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Volume 6 : 1995 – 1999

Newsletter-313-April-1997

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Newsletter-313-April-1997

No. 313                                                   Edited by Liz Sagues                                                   APRIL 1997

Diary

Tuesday April 8:                Lecture: Claude Grahame-White and Hendon Aerodrome, by Bill Firth. Bill is a HADAS member and for many years has fought hard to have some of the Aerodrome’s original                                                                   buildings retained. Flying began at Hendon in 1910, when Claude         Grahame-White purchased the field and established a flying school. Grahame-White, Engand’s first certificated pilot, is one of the unsung pioneers of aviation, and among his innovations were navigation methods which proved, for the time, entirely practical — he advised following railway lines and dropping low to read the station names! Between the wars, he even persuaded the railway companies to paint the stations’ names on their roofs! In 1911 the first official Air Mail was flown from Hendon to Windsor. Come to the lecture and learn more…

Tuesday May 13:                                Morning tour of the Garrick Club, with Mary O’Connell. 

Tuesday May 13:                               Annual General Meeting. Attractions beyond the boring business are planned:

 

Bill Firth’s lecture and the AGM are in the Drawing Room (ground floor) at Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley, N3, starting at 8pm for 8.30pm. Members can also take the opportunity to visit the HADAS library. 

Saturday June 7:                                Outing to Chedworth Roman Villa and Cirencester.

September 4 – 7:                             Weekend in York. We are fully booked for this, with a short waiting list. Members are welcome to add their names to this list if they wish.


News of members

Among the welcome rush of membership renewals was a note from Louise de Launay, widow of Jules, who left Edgware in 1977 and in recent months moved to just outside Canterbury from whence she sends her best wishes to HADAS. We reciprocate with just a tinge of envy as she describes her sur­roundings in glowing terms — the magnolia and fruit trees, nearby river and birdlife…

Helen Gordon is now back home from hospital and recovering after a third fall. She has broken a shoulder, one hip and then the other — there can’t be too many more bones left to break. Seriously, though, we wish her all the very best ‘and hope she will be mobile soon.

Ted Sammes is getting stronger and is taking part in a few local archaeological meetings and events when friends can give him a lift.

Victor Jones is also progressing and can now do his own shopping with the aid of an ingenious three-wheeled support which he can steer and brake. Believe it or not, he has started driving again.

Miss Sheldon (Shelley) moved away several years ago but will be remembered by many members for her happy disposition on nearly all our outings and lectures. She is a great age now but still writes interesting letters to Renata Feldman, sometimes with suggestions for HADAS outings.

Julius Baker, probably our most senior member —in his 90th year — should be in the Guinness Book of Records. He is an energetic participant at lectures and on outings, and is at present on a three-month trip to Africa. He was born in South Africa, and now after many years exile in England he has re­turned to his native continent to see many places he has never visited.

Flying to Johannesburg, he is going on to the Okavango delta and anticipates paddling a boat down the streams. Then it’s on to Chobe, Angola and Botswana. Etopsha, north of Namibia, is a wet area swarming with birds and wild animals. In the desert sands of Namibia and Angola he will see the tallest sand dunes in the world and large canyons second only to the American Grand Canyon. Basutoland and Swaziland are also on his itinerary, then he will go down to the Cape coast where the largest diamond deposits are mined.

We admire his enthusiasm and look forward to his safe return in time for our own archaeological excursions in the summer.


Following in the footsteps of the late Brigid Grafton Green, whose contributions to HADAS and to pre­serving and promoting the history of Hampstead Garden Suburb will be ever remembered, another HADAS member, Ann Saunders, has become chair- man of the Suburb Archive Trust. Harry Cobb, CBE, has taken on the duties of archivist.

The Trust was founded in 1979 to collect and preserve documents and other items relating to the history of the Suburb. Since then it has built up an extensive and valuable collection of material and objects, much of which has been transferred to the Greater London Record Office for professional con­servation, protection and cataloguing. The Trust will retain ownership of, and control over, the material, which will be available either in original form or copy for display on special occasions on the Suburb and elsewhere.

The Archive Trust remains committed to its original task, and invites Suburb residents and oth­ers to contribute, or make available for copying, relevant material. The Trust has a limited budget and gratefully receives gifts of books, etc, connected with the Suburb’s history and architecture.

Enquiries, addressed to The Institute, Central Square, NW11, will receive careful attention.

The great outdoors

There may just still be time to catch the spring exhi­bition at Church Farmhouse Museum, Greyhound Hill, Hendon. “Hidden places and secret spaces in Barnet” is the theme of Our Suburban Countryside, which runs until April 6. Information has been drawn from the surprisingly large number of local organisations with interests in the countryside to provide details of walks, trails, nature reserves, bird-watching and other more esoteric activities such as bat-counting.

Coming next at the museum is The Splendour of Heraldry, a display put together by the North East Middlesex Heraldry Society. If you thought her­aldry concerned only those whose names are in Debrett’s, this exhibition — which takes in pub signs and company logos as well as more formal armorial bearings — should be a revelation. For more details, ring the museum on 0181-203 0130.

Back in order

Numerate members will have spotted that this News­letter and its predecessor do not carry successive numbers. We’ve skipped over No. 312. The reason is — as those same members no doubt also noticed —that two issues appeared last summer with the same number, and we’re now putting the sequence right.

To those members who added a little extra to their fee this year, thank you (on behalf of all).

Our total membership for 96/ 97 passed the 300 mark, and we welcome those who have joined since Christmas — Robert and Eveleen Wright, Pauline Plant and Susan Whitford.

We would very much like to hear from mem­bers pursuing research of any type for, possibly, a new item or short article in the Newsletter, or purely for information should other members be involved in a similar project.

By the way, Andy Simpson’s publication of the cartoon of an irate female, together with a warning about getting your renewals in, appears to have worked! So I’ve hung up the ceremonial sword for another 12 months. On the other hand, if we don’t see a good attendance at lectures, it can always come vs” down again.

Vikki (don’t call me Salome) O’Connor

Newsletter hiccups

Even the impeccably efficient Dorothy Newbury is a victim of printing and other gremlins occasionally. So she offers her apologies to the member whose Newsletter had two blank pages, and another whose envelope failed to contain the promised 1997 pro­gramme card. Anyone suffering similar problems should ring Dorothy (0181-203 0950) and matters will be promptly put right.

A commemorative role …

Wanted: a member with time on his or her hands to update the HADAS publication Blue Plaques in Barnet. A list of the additions has already been made, with details. Some need a black and white picture to accompany the text. If necessary, there is a member who could help with the photography. If you’re interested and don’t have a copy of Blue Plaques, one can be supplied for your guidance. Any­one willing to volunteer should phone Dorothy Newbury on 0181-203 0950.

Janet Faraday

Janet Faraday, a very long-standing member and a regular at lectures, outings and Christmas dinners, died on March 11 at the Royal Free Hospital. Al­though she had been receiving medical treatment for a year or so she entered hospital only a few days before her death. We shall all miss her happy, friendly, helpful disposition. She was a descendant of pioneer electrical engineer Michael Faraday (pictured on the £20 note) and arranged a HADAS visit to the Royal Institution last year in commemo­ration of her illustrious relative.

Sacred sites, ancient on modern

Andy Simpson reports on the February lecture, A History of Hertfordshire


An audience of some 30 members enjoyed a typically entertaining Tony Rook presentation and took the opportunity to browse through some of Tony’s ex­cellent publications. Indeed, these notes are based in part on one of his Nutshell Notebook series — a splendid 50p-worth if ever there was one, covering the salient points of the lecture and illustrated with maps.

Tony, of course, excavated the Roman bath­house now displayed under the Al at Welwyn visited in the past by HADAS — and after describing himself as “archaeology’s foremost fornacator” (a bath-house slave) launched into his lecture, with his motto “entertain, amuse, inform” to the fore. This he certainly did.

For much of its history Hertfordshire was a place that grew things for use elsewhere or provided services for people travelling through. Tony pointed out how radial routes to London cut the county north-south. Moving east-west across it was much harder. County Council meetings used to be held in London as it was the easiest place for everyone to get to!

Until very recently Hertfordshire was entirely agricultural. Earliest occupation had been on the chalk uplands, with the heavy, forested clay low­lands mainly in the south of the county cleared and ploughed only in the Iron Age. London breweries were once supplied by malt grown in the “cham­pagne country” of southern Hertfordshire.

The county’s early occupiers are represented by Britain’s easternmost long barrow, at Royston Therfield Heath, this religious monument of pre-

historic times now surviving on a “sacred site” of the modern age —a golf course. The county also has many ring-ditched barrows, frequently ploughed out. The Iron Age Belgae had a fortified place — a 120-acre plateau fort — at Wheathampstead, where Caesar may have fought Cassivellaunus in 54BC, with a boundary ditch to the north of their territory 100 feet across and 30 feet deep even today. After 43BC the Belgae spread their settlement to the gravel plateaux, represented by Tony’s effort with his Nikon, “2,000 years at f22”, to photograph the Iron

Age Welwyn Garden City (aka Butser). There are 15 Iron Age farms known in Welwyn — as always, Tony remarked, distribution maps plot active ar­chaeologists!

Then came the Romans: “with poor steering gear on their chariots, hence the straight roads”. Most villas were on the light, chalky soils around Verulamium, with parts of the county not cultivated until the Dark Ages. A slide of a reconstructed settlement from that period illustrated the “bio­degradable Saxons” with their timber and thatch leaving little evidence. The 1086 Domesday survey, however, provides a snapshot of late Saxon Hert­fordshire, with an explosion of settlement in the north east of the county, quite empty in Roman times.

The Normans imposed control with castles such as Berkhamsted, while south of St Albans many stretches of forest took over previously cultivated ground. After the Black Death, wages and rent replaced feudal dues. Later, the first-ever toll road was built in Hertfordshire, with Rodwell having the first turnpike stretch. Most roads remained as radial routes. The Reading road was known as the “gout track” as sufferers headed for the healing waters of Bath.

The first canal, the New River, took drinking water—not boats—from Amwell Spring to London in the 17th century. The Grand Union (later Grand Junction) Canal and, from 1838, the London to Bir­mingham Railway, brought the industrial revolu­tion to the west of the county first. The mills and maltings have all now gone or have been converted into desirable commuter homes. The 19th century saw women attain financial independence as straw hat-makers, earning more than their agricultural labourer menfolk. Later Ebenezer Howard sug­gested bringing housing and industry together in Garden Cities such as Letchworth and Welwyn to avoid commuting. Post-war, the Government in­troduced new towns such as Stevenage.

All in all this was a fascinating and enjoyable lecture — Tony certainly did “entertain, amuse, inform”.

Whither archaeology in the 21st century?

Sheila Woodward, HADAS representative on the CBA, reports on a crucial discussion


At the Winter General Meeting of the Council for British Archaeology, held in York on February 2.7, there was a wide-ranging discussion on British ar­chaeology’s future and what the CBA should be doing to publicise its needs. It is difficult to summa­rise such a lengthy and comprehensive debate (a full report will be published by the CBA in due course) but the matters discussed were grouped under five main headings.

National policy and sustainability

There was considerable criticism of lack of co­ordination and consequent variation of standards of facilities, expertise and funding between different areas. Growing archiving problems must also be tackled.

Quality of work being done

Archaeology still lacks adequate status. The growing commercialisation (competitive tendering) can result in excavation by teams with good techni­cal skills but a lack of local knowledge. The increas­ing range of technologies is complicating training. There was also criticism of the lack of monitoring of excavations, and of the whimsicality of Lottery funding!

Attenuation of local government archive services Local government reorganisation has often proved disastrous for archaeology, and the importance of “educating” local councillors was stressed. The future of archaeology in universities

There was some difference of opinion about the content of university archaeology courses as many students do not intend to become practical excavators.

Public participation and communication

These were recognised as increasingly impor­tant and could be valuable assets in improving the status of archaeology.

There was some criticism of the general tone of the debate as being too pessimistic and failing to appreciate the enormous improvements achieved in recent years. The final resolution accepted that criticism.

The wording of the resolution, passed in great haste as time had run out, was amended so often that I cannot transcribe it accurately! However, the gist of it was that, while recognising the large ad­vances made in archaeology in the last 30 years and welcoming the prospects offered by new sources of funding, the Council must press for increased visibility of the subject, draw public attention to threats, refocus the understanding of the needs for studying the subject, and seek to re-establish a common sense of purpose within the discipline.

A window on Victorian attitudes to philanthropy


HADAS member Douglas Morgan has moved south in his study of great stained glass windows. Follow­ing his monograph Windows on Crathie (the Deeside church where Queen Victoria was a frequent wor­shipper), reviewed in the March 1995 Newsletter, comes Great West Window, a study — with fine coloured illustrations — of the Victorian west win­dow in the chapel of King’s College, Cambridge.

Douglas Morgan explains that the west window had been included in the original Tudor plan for stained glass throughout the chapel, depicting scenes from the Old and New Testaments. But for some reason — and debate still rages over quite what that reason was — work stopped short, and plain glass was inserted instead.

Even when the offer of a 19th century benefac­tor Francis Edmund Stacey, a former Fellow of the college, to complete what had been intended was accepted, realisation of his generosity was no simple or easy matter. There was the question of the initial design, on “a triumphant hymn of praise”, by the respected firm of Clayton and Bell. The Provost and Fellows of King’s found it too modern, incorporating events which post-dated the Bible.

Even the replacement design, on Stacey’s origi­nal favoured theme of the Last Judgement, had its problems— nudity among the condemned souls was disapproved of, and was the Archangel not over­armed? Finally, after revisions, it was approved, but the disputes and delays carried on, particularly as a result of Clayton and Bell’s request to display the window, before installing it in Cambridge, at the Paris Exhibition of 1878.

The detailed story of all this makes intriguing reading, and opens its own window on the complica­tions of Victorian philanthropy — not a million miles away from those which surround today’s Lottery benefactions.

Great West Window is offered to HADAS members at the special price of £2, plus 75p post and packing. Cheques to Arabesque Publications, 12 Wildwood Grove, NW3 71111 (0181-455 3513).Happy birthday, Hampstead’s saviours


April 7 1897 was an important day for local history in North London. It saw the formation of the Hampstead Heath Protection Society (now the Heath and Old Hampstead Society) and marked the begin­ning of a magnificent, continuing effort to protect, preserve and enhance a very special part of North London.

Since that day the society has extended its pro­tective role beyond the boundaries of the Heath —now four times its original area, largely thanks to the society — to cover Hampstead Town (“Village” is a description applied by newcomers!) and has dedi­cated enormous effort to save the area from sacrifice to the god car, to fight ugly and unneeded develop­ment, to support useful shops, to restore appropriate street furniture and generally to keep Hampstead and the Heath the way everyone loves them.

A programme of events is under way to celebrate the birthday, with highlights including exhibitions at Burgh House (now on) and Kenwood (opening in June), lectures and concerts. And in September the restoration of the Chalybeate Well in Well Walk— one of the famous wells of Hampstead, which brought the Town its initial repute — will be marked by a ceremony in honour of Christopher Wade, Hampstead’s best-known local historian, founder with his late wife Diana of Hampstead Museum, and for many years a HADAS member.

The centenary is being marked, too, by pub­lication of a book, A Constant Vigil, which features selections from 100 years of the society’s annual reports, a fascinating insight into the issues which have made the headlines in Hampstead. Proceeds from sales of the book will help the society continue its work. Copies cost £9.95 from Burgh House or local bookshops.



There was industrial activity on Hampstead Heath after mesolithic man’s tool-making —brick-making in the 19th century. In this article, reproduced from the Heath and Old Hampstead Society’s Newsletter, geologist Eric Robinson explains where and why.

A source of bricks for building the terraces

It. may be difficult to believe that between 1866 and the end of the century there was an extensive brickfield on the west side of the Heath, stretching from the Viaduct down the valley of the Hampstead Ponds. It was an enterprise generated by Sir Thomas Maryon Wilson to allow John Culverhouse, a local builder, to make the bricks needed for the extended terraces of the Village.

Geologically, the ground of the brickfield was underlain by London Clay overlain by silts and clays of the Claygate Beds. Together they make an excel­lent blend of materials for brick-making. When fresh and unweathered, London Clay is rich in iron pyrites (sulphide) which changes to sulphate on exposure to air. Sulphate takes the form of crystals of gypsum—liable to cause bricks to burst when they are fired in a kiln.

On the Heath, the clay was dug by hand, and cut from terraces notching the hillslopes below the Viaduct. It was then left to be washed by rain to flush out the gypsum. Then it could be blended with the fine silts of the Claygate Beds together with the brickearth (wind-blown silt from the top surface of the Heath).

Many of the bricks were fired in very simple kilns. if the wind was in the east, the reek of sulphur smoke must have hung heavily over Hampstead.

The product was a yellowish stock brick. The outer bricks of the kiln often fused together to form dis­torted blocks with glazed surfaces which we often see in garden walls in Hampstead.A well-known photograph of 1880 makes it clear that clay was cut over both sides of the valley (really the headwaters of the River Fleet) at the height of the workings. It would be difficult to identify the area in the present landscape. The benches and terraces have been levelled; the football field occupies the uppermost level. Elsewhere, the thick and tangled vegetation of the valley above the Mixed Bathing Pond and again towards the Vale of Health may indicate deep disturbance of the ground. Like the sand-pits of Sandy Heath and the Spaniards Road, the disappearance of the brickfield is evidence of the speed with which nature colonises open space and broken ground. Ecologically, this is an area of the Heath given over to invasive species.


Neighbourly happenings

·        Next lecture in the Barnet and District Local History Society programme is Sir John Soane and His Collection, by Helen Dorey. The amazing “cabinet of curiosities” put together by Sir John, architect of the Bank of England and other notable buildings, is preserved for the nation by the Act of Parliament he instigated, and can be seen at his home in Lincoln’s Inn Fields — one of the most fascinating small museums in London. The lecture is in the Wyburn Room, Wesley Hall, Staplyton Road, Barnet, at 7.45 for 8pm.

·           Enfield Archaeological Society holds its AGM on April 18, with reports of fieldwork and research following the business. The meeting is at Jubilee Hall, junction of Chase Side and Parsonage Lane, Enfield, 8pm. Visitors are asked to contribute 50p.

·                      Industrial Archaeology, described by John Boyes, will be the subject of the Finchley Society’s April meeting, on the 24th. The location is the same as for HADAS meetings — the Drawing Room at Avenue House — and the start time is 7.45pm.

Calling all juniors

Junior members are invited by the British Museum to attend its Archaeological Open Day on April 23. The subject is Archaeology in the Near East, and the day which is free — is intended for sixth formers and interested year 11 students. It offers an intro­duction to the archaeology of Mesopotamia and Western Asia in general. There will be lectures, workshops and gallery visits, plus presentations by universities offering degree courses in Near Eastern archaeology. For tickets, apply to the British Museum Education Service, London WC1B 3LA (0171-323 8511/8854).

What the papers say…

“Archaeologists have located the site of the ‘forgot­ten battle of 1066.” The battle for London, almost three months after William’s victory at Hastings, is thought to have been fought just within the walls of the Roman city, at the junction of Cheapside and the Folkmoot, a meeting place long buried under the northern edge of St Paul’s Cathedral. (Sunday Times)

“The fossilised skeleton of an carnivorous amphib­ian dating from the Triassic Period has been hailed by palaeontologists as one of the most significant finds in Australia this century.” The fossil, of a fearsome creature more than 6ft long and equipped with enormous teeth, has been dated at 220 million years old, about 10 million years older than the earli­est dinosaur. (Daily Telegraph)

“The Mildenhall treasure, a magnificent hoard of Roman silver plate supposedly dug up 50 years ago in East Anglia, may have been illegally imported by American troops immediately afterthe second world war.” Dr Paul Ashbee, formerly a lecturer in arch­aeology at the University of East Anglia, suggests it may have been looted by American troops in Europe, flown to the Mildenhall airbase, passed to a local antiquities dealer and declared to the authorities only under pressure, the dealer claiming to have dug it up locally. Dr Ashbee claims British Museum curators knew of the treasure’s doubtful provenance, but were unable to question it to for fear of instigating a diplo­matic row and risking their jobs. (Sunday Times)

“Two-thousand-year old graves containing daggers and long swords may be proof that the legendary women warriors, the Amazons, existed on the Russian steppes.” The archaeologists’ find fits with the location and date of Herodotus’s identification of the Amazons. (The Independent)


Notice of AGM

The Annual General Meeting of the society will be held at 8.30pm on Tuesday May 13, 1997 at Avenue House, East End Road, Finchley, N3. Coffee will be available from 8pm.

Nominations for officers and members of the committee must be submitted to me on the nomination form below, to reach me no later than May 6, 1997. The consent of your nominee(s) must be obtained in writing before submitting their name(s).

Resolutions submitted by members for consideration at the AGM must be received by me not later than April 22, 1997.


The ‘traitor’ who found sanctuary in Mill Hill


HADAS is grateful to the Mill Hill Historical Society for permission to publish this article, which appeared in one of its recent newsletters, It concerns one of the area’s earliest links with America — though not the very first, which was through the friendship of botanist Peter Collinson with Benjamin Franklin and another botanist, John Bartram, like Franklin a resident of Philadelphia.

When the War of Independence broke out in 1775 three brothers who held large landed estates in York County, Pennsylvania, sided with the loyalists, sup­porting the British. When a year later independence was achieved they found themselves held to be traitors. All had their property confiscated. William Rankin, a colonel, was arrested and imprisoned in York jail, from which he escaped and fled to Eng­land, as did his other brother.

A few weeks before the Declaration of Inde­pendence in 1776 the third brother, James Rankin, aged 45, had been elected to the Pennsylvania As­sembly. Now he was accused of misrepresenting and insulting the Whig Committee of York County. Though he is said to have confessed, asked forgive­ness, and promised to behave as a good citizen, he too was deprived of his property and fled to New York. There he served as chairman of the Board of Refugees which dealt with the large numbers then emigrating from America to Canada and to this country.

When James Rankin himself crossed to England we do not know, but in 1787 he came to live in Mill Hill. Perhaps he had met his neighbour Michael Collinson, Peter’s son, who is said to have strongly condemned the “unnatural ingratitude of America”. Despite his losses he must still have been a man of means, for he purchased the substan­tial residence of Littleberries on the Ridgeway with the neighbouring house of Jeannettes, with a total estate of 22 acres. He would seem to have let Littleberries soon afterwards to Thomas Kerr, while he lived with his wife Ann in Jeannettes.

For the year 1793 Rankin took the office of an Overseer of the Poor for Hendon and it is interesting to note that in that year £3 18s Vzd was spent on repairing the windows, roof, floors and plaster of the almshouses at the top of Milespit Hill.

While James Rankin was in Mill Hill a small part of his estate in America was restored to a son and daughter, and it is said that the British Government compensated the brothers for their losses. James Rankin died in 1803, aged 72, but his widow continued to live in Jeannettes for another 27 years, dying there at the age of 83 in 1830. They were both buried in St Mary’s churchyard, Hendon.

• Mill Hill Historical Society member Wendy Davis has produced a poster illustrating the door­ways of all the listed buildings in Mill Hill. Copies are available from her at 41 Victoria Road, NW7 4BA (0181-959 7126) for £3.90 plus postage.

Newsletter-325-April-1998

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 6 : 1995 - 1999 | No Comments


Going home

Mrs Banham, a founder member of the Society, is leav­ing Hendon after 50 years in the same house. I asked her if she wasn’t sad at leaving her home and all its memo­ries. “Not at all,” she replied. “I am going home.”

In fact she is returning to the village where she was born, lived and worked as the school teacher, before coming to London. She still has relatives and friends there and will live in a sheltered flat near to them. I have her new address and phone number and she would be happy to hear from old friends.

In earlier years she participated in everything. Mem­bers who came on the Orkney week will remember particularly the fun we had. She always brought a bottle of sherry with her on weekends away — and she would call us into her room for a tipple before our evening meal. And on day trips she always brought a large tin of mixed sweeties to pass round the coach.

In the very early years of the Society Mr Banham (now deceased) addressed the newsletter envelopes by hand and delivered them all.

We have a lot to thank them for, and we all wish Mrs Banham a happy retirement.

Mr Philip Canter

Another member of long standing, Mr Philip Canter, has died. Mrs Eileen Canter is now living in a nursing home in Elstree. Both of them lived in Golders Green for many years and came on most of our outings and weekends. I have Mrs Canter’s address and will give it to any mem­ber who would like to write to her. by Dorothy Newbury

Welcome to HADAS

HADAS is delighted to welcome the following new members to its ranks: Stephen Aleck, Galina Gos­podinova, Caroline Lomas and Ann Seurback.

We very much look forward to seeing you joining in all the society’s activities, from lectures and outings to research and excavations. There are lots of projects in the pipeline, so members new and old keen to get involved should contact me. by Vikki O’Connor

Modern and ancient

All of a sudden, there’s a rush of new sources of informa­tion on archaeology.

The traditional approach — on paper — comes from Cherry Lavell, who HADAS members may well remem­ber from her 25 years compiling the CBA Abstracts, or from her involvement with our neighbours, Camden History Society. Since she retired five years ago, she has devoted an ever-increasing amount of her time to compiling the Handbook of British and Irish Archaeology, just published by Edinburgh University Press (£29.95).

It’s an exhaustive, yet thoroughly orderly, treasure trove of references, from which universities offer which archaeology courses to how to find an expert on garden history, from the seminal books on archaeology to where to apply for excavation grants. She ranged round the country in her hunt for information, being the opposite of those archaeologists who don’t know — or don’t bother to find out — where to find what they need.

The handbook is, says Cherry, for every archaeolo­gist, from beginner to student to specialist. “I just hope it will be useful,” she adds. There’s little doubt about that.

For those with the Web at their fingertips, the ad­dress to type in is christine.ivory@onyxnet.co.uk, and back will come details of the brand new Archaiologia Jobs and People Finder, a service intended for everyone in­volved in archaeology, history and related disciplines. Use it to find jobs and contracts (volunteer places on digs, teaching posts, etc) or specialist services such as geophysical surveying or archaeological illustration. It also aims to help those seeking staff for archaeological projects. Individuals can register their personal details, or those of specialist services they can provide, for a small admin charge.

Watch this site

I think this is the fourth time that 142-150 Cricklewood Broadway has come up for development.

English Heritage has advised the borough planning department that it lies beside Roman Watling Street and within the extent of the medieval roadside village of Cricklewood. It is therefore of archaeological impor­tance and a field evaluation by an archaeological con­tractor is required.

Some site watching would be worthwhile when work starts. Are there any members in the vicinity? by Bill Firth (0181-455 7164)

The borough at their feet

GOAL! Football in Barnet Borough is the current exhibition at Church Farmhouse Museum, running until April 26. It traces the history of the three main clubs in the area, through kit, photographs, videos, programmes,trophies and personalia relating to important international players of the past such as Lester Finch (Barnet), George Robb (Finchley) and Laurie Topp (Hendon). While football has yet to be traced in the archaeological record, it has a venerable history, stretching back locally to a 1788 engraving (left) showing a game being played at the Market Place, Barnet. Hardly the strip today’s clubs sell to fans at controversially high prices!

We’re doing the Lambeth Walk…

George Sweetland maps the route taken by members as they ventured South of the River

The cosy reception room of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society offered a relief from the cold wind blowing from the river by Lambeth Bridge, as HADAS members as­sembled on March 5 for their tour of the Society’s head­quarters conducted by the indefatigable Mary 0′ Co n n e

Founded in 1841 to protect the interests of dispens­ing chemists and druggists, the Society moved from its original home in Bloomsbury Square to the present building in the late 1970s. Its museum, which is spread over several floors, includes a wonderful collection of dispensing jars, the oldest, from Italy, dated to the 15th century. They are quite beautiful and we were told they were intended to look attractive, so customers felt they were getting value for money. Most contained ingredi­ents of medicinal value; others, however, would have been at home in the witches’ scene from Macbeth.

Moving to the upper floor, our guide — himself a retired pharmacist — demonstrated how until quite recently powders were crushed and wrapped, tablets made and pills rolled. The last apparently had three grades, from a varnished talcum powder coating to silver and gold, depending on the financial means of the patient.

Time meant we could give only a cursory look at these fascinating relics and, after thanking our guides, we braved the heavy traffic to the Museum of Garden History housed in the redundant parish church of St Mary. Rescued from a sad state of neglect by the

Tradescant Trust, it is now a fine monument to the Carolean gardeners, father and son, who introduced so many exotic plants to the British Isles, plants which we think have always been with us. Their collection of rarities forms the basis of the Ashmolean museum at Oxford. Elias Ashmole, the Tradescants, and William Bligh are buried in the churchyard.

The most romantic story attached to the church is of Mary of Modena, James Il’s queen. In her flight from Eng-land she was forced to take shelter overnight in the porch, accompanied only by her infant son and lady-in-waiting.

The museum café provided us with a light but sustaining lunch, and after viewing the museum and churchyard, we met outside the doors of Lambeth Pal­ace. Once Mary had again counted her flock, and the last straggler had arrived, she gave a signal and someone pulled the bell handle (nothing so 20th century as a press-button here) and we filed in.

Our guide introduced himself as the chief security officer and while we were all issued with identity cards to hang round our necks, he gave us an introduction to the history of the palace. The original building here was the manorial house of one sister of Edward the Confes­sor, and it became the custom for the Archbishops of Canterbury, who also held the post of Lord Chancellor the the monarch, to stay there when at Westminster. Archbishop Walter in 1197 exchanged land in Kent for

Roy Walker reports on the February lecture

Until the 1980s was believed that mid-Saxon Lunden­wic (c650-850 AD) was located within the walled Roman city. However, Martin Biddle and Alan Vince independ­ently researched the excavated evidence and concluded that the “market for many peoples coming by land and sea” (Bede) was situated west of the city alongside the Strand. The Jubilee Hall, Covent Garden, excavation in 1985 provided confirmation of this conclusion. Gordon Malcolm, at our well-attended meeting, continued the story of Saxon London by detailing the work recently undertakenby MoLAS at the Royal Opera House site and explaining how further parts of the jig­saw were now in place — the important edge pieces.There have been many small excavations within the area of Lundenwic, but at the Opera House site an area equivalent to 2% of the settlement was excavated. Deeply stratified, multi-period archaeology was revealed including truncated features suchas pits and wells. From the earliest Saxon period on site was a road aligned north-south with alleys perpendicular to it. One metre thick, it hada cambered surface of compacted gravel. Its alleyways had buildings aligned to them with associated yard areas.

There was poor wood survival on site, unless carbon­ised, although various building construction techniques were recognised. One building consisted of a series of ground-fast uprights with wattle on a ground beam running between. Within was a succession of metal­working hearths and a ridge of brickearth indicating a furnace. Here was found ornate jewellery, gold wire, strap ends and crucible fragments with silver deposits. Here too was a mould carved from bone, perhaps for an ornate button, with a ring and dot pattern and the image of a bird. Among a group of stone homes was one re-used as a mould.

Another building had upright posts and evidence of an internal partition. A gravel alleyway adjoined it. Also, the same plot showed a different technique — a brickearth wall with a wooden beam on top surmount­ed with wattle and daub walling. The finds indicated this was a we room. Ye t another building contained loom weights and the remains of a wooden bench.

Various hearths were found, one with the remains of the wooden lining used for supporting pots. Re-used Opera tells much more of the Saxon story There were fewer buildings by the turn of the 9th century. Rectangular pits emerge probably for industrial use. A v-shaped ditch, aligned east-west, was dug on the northern side of the site and lined with sharpened stakes jutting out of the southern face. This feature has not been dated but it is known that the Vikings invaded around 830AD.

Mid-9th century finds include two sword guards (one with part of the hilt), spear head ferrules and an iron cauldron buried in a barrel well perhaps for safe keeping. The hoard of Northumbrian coins of c840 AD buried with in a layer of dark earth could be a sign of those troubled times. Then, in Gordon’s own words, “in 886 AD the mid-Saxons moved into the City, becoming late-Saxons”.

This excavation has yielded the largest quantity of Anglo-Saxon pottery yet recovered from a single site in this area of London. It includes fragments from three or more pottery lamps, a very rare find. The results have given a greater depth of knowledge into this period and will serve as a model for any future work undertaken within the area of Ludenwic.

• The Museum of London has updated its permanent Saxon display to include many recent finds. A feature is a diorama constructed on the basis of evidence from the Opera House site; there are also remarkable survivals of wood and leather

called “Lollards’ Tower”, the chapel with its crypt, and the guardroom. To the east are the old stables and workshops.

The crypt, which served as an air raid shelter in the last war, is the oldest part of the palace. From it, we were taken to the Great Hail.Demolished during the Commonwealth, it was rebuilt in a mixture of Gothic and Classical styles by Archbishop Juxton after the Restoration. It has a fine hammer beam roof, and fragments of the old stained glass from the chapel are incorporated in the windows. On display are a pair of gloves given to the Archbishop by Charles ‘before the latter’s execution. As with the Great Hall, the chapel was badly damaged in 1941 and has also suffered ry from Victorianisation. Apart from the 13th cen­tury west door, it is not particularly impressive and the modern highly-coloured frescoes seem out of place.

Next was the guardroom. Prompted by the Tyler revolt, it was built as an armoury in 1380, but was modern­ised by Edward Blore, fortunately retaining the medieval roof. The first Lambeth Conference was held here, in 1867, and it is now a gallery, with portraits of early Archbishops by Van Dyck (Archbishop Laud) through to Hogarth. More portraits continue along the walls of the adjacent corridor, including works by Lawrence and Sargent. We were now in the Gothic-style building designed by Blore in the 1830s and erected over the site of the demolished manor house. It was the end of the tour. As South Londoners we can rarely go to HADAS events, but are most appreciative of the hard work of Dorothy and Mary.

A capital place for archaeological finds

Bill Bass visits the planned new London Archaeological Archive and Research Centre

Members may be aware of the problems in dealing with London’s Archaeological Archive and the fact that it was effectively closed two years ago. This was due to a number of reasons, including a lack of funding and the chaotic nature of the existing archive — it was full up.

During February members of London’s archaeo­logical community, professional and voluntary alike and including HADAS, were invited by Dr Simon Thurley, Director of the Museum of London, to view how the archive has been stored in the past and the plans for the future.

The archive consists of every kind of find from environmental to monumental (a combined volume of 3,500 cubic metres) plus the documentary side — record sheets, plans, drawing, photographs and so forth (300 linear metres of shelf space) from 100 years of excavat­ing in the London region. This, of course, will be added to as archaeological work continues. To put the scale of London’s archive in perspective, it is three times larger than that of York and ten times larger than any other in the country.

We were given a tour of the present site at Lever Street, near Old Street. Floor space and racking was chock-a-block with boxes of finds — boxes of 329 differ­ent shapes and sizes, in fact, as a survey discovered (a storage system to be drastically refined). Outside, pal­lets were full of soil samples, stonework, etc. The nature of the problem was obvious when even members of the museum or MoLAS had difficulty in accessing material for research. At the time of our visit stuff was being packed up ready for transfer to the “new” building.

Our party was transferred to the new site at Eagle Wharf Road, slightly north towards Islington, which is a much more modern and spacious affair. This has been owned by the Museum since 1989 and has housed its extensive social history collection for several years. It was decided to combine the whole archive here rather than find an alternative site, perhaps outside London.

The new establishment has been partially fitted out and is receiving the archive from Lever Street. This building will house the basic record, with enough space for future deposits hopefully for the next ten years or so.

However, the real plan is to expand this facility to make it a major centre for the storage, processing and research of the archive by making it accessible to every­body — archaeologists, borough museum services, local societies, historians, schools, members of the public, in fact anybody interested in London’s past.

To do this Eagle Wharf Road will need extensive alterations and expansion, including new floors to ac­commodate new public study, research and activity rooms, photograph and computer sections plus other offices. A computer documentation system is being developed to allow easy access to the wealth of records in the archive, with possible future connections to the Internet. As this worthwhile project must find funding, it is hoped contributions can be attracted from the Lot­tery, research councils and private sponsors.

… and one which won’t stay

One object on display at the Museum of London from April 2 won’t cause a storage problem. A third section of the first known map of London (the museum has the other two), has been located in Germany and is on loan until May 10. The map, engraved on copper plate, dates from the mid-16th century and shows old St Paul’s.

Long may the local society flourish!

Sheila Woodward, HADAS representative on the CBA, reports from Bristol

The Winter General Meeting of the Council for British Archaeology is now customarily held outside London. This year the venue was Bristol University where the elegance of Clifton Hill House rivalled that of the Society of Antiquaries, venue of London meetings.

The agenda ranged widely, from the Peatland Cam­paign (some progress in efforts to control what remains of our raised bogs) to the continuing problems of illicit excavation, both here and overseas, of portable antiqui­ties and their illegal export.

There was a lively debate on recent cuts in local government funding and the consequent reduction in local government archaeology officers. Loss of local knowledge and expertise was generally deplored.

The importance of the amateur contribution was emphasised by Dr Peter Addyman of the York Archaeo­ logical Trust. While acknowledging that technological developments create obstacles for amateur excavation, he argued that local societies can do invaluable field­work in observing, surveying, recording and reporting. He cited instances of such work which he has encour­aged in the environs of York.

In the field of education the Council has currently two main concerns: the exclusion of prehistory, and indeed of most matters archaeological, from the English national curriculum, and the equal absence of archaeol­ogy from the Open University’s teacher training pro­gramme.

National Archaeology Days in 1998 will be July 25­26. And HADAS’s treasurer will be delighted to hear that the CBA affiliation fee for societies remains un­changed for 1998-99.

What’s on, close at hand…

If the postman is quick with this Newsletter, you may catch Pinner Local History Society’s meeting on April 2, when Patricia Clarke talks on Shops in Pinner Long Ago. Venue is Pinner Village Hall, Chapel Lane Car Park, time 8pm. Visitors are welcome (£1 donation).

The subject for LAMAS on April 9 is Libraries and Institutes in the City of London, by David Webb, Librar­ian of the Bishopsgate Institute. The lecture — HADAS members very welcome — is in the Interpretation Unit of the Museum of London, 150 London Wall, EC2, at 6.30pm.

Enfield Archaeological Society holds its AGM on April 17, with the business followed by reports of field­work and research. The society meets at Jubilee Hall, junction of Chase Side and Parsonage Lane, Enfield, at 8pm, and visitors are welcome (50p charge).

The Finchley Society will learn of London Docklands, Then and Now, at its next meeting, on April 30. The speaker is Arthur Farrand Radley, and the meeting is at Avenue House, East End Road, at 7.45pm. Following on from the talk, a coach trip to Docklands is scheduled for May 9.

… and further afield

Pots, People and Processes is the title of a joint conference to be held by the Northern Ceramic Society and the Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology in Stoke-on-Trent on April 24-26. The busy programme includes a MoLAS contribution on the production of tin-glazed ware on the North Bank of the Thames. Ring the conference organiser, David Barker, on 01782 232323 for more details.

And the Sussex Archaeological Society is organising training courses in June and July at Clay Hill ringwork, probably one of the very first fortifications built by the Normans in England. Contact Dr Richard Jones, Anne of Cleves House, 52 Southover High Street, Lewes BN71JA to find out more.

A walk in the Wood MoLAS surveyors have been using the very latest state-of-the-art computerised recording technique, digital terrain modelling, to locate and map a triple-ditch and double-bank earthwork running through Highgate Wood, close to the Roman pottery production site with which many HADAS members are familiar.

English Heritage has commissioned the survey, as the first stage of further study of the earthwork, which is just one of a series running through the wood. The data, which on the surveyors’ portable computer produces a graphic display of the relief of the site, will be used with even greater sophistication at the MoLAS lab, alongside study of maps.

No excavation is planned, as the earthwork — prob­ably some kind of delineation feature, medieval or ear­lier — is not under threat.

Views of the past

Hornsey Historical Society stalwart Ken Gay is the man behind a new title in the Chalford Publishing Company’s Archive Photographs series. Hornsey and Crouch End contains more than 200 fully-captioned photographs, plus a short introduction, two maps and an index. Cop­ies cost £9.99, plus £1 postage, from HHS, The Old Schoolhouse, 136 Tottenham Lane, London N8 7EL.

A happy ending

Madam,

I was deeply touched by the sympa­thetic account, published in your January Newsletter, of the recent injuries to my tail. I am delighted to report that my caudal appendage is now fully restored to its former glorious tumescence. My thanks are due to HADAS members for their concern.

I beg to remain, your obedient servant,

Henry Roots