upper half of the stalk and remove the hard shell round it. Second, start the actual peeling process. Since Pliny says that a needle is used I used a needle too. In fact the sharp point of the, needle does the peeling.

This process offers explanations for passages in Pliny’s text which for a long time have remained ‘difficult.’ It also leads to a better understanding of the passage Pliny devotes to the different grades of quality … the criteria distinguishing between. a better or a poorer papyrus: fineness, firmness, whiteness and smoothness. Most important, however, appears to have been the the criterion of measure. Sheets of papyrus differed in width (and height): the best measured 13- digits (9ins 24 cm), the poorest only 6 digits (44in=11cm).

It is only with great difficulty that we can explain these differences in width on the basis of the strip-theory, since a sheet made accord­ing to that principle could have any measure simply by adding a few strips to it. According to the Groningen method the amount of material from which a sheet is made is limited: once you have peeled the piece of stalk, you have nothing to add. The amount of material in the stalk diminishes towards the top. This means that a sheet peeled from the middle is of necessity Wider than a sheet peeled from any part above it. ”

Dr Hendriks clearly feels that he has solved a problem which has teased’ ‘scholars for centuries -and has added a bit to our knowledge of ancient technology,’ too.

His paper on papyrus is just one of a number of interesting pieces in the current Omnibus. You can find out more details about the magazine by writing to JACT,.3134 Gordon Square, WC1H OPY. I believe one or two earlier issues are out of print, but most are still available.