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Volume 5 : 1990 – 1994

Newsletter-234-September-1990

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Newsletter 234: September 1990 Editor: Brigid Grafton Geen

DOROTHY’S DIARY

Sat Sept 29 CAMDEN TOWN WALK with Muriel Large

Tuesday October 2nd Lecture: “Excavations in West Africa” Dr. Paul Craddock origins of West African Bronze work.

Saturday October 6th MINIMART St Mary’s Church House, Hendon NW4

Tuesday November 6th Lecture “Waters Sweet and Fresh for London” Dr. Michael Essex- Lopresti

Tuesday December 4th Christmas Dinner

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

This Newsletter is being put to bed by a surrogate editor because, as readers will be most sad to hear, our real editor, Isabel McPherson, was unexpectedly taken off to hospital in the middle of August. Friends wishing to enquire after Isobel can get the latest news from June Porges, on 081 346 5078 (evenings only); or if you would like to drop her a “best wishes” card, address it to Cordwainers Ward, Royal Free Hospital, Pond Street, NW3.

Before she went to hospital Isobel had already accumulated a heavy postbag. Here is a selection from it:

Would HADAS by another name smell sweeter?
From Mr R G Michel

Dear Editor,

I would like to record my support for the status quo party in the debate on a possible change of name.

I read Jennie Cobban’s “The Case for Change” in Newsletter 231 with interest, but in my view the defence at present has no case to answer.

Even if it had, I suspect finding improved name would prove a difficult task. I do not favour the use of “Barnet” because of the potential for confusion with the town or with the local authority. I am certainly against anything like “London Borough of Barnet Archaeological Society” unless the Council intend to fund in full our academic activities.

“North West London” would not do at all. I’m sure the residents in the vicinity of Barnet High Street and Stanmore (for insurance purposes if no other!) do not consider themselves to live in that area.

I am certainly not against change in principle, but on the other hand I do not like change for change’s sake. If a convincing case for change can be assembled and a more appropriate name created, fine – until then I suggest the noes have it.

Yours sincerely,

ROBERT MICHEL

163 Colin Crescent,

Colindale, August 2, 1990 London N1 19 6ET

From Mrs Daphne Home Lorimer FCR, ARPS, FSA (Scot)
Madam,

I was sad to read that there is, once more, a desire to alter the name of the Hendon and District Archaeological Society. The name is descriptive (it started in Hendon and now encompasses the District of the Borough of Barnet) and it is well known. HADAS is so well known, in fact, that people as far apart, for example, as the Secretary of the Palaeopathology Society in the USA and the new Professor of Archaeology in the University of Glasgow have heard of it. HADAS is a name to be proud of and to cherish.

It is not unknown for a local society to change its name – for example, the East Anglian Archaeological Society became the Prehistoric Society and the South London Entomological and Natural History Society became the British Entomological and Natural History Society. In each case, however, it was in acknowledgement of the fact that the society in question had become a national body. HADAS, much as we love it, will never be a national body. By changing its name, 25+ years of work will be forgotten, except by those involved in it, and HADAS will lose its identity.

It is for the present custodians of the HADAS name to see that it is as well known as it used to be throughout the Borough of Barnet. However much we used to grumble at manning exhibitions at every fete and jamboree, at giving talks to schools, lectures to adult evening classes and penning short notes for the papers whenever asked, it did keep the name before the people of the Borough.

The origins of the names of local societies are as much part of the local history as the origins of its street names and the changing use of its buildings. Might I suggest, Madam Editor, that far from changing its name, HADAS appoints an archivist to burnish it?

I am your obedient servant,
DAPHNE LORIMER

Scorradale

Orphir

Orkney KW17 2RF

From Mr Alan Lawson
Dear Editor, 4th August 1990

In any discussion about possible change of name that might take place within HADAS, I think that we need to be most careful in our choice of words and cliches that we use to argue our case.

No one would deny that HADAS has changed, inasmuch as its membership has changed over the years, BUT its objectives remain the same. “Moving with the times” (Percy Reboul, Newsletter 233) is a truism not an argument.

Really! Amami, Drene, etc, and also Passing Cloud (probably very carcinogenic) have nothing to do with HADAS, unless of course we should come across some discarded containers on one of our digs years hence – and then they would be classified as “industrial archaeology.”

Finally, TRAMS! They are now beginning to re-emerge as the “in” means of solving urban transport problems.

Yours,

68 Oakwood Road, ALAN LAWSON
London NW11 6RN

BOTTOMS UP FOR AMPHORAE

Also in the Editor’s incoming mail was a letter from Nell Penny which set things off on quite a different tack. Nell was curious about the shape of an amphora’s bottom; she wrote:

“Stimulated by Brian Wrigley’s lucid and witty ‘metallurgy for beginners,’ I am emboldened to ask some potter-archaeologist why the Greeks and Romans persisted through a millenium in using amphorae – two-handled vessels which couldn’t stand up for them­selves. I am told that these later cultures were copying Middle Eastern habits. There practically anything will stand up in sand.

The capacity to stick flat bottoms on large jars certainly existed in the second millenium BC – I saw it proven in the huge jars of Minoan Knossos. Why then did Mediterranean societies continue to make and use unweildy amphorae? Innate conservatism?”

Amphorae are a subject dear to the heart of any archaeologist interested in the period from the Bronze Age to the Dark Ages. These large, clumsy vessels possess – from a digger’s point of view – priceless assets. Because of the detailed chronology which has been built up on the basis of their changing shape, colour, capacity and stamping, they are an invaluable tool for dating, sharing in that respect the important characteristics of more elegant artefacts such as coins and Samian pottery forms; and amphora fragments from many sites round the coasts of the Mediterranean and western Europe provide the bedrock for modern theories on the trade routes and economics of the ancient world.

Returning to Nell’s problem, I don’t believe that died-in-the-wool traditionalism had anything to do with dictating the contours of an amphora’s bottom, whether it was peg-tip, long sharp spike or button-like “pip.” I’ve always understood that because wine amphorae were so heavy ­often over a metre tall, containing up to 25 litres of wine and possibly weighing, when full, some 50kg – you had to be able to hold them firmly when you picked them up to decant the liquid. A flagon like object of that size and weight, flat-bottomed, could not have been easily held – but put a spike on its bottom and you could sling it around, gripped at the top with a hand through one handle and at the base by the spike.

The essentials of amphora shape were summed up by an American archaeologist who took part in the excavation of the Agora in Athens a few years back, where 800-odd commercial amphorae were re-assembled. In a pamphlet, Amphoras and the Ancient Wine Trade, he described the finds, which covered over a thousand years, from 500 BC to the 6c AD. He found that the amphorae had in common

“a mouth narrow enough to be corked, two opposite vertical handles and at the bottom usually a tip or knob which serves as a third handle, below the weight, needed when one inverts a heavy vessel to pour from it. A flat bottom big enough for the jar to stand on would give no purchase for lifting. Attached bases like those on small two-handled vases for the table would add uselessly to the weight of these containers and to the inconvenience of stowing them as cargo, as well as to the cost of manufacture. Stands of various kinds were ordinary household equipment … when the jars needed to be kept upright – sometimes wooden or bamboo tripods, or large pottery rings in which the body of the amphora sits as in an egg-cup.”

Wine-jars on stands appear in tomb-paintings of Egyptian and Syrian banquets; but not at Greek parties. The Greeks usually drank their wine diluted with water, and the mixture was prepared in a krater or mixing bowl away from the table: but the boy who prepared the wine must have had to up-end the heavy vessel over the krater just as a server would have done at table, and must have needed the spike equally. The Syrians and Egyptians often sucked their wine direct from the jar on its stand through a bent tube – an almost exact ancestor of today’s “bendy straw” so beloved of modern toddlers.

Though amphorae began by being vessels for wine, often being fired in kilns beside the vineyard, the American digger in Athens writes that “they tended to accumulate just as gasoline cans do in countries today, and to be adapted to many purposes. They were re-used for all sorts of commodities – cheese and pickled fish, beer, nuts, honey. Some became funerary urns; others, with a section cut from one side, served as coffins for infants. Whole or broken, their bulk was exploited in filling disused wells or cisterns, or levelling a stretch of ground for a large building. Their hollowness … was used for strategic purposes, most memorably as Herodotus tells by the Phocians of central Greece, who dug a great pit in a mountain pass, laid in amphoras and covered them with earth, and so trapped the enemy cavalry, whose horses crashed in and broke their legs.”

As in Athens, so later in Londinium amphorae were used for many purposes. The Capital Gains exhibition at the Museum of London a few years ago showed an amphora dated AD70-120, found on a riverside site in Southwark. An analysis of the residue showed it had contained liquamen, or fish-sauce; the inscription read “Liquam/Antipol/Exc/ L Tettii Africani” – i.e. “the finest fish sauce from Antipolis (Antibes) product of Lucius Tettius Africanus.” Although the amphorae from British sites often had the weight, content and name of the producer inscribed on the body of the vessel, earlier wine-jars which provide so much evidence for east Mediterranean trade often showed a stamp impressed on the handle of the jar before firing.

Other imports into Roman Britain in amphorae between c. AD50-200 were whole olives, olive oil, wine, concentrated sweet grape juice, dates, figs and salt fish. An amphora found unbroken in the Thames estuary still had its undisturbed contents – about 6000 olives. Sweet grape juice, known as defrutum, was an essential ingredient for Roman cooks. Olive oil usually arrived in distinctive globular, round-bottomed amphorae from southern Spain. c. AD200 was the beginning of the end of the amphora era, although the vessels continued to be used in dwindl­ing numbers for three or four centuries: for instance, fragments of a Palestinian wine amphora made in Gaza in late 4c/early 5c AD helped to date one of the last Roman buildings built in Londinium. Casks and barrels, however, used in Europe since the let century BC, were becoming increasingly popular.

Finally, something about stoppers, or bungs. Ancient vintners had a choice of substances with which to close the mouths of their amphorae: wax, clay, wood (though that was mainly used as bungs for casks); but they did not, so far as we know use cork for wide-mouthed amphorae, though cork from Spain and North Africa was known in Rome in the 1st c. BC and Pliny mentions it. Cork comes into its own as a closure for wine only in the early 15c AD, when cork and glass bottles get together.

There are, in the Greek gallery at the British Museum, some objects made of twisted bronze openwork strips, about 9cm long and perhaps 3cm in diameter, found in tombs dated c. 750BC. The caption suggests that pitch-coated twine was wound round and round these, and that they were used to close wine jars. Pitch had long been used for various purposes in the prehistoric wine trade – for instance, to paint the bodies of Greek amphorae to render them more impervious. It has, indeed, been suggested that storing wine in pitch-treated amphorae originally gave the Greeks their liking for what is still a local product, retsina – wine with a turpentine taste.

A recent article in Archaeometry took that theory back into the Bronze Age. Divers exploring a shipwreck off the Turkish coast dated c.1350 BC found about a hundred Syrian amphorae. They contained lumps of greenish-amber coloured resin, thought to have been used for sealing them. Chemical analysis identified the lumps as a species of pistacia, still known as the turpentine tree. That gives modern retsina a really long ancestry. Brigid Grafton Green

TALKING OF BARNS AND TEMPLES . . .
PETER PICKERING describes HADAS’s July adventures in Essex

Dorothy advised us to bring a packed lunch and rainwear. So we did, and we took them home again, untouched. Our vision of crouching under a shared umbrella trying to undo a sodden bag of sandwiches proved the diametrical opposite of the reality. The globally-warmed sun blazed down on a large marquee, in which were all the goodies the Essex Federa­tion of Women’s Institutes could muster.

But I must control myself, and begin at the beginning. Our first visit was to Harlow Museum, in Passmores House, which has a medieval core, a 1723 front, and an imported Adam fireplace. Congratulations to Harlow Council on its imaginative purchase of this attractive building. The curator, Ian Jones, who had fascinated us in February with his account of the excavation of the Temple of Minerva, displayed his collection. The Harlow area is rich in Roman finds, and had a flourishing post-medieval pottery industry particularly yellow on brown slipware whose quality, if Mr Jones was not slandering it, was not of the highest. There was also an exhibition of jigsaws, including one with pictures of the peoples of the world, with brief characterisations a la Nicholas Ridley.

Thence to Cressing Temple. The soubriquet “Temple” comes from the Knights Templars, whose two great 13c barns (the Barley and the Wheat Barns respectively) are the dominant feature. They were hives of activity, with crowds milling around the Women’s Institute competition entries. But Mr Wadhams found a quiet place in which to tell us the history of the site, and teach us about medieval carpentry and timber-framed building construction. He then took us through the barns themselves, where the apter pupils could spot the different types of joints on the beams, rafters and braces for themselves. Congratulations to Essex County Council on its imaginative purchase of this beautiful and important complex, which will be even better in a year or two when the walled garden and the court house are restored.

Next to Coggeshall and another barn, equally grand and even older, but seeming somehow lifeless, perhaps because so much was rebuilt from a derelict state in the 1970s, or perhaps because instead of the thronging Women’s Institutes doing their thing there were National Trust displays. Nevertheless, congratulations to Braintree Council for saving it in 1982 (am I perhaps dropping a series of hints to our own dear Borough?) The party then split up to wander round Coggeshall, trying to find shady spots from which to see the wealth of domestic buildings, many with pargetting or carved bessumers, or even to have a cream tea. Then homewards, with thanks to Frank, our helpful driver, and congratulations to George Ingram, about to celebrate his ninetieth birthday.

MORE ABOUT THAT PIPELINE
by Victor Jones

We reported in Newsletters 230, 231 and 233 on HADAS’s monitoring of the Three Rivers Pipeline which the water authorities are cutting across north and northwest London. When it has been completed the pipe­line will pass through about seven miles of our Borough. The present line starts at Rowley Green and we are watching its progress closely, hoping to pinpoint information of archaeological interest. The cut being made in the surface of the ground is 10m wide and 25cm deep; with an inner cut, which will carry the actual pipe, 75cm wide by 2m/3m deep.

The original intention of the water authorities sounded a bit like the building of the Canadian Pacific Railway through the Rockies – to start at each side (in the case of LBB from Brockley Hill, going NE, and from Rowley Green, going SW) and meet in the middle. However, that’s not how it has worked out in practice.

The digging proramme in fact began at Edgwarebury Farm, in the area some little way to the east of Brockley Hill; since then the plan has been changed almost weekly, so that we have had to tailor our watching on a day-to-day basis. Here is a report on what is happening in the different sections:

The Edgwarebury section (from the A41 to M1) is almost complete, the pipe having been laid and covered. We made a few finds while watching and they are being processed.

As reported in the last Newsletter, work on the section between the Ml and A1000 won’t be completed until the end of September, because one part of it crosses Mill Hill golf course and the golf club is to be allowed to complete its match programme in peace. The part of this section which covers Scratchwood open space will require constant watching during the next few weeks.

The section between the A1000 and Arkley was completed in June/July as far as the Barnet Road; again, finds are being processed. The line has now been taken across the Barnet Road and the NW corner of Hyver Hill to the A1000. We have found no material of interest in the part cleared and walked so far, about halfway to the A1000.

As reported in the last Newsletter, the section from the A41 to the AS (Watling Street) was started in June, and then adjourned to the other side of Watling Street, going from Wood Lane down to the point where the crossing of Watling Street is to be made. Little material of interest was found. In the last Newsletter we reported that the crossing of Watling Street would take place in the first week of August, but that did not happen. We also outlined the agree­ment reached with the contractors by which we would have time to examine the pipeline on both sides at the Watling Street crossing, an area which might prove to be of outstanding archaeological interest. The crossing is now scheduled to be made from Sept. 7-10, and we hope the same arrangements will stand.

The finds and observations made so far have not provided anything of outstanding interest. Pottery and other artefacts consist mainly of material dated to the last two/three centuries, and are of the kind one might expect in a spread of farm rubbish in field and woodland, in an area geared mainly to the provision of hay, for the horses in a metropolis. A full report on the finds will be made when monitoring is complete and they have been studied; and it is hoped to publish in a forthcoming Newsletter a map showing the line taken by the pipeline.

Meantime, members interested in taking part in the remaining walks, or in the investigation of the Watling Street crossing, please phone either Tessa Smith (081 958 9159), Brian Wrigley (081 959 5982) or Victor Jones (081 453 6180).

MEMORIAL TO A LOCAL HISTORIAN

It was sad to hear last month of the death of Bill Taylor, aged 84, leading local historian of the northern part of our Borough and a colleague of HADAS’s of long standing. We had many links with him. From 1965-83 he was Curator of Barnet Museum, a position which went well in tandem with his secretaryship of the Barnet & District Local History Society, with which he had been associated since he first joined it as a young man in his twenties.

HADAS’s collaboration with him was probably at its closest during the planning of the Battle of Barnet quincentenary when, on our first suggesting a commemoration of the battle, Bill gave us his wholehearted co-operation in forming a committee and then in collecting, preparing and mounting a large exhibition in the old Council chamber at Barnet, next door to his Museum.

That was in 1971, and our association continued to thrive in such matters as the exhibition of Industrial Archaeology, Here Today, Gone Tomorrow,” .which Bill invited us to put on at Barnet Museum in 1979; and the backing which he gave to HADAS’s efforts to spread blue plaques, commemorating famous people and events, outside the environs of Hendon to other parts of the Borough. That project culminated, among others, in plaques on Thomas Lipton’s former home in Chase Side, Southgate; on the Tudor Hall, in Chipping Barnet; and to Benjamin Waugh, founder of the NSPCC, in Friern Barnet. I remember Bill saying he rejoiced in all those. BGG

UP-DATE ON THE DIG

19-25 High Street, Chipping Barnet

As the heatwave continues, so does work on extending this site. A fifth small trench has now been opened on the eastern edge, close to the entrance. This is in the hope of picking up traces of buildings fronting the original line of the Great North Road, which runs along the eastern edge of the site and out into the main lower High Street; however, modern interference – what appears to be a brick-built toilet block – has removed most of the archaeology at this point. The exception is a small area of medieval deposits immediately below modern topsoil, which has yielded 12c/15c material.

Traces of buildings continue to be elusive over the rest of the site, despite extensions to trench 2 in the centre: however, much medieval pottery, mostly “grey wares,” continues to be found. Digging on the site is expected to continue into September: the hardy band of a half-dozen or so regulars could certainly do with some help to extend

The trenches and complete the surveying. Details as always from the “Gang of three”. Come and help us add to our present tally of one hand-made sherd “not later than 1150AD.

The HADAS LIBRARY

This is an attempt to kill two birds with one stone: to provide an interim progress report and to cry for help.

Our Hon. Treasurer, Victor Jones, reported in the June Newsletter on the suitability of our new room at Avenue House “for housing a small, well-ordered library.” Since then he has been working out the practical­ities of that project. First step is to take stock of salvaged material.

Though some of our books and papers were badly damaged in the Avenue House fire, many people working many hours managed to save something from the wreck. The full tale of that marathon rescue is likely to become a HADAS legend and Victor hopes to tell the complete story in a forthcoming Newsletter.

The salvaged material went into storage until details of our new accommodation could be settled. Now Victor and Ted Sammes, continuing the work of June Porges, have started the long trek towards getting the less damaged material back into use.

They have unpacked some books and begun the job of putting then on the shelves. That’s not, however, quite as simple as it sounds – and this is where our cry for help comes in. Every item has to be carefully examined, a decision taken about its condition, books cleaned, dusted, covers replaced, and so on.

Would you – yes, you who are reading these very words – be able to spare even an hour or two to help? Even better, a whole morning, after­noon or evening? The work is not difficult, though it is a bit grimy and calls for old clothes, if you can help, will you ring Victor Jones on 453 6180 and discuss days and times? You’re guaranteed to get a great welcome.

SITE-WATCHING

The following sites, subject of recent planning archaeologically sensitive. Members living near are on them and report anything of possible interest to John Enderby, on 081 203 2630.

Central Area

Manor House, 80 East End Road, N3

Five Bells PH, 167 East End Rd, N3

St Michaels Convent, Nether St, N3

Northern Area

62/72 Wood St, Chipping Barnet

58 Union St, Chinning Barnet

19/29 High St, Chipping Barnet

98/100 High St, Chipping Barnet

56 Galley Lane, Arkley

170 Bells Hill, Chipping Barnet

198 High St, Chipping Barnet

92a Bells Hill, Chipping Barnet

Western Area

30 Church End, NW4

Rosebank Barn, The Ridgeway, NW7

93 Francklyn Gns, Edgware

108/110 Edgwarebury Lane, Edgware

30 Hartland Drive, Edgware

MME PATAUD BROODS ON ETERNITY

HELEN GORDON, our woman in the Dordogne, sends this despatch

Another museum has been opened in Les Eyzies this year, on the site of the Pataud shelter which lies between the Prehistoric museum in the castle, and the Cro-Magnon hotel. Here the cliff towers above the village road about 200m from the Vezere; the shelter lies partway up the cliff in a deep overhang.

The shelter bears the name of its farmer proprietor at the end of the 19c when signs of its ancient prehistoric inhabitants were first recognised Peyrony and the other French archaeologists recovered much material from the area, but it was not until a full-scale excavation was carried out between 1958-64, led by Harvard Professor Movius, that the shelter was shown to be one of the most important upper palaeolithic sites in France, having been occupied on numerous occasions between 32-30,000 BC and 18-17,000 BC.

The site itself has been preserved in one section of the museum, showing clearly the stratification and the location of the principal finds, replaced where they were discovered. The second part is located in the troglodytic cellar of the farm which has required little adaptation for the display of a rich selection of the material, and incidentally, with great serendipity, provided a wonderfully cool atmosphere in which to enjoy it, in this hottest of Dordogne summers (temperatures reaching 40° C).

Needless to say the museum is well equiped with headphones in different languages, ever-changing screens of information, and a final electronic game to test a visitor’s knowledge and observation, sending him back to look again if he fails. In the centre sits “Mme Pataud,” brooding over eternity. She has been modelled by the sculptor Eirik Granquist, advised by H-A de Lumley, a palaeontological specialist on diseases, on information derived from the well-preserved skeleton of a young woman found buried with her new-born baby-at the back of the shelter. She was in her twenties when she died, a strong young woman and, belonging like us to the genus homo sapiens, one who might pass unnoticed in a modern crowd; though I detected a certain ferocious toughness in her expression which might cause surprise.

At the end of the visit, lights go out and a five minute film is projected on the background of the rock, showing shelter life. A fire is blazing, lighting up returning hunters, animals being skinned, tools being made, food prepared and eaten; (the sense of reality, which breathes life into the museum exhibits, its unfortunately jolted by the close-ups, inevit­ably out of scale with the background). This aside, the museum provides an excellent introduction to this slice of prehistory, and I find endearing their emphasis on the continuity of occupation of the shelter, from the Aurignacians to N. Pataud, and indeed to the museum.

GEORGE IN HIS NAUGHTY NINETIES Spotlight on a special occasion, hosted recently by JUNE PORGES at her Finchley home

There was a touch of “This Is Your Life” about George Ingram’s 90th birthday party – because it was all a surprise. George expected to enjoy a little light supper with one or two cronies – and instead he walked into a gathering of twenty or so HADAS friends waiting to congratulate him.

The occasion, however, had none of the formality of “This Is Your Life.” It was a glorious July evening and there was no official programme. People drifted from sitting room to garden and back; and there was much nattering about HADAS and its high spots, past and present. The age-range was roughly two-plus (our hostess’s grandson) up to George’s ninety: no generation gap visible at this party.

Of course good food and wine marked the event – including a birthday cake with candles, lovingly made, needless to say, in a HADAS kitchen. Glyn Daniel started something when he suggested more than a quarter century ago, in his classic The Hungry Archaeologist in France, that there is an affinity between good food and archaeologists. It’s a tradition HADAS cooks like to nurture.

The party went with such a swing that one hostess, in charge of presents, nearly forgot to give George his. They were a series of albums ­four or five, each immaculately wrapped, to hold his photos, starting with a tiddler for casual snapshots and building up to a monster which could take full-size exhibition prints. One or two photos of George (in HADAS gear, with trowel or guide-book at the ready) started each album off. Know­ing George’s canny hand with a camera, they seemed a most appropriate gift.

After gossip, goodies and gifts there came, naturally, “Happy Birthday To You,” sung with a will by the assembled company. That’s a wish, dear George, with which the Newsletter warmly associates itself.

MARY O’CONNELL – so successful as a guide to City tourist groups that she is now tutoring classes for probationer guides – is also busy on another front. She and. her husband have bought a holiday home in Taunton and are busy equipping it – no wonder they are keeping a beady eye on what comes in for the Minimart.

Sad news from MARY BARNETT, currently in hospital undergoing tests for an undiagnosed infection. She and husband Barney, two of our most regular outings addicts, had signed on for the Ironbridge weekend, but whether they will be able to take part is in the lap of the doctors.

REVA BROWN, HADAS member since 1979, is now studying at Bradford-University. Her subject is unexpected. “I’m looking at the purpose of university schools,” she writes, “and at academics and the management of knowledge. It’s proving fascinating.” She is two-thirds through her course, so we can hope to welcome her back to London before too long.

Thought for the day, seen on the Institute of Archaeology notice-board:

“Competent Field Archaeologist wanted with survey, drawing
and excavation skills, for four to six weeks’ field work in Kuwait.”

Underneath a wag had written “Combat experience preferred.”

Newsletter-233-August-1990

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 5 : 1990 - 1994 | No Comments

ISSUE No 233: Edited by Vikki O’Connor AUGUST 1990

DIARY

Saturday 25 August PIDDINGTON ROMAN VILLA & TOWCESTER (Details & application form enclosed)

Friday 31 August – SHROPSHIRE WEEKEND

Sunday 2 September 44 Members have booked for this trip. Due to cancellation two places have become available. Please phone Dorothy Newbury on (081) 203 0950 if interested.

Saturday 29 September CAMDEN TOWN WALK – Muriel Large

Tuesday 2 October LECTURE “Excavations in West Africa” – Dr Paul Craddock

Saturday 6 October MINIMART – only a month to go, goods are coming in thick & fast!

DIGGING NEWS

19-25 HIGH STREET, CHIPPING BARNET – ANDY SIMPSON

“MAD COWS & ENGLISHMEN” (with apologies to Noel Coward)

After bemoaning the heavy rain in the last note, your scribe can now whinge about it being too hot… But seriously folks, work on the 19-25 High Street site at Chipping Barnet is continuing, with effort concentrating on the centre and rear trenches. A considerable amount of medieval pottery has been recovered and identified by Jennie Cobban as being mostly South Herts ‘greyware’, South Herts variant, and London-type ware, of the period 1150-1350, i.e. very similar to the range and date of material recovered from the ‘Mitre’ as recounted in the report accompanying this newsletter.

The excavation team have been much amused by the rutted nature of the presumed medieval pebbled yard surface revealed in the centre trench, giving rise to dubious jokes about medieval mad cows. It keeps us sane, I suppose…

With the time allotted for the excavation coming to a close, we would be very grateful for extra ‘hands’ for the final weeks – details, as ever, from: Brian (081-959-5982); Arthur (081-368-6288) or your scribe (081-205-6456).

THE MITRE DIG BRIAN WRIGLEY

The final report on this dig appears as a supplement to this issue of the newsletter. To acknowledgements formally recorded there, I would like to add our further thanks to the Willcocks family who provided the Kanga Hammer, and Victor Jones for organising the initial surface breaking with it; also to all those who dug and drew – Anna Fraser, John Heathfield, Graham Javes (who also worked on the finds), Fred King, John O’Mahoney, Brian McCarthy, Vikki O’Connor, Peter Pickering, George Sweetland, Don Watson, plus Ann, Lisa, Miriam, and Peter (whose surnames unfortunately did not get recorded!)

I would like to add a small point of correction to the historical record: the aptly-named licensee of The Mitre, Mr Bishop, told us his house had in the past had a bad Press – I think it was Pepys and Dr Johnson who referred to the poor victuals provided by The Mitre. We must put this right by putting on record that we found The Mitre’s victuals most enjoyable, and I particularly commend their excellent crusty cheese sandwiches!

THREE RIVERS PIPELINE PROJECT VICTOR JONES

Several sections are completed and the remaining work has now been re-programmed.

As some Members will know, rather more than half of the project is finished and we have walked all of it several times. Finds of various kinds were made and are sorted by section. No work has so far been undertaken on the section between the M1 and the A1000. This has to cross a golf course and part of the Scratchwood open space and its woods. The main works on this will not be started until mid-September as much of this is in the golf course area, and is delayed due to the Club’s match programme. This work is expected to take two or more weeks.

There is also the smaller section between the A1000 and the Barnet Road. This crosses the north-west corner of Hiver Hill and should commence when the Arkley section is finished.

The section from the A41 to Watling Street and on to the Wood Lane side of Brockley Hill was started in June. The topsoil removal finished three weeks or so ago but Watling Street crossing was not undertaken as arrangements had to be made first for the road to be closed. This is now planned for the August holiday weekend (4th – 7th August).

When we discussed the project with the Consultants to the Water Company it was agreed they would ask the contractors to give us access to both sides of the road and to clear ditch and banks to road level before this work so that we might look for possible remains of the Roman road foundations, and examine the “Hollow Way” to the east of Watling Street. It may possibly be the continuation of the road we discovered during our 1987 dig and was thought to be of Middle Ages construction.

Members interested in taking part in these walks or the Watling Street work, should this prove possible, can phone Tessa Smith, Brian Wrigley or Victor Jones for information.

MEMBERS’ VIEWS: “HADAS” – THE NAME

The following Members’ views have been received for publication in the Newsletter. The Hon Secretary has received more letters on the subject which will be duly placed before the Committee for consideration.

“Our name HADAS is widely known by people in the archaeological world, as meaning a North London society practising and promoting archaeology. The name is a kind of password among the London & Middlesex Archaeological Society and similar groups; in the Museum of London, and among senior staff of the Departments of Urban and Greater London Archaeology. It is known to the Council for British Archaeology and to readers of such reputable journals as Current Archaeology and the London Archaeologist. If we were to be differently named I believe many would ask “but what happend to HADAS?” Let us stay the same but with a sub-title, eg HADAS, FOR ARCHAEOLOGY IN BARNET.”

JEAN SNELLING

“I am wondering whether I attended the same AGM as Joan Wrigley! As I remember it, the motion was printed on the agenda papers and I heard it read in clear tones by both the Hon Sec and the Chairman. In short, the proceedings were properly and meticulously adminstered.

The reason why the motion succeeded so overwhelmingly was that members found it reasonable and pertinent, not that the back row was enjoying a zizz. Resistance to change is the curse of this country. We see it, and have seen it historically in medicine, agriculture, politics, the arts, archaeology … you name it. For goodness sake let’s accept the fact the HADAS has changed. It has little in common with the aims of its founding fathers – all honour to their memories. It has grown in every sense of the word thanks to the skill and dedication of a number of people – including some whom I know object to the name change. But we must keep moving with the times. There is nothing sacrosanct in a name: the Amami, Drene, Oxydol and Passing Cloud of my youth, like trams and steam engines, are now part of history – treasured memories but replaced by more relevant products and services.”

PERCY REBOUL

“I would confirm what I tried to say at the recent AGM of the Society in Hendon Library. I am still of the opinion that if a suitable note be printed on HADAS stationery, membership cards etc – to the effect that “HADAS ACTIVITIES INCLUDE THE WHOLE AREA OF BARNET BOROUGH” it would solve the controversy.

As you know, HADAS has established itself in several publications, etc and is known to many people and organisations – any change of name might necessitate the loss of this acronym. Also the ‘logo’ might have to go.

I appreciate there may be some feeling among our members who live in the northern parts of the Borough of Barnet – Hendon is a few miles to the south, but it is the base from which the Society was established and no doubt there are some members who still live in the area which once ‘came under the Borough of Hendon – it was from 1st April 1965 that the new London Boroughs formed, but the Councils of Barnet and Hendon could not agree on the title, nor could the other 3 Councils of Finchley, Friern and East Barnet – so the Minister of Housing & Local Government confirmed “Barnet” as his decision! (One good suggestion, I think, was ‘Northgate’ which if adopted would have avoided troubles of identity!)

It would be nice if the Barnet Corporation could let us use their title, also to fund us perhaps, but as that seems unlikely I think our present title should be

retained with that little note re. Barnet.”

GEORGE W INGRAM

(As an ‘outsider’ to the Borough, born and raised in Bounds Green, still living in N11 just within the Barnet boundary, I thought I could view the identity issue with detachment but on reflection this is not true. I feel privileged to belong to HADAS – a name synonymous with the best traditions of local voluntary archaeological groups – the HADAS stand flying the flag at LAMAS conferences is a tradition in itself. (Jean Snelling makes the point about our reputation with various bodies.) Boundaries come – and go ­the “& District” not only provides for the inclusion of Barnet but there is room for expansion if that were ever appropriate. Barnet already has a thriving local history society bearing its name -a Barnet Archaeological Society could cause confusion. – Ed)

A FURTHER VIEW FROM JEAN SNELLING:

“We need to be better known in our London borough. This means steady hard work to show local people what we do. Rescue digs are mostly brutish and short. Local shows, lecture opportunities and press reports may have to be our bread and butter at present and probably we should build up our exhibition material. There is great interest in the recent and probably more understandable past such as the Water Pipeline, the Whetstone medieval house and the Icehouse, and in our publications about the present and last centuries. Roman kitchen ware and prehistoric stuff are less persuasive, yet the West Heat site fascinated primary school children who visited it. We could do with a demonstration set of flint tools that people could actually handle (feeling is better than just looking), and how helpful a local Roman villa or a really spectacular and prolonged excavation would be. At exhibitions people like to take our Newsletters. So let us send Newsletters regularly in rotation to our public libraries for readers to take away.”

TRIBUTE TO A ROYAL MUM AND GRANDMA
TED SAMMES

Opening to the public on the Queen Mother’s Birthday, August 4th will be an Exhibition at the Guildhall, Windsor. The exhibition, Ninety Glorious and Memorable Years, traces the life of Her Majesty and includes mementos of her visits to diverse countries. It will be open daily from 10am to 5pm until August 31st. The exhibition is being staged by the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, and will cost £2 for adults and £1 for senior citizens and children. Visiting this also gives a chance to see other parts of the Guildhall, which is not normally open to the public.

SOME THOUGHTS ON METALLURGICAL FOLKLORE BRIAN WRIGLEY

For anyone interested, as I am, in ancient swords and daggers, it is impossible to ignore early metallurgy, and not to become conscious of the varying characteristics of metals used in prehistory – which, as one not formally trained in metallurgy, I may see in the same sort of terms as a prehistoric metalworker might have used in the instruction of his apprentice son

COPPER, (my lad, he might have said) is surely feminine – the red harlot of the metals; the first, so all say, to attract Man’s attention in her native state, by the dull gleam of her Red Light in the earth. And once in Man’s service, she shows herself, malleable and ductile, ready to adopt any pose or contortion her master’s whim should dictate, after only little firing and gentle beating. She faithfully strives to stay in her master’s service; when other elements attempt to corrupt her, she uses them only to clothe herself in protective coverings, often of eye-catching electric greens and blues; only old ever-present Oxygen and underworld Sulphur can cover her in drab greys and browns, and even then beneath her dull garb, she keeps her shining copper-red spirit, ready for her master to admire whenever he should choose to give her a little polish.

But she is weak; her very willingness to bend and stretch are against her being firm and strong; to stiffen her up into BRONZE, she needs the help of her sister, TIN, who is far to seek and hard to find; her cousin ARSENIC (who is always around and often found with her) can help in this, but he is untrustworthy, giving off fumes deadly to Man, and should only be made use of with care and at arm’s length.

(Our prehistoric smith, of course, could not have known that, millennia later, COPPER would show her worth yet again as Man’s hand-maiden in fetching and carrying his newly-discovered electric currents.)

IRON, on the other hand, is definitely masculine. In its native state, as pure iron, it simply does not exist on this Earth, apart from some meteoric strays from outer Space. He exists here, as metal, only in the service of Man, who has torn his ore from Earth, put it to intense fire, much fiercer than that needed for COPPER, and beaten him hard and mercilessly to make him emerge as a metal. Not for IRON is the readiness my lady COPPER shows, to become a fluid and take the shape of the mould Man provides; in the fiercest heat, he will glow and soften, but still has to be beaten with heavy blows to form into the shape Man wants. (When we say, the smith a might man is he, it is the IRONsmith we speak of.) This very obstinacy is of course also the strength we so prize. But IRON is an unwilling slave; he ever wants to quit Man’s service, and must be closely overseen; left to himself for the shortest of times, he can be seen to strive to change himself back into rust – the ore from which he came – hoping to creep unnoticed back into the womb of Mother Earth.

GOLD, of course, is also masculine and indeed the King of metals. Disdaining to combine himself with any inferior element, he nonetheless will on occasion deign to alloy himself, in nature, with his Queen, SILVER, in the form known as electrum. (SILVER in passing, is prone to dubious alliances with some of the lower orders, such as smelly old Sulphur ­which alliances get black marks, as sometimes shown on our eggspoons, for example.) GOLD does not serve Man; he makes Man serve him – grubbing in the earth, quarrelling, lying, fighting and slaying to acquire this sovereign metal. However, conscious of his regal duty to his subjects, he is willing to be spread very thin to lend to objects of common stuff an aura of wealth as gold leaf; he only insists that the beating to achieve this should be gentle, and under the protection of layers of leather, as befits his royal status.

Now, my lad, (the smith might have gone on to say) I have told you some of the secrets of our craft, which you have sworn never to betray to any outsider. As a sign of this, we must go down to the river and make a votive offering by throwing in a bronze dagger.

MEMBERS who visited Southside House, Wimbledon last year with Mary O’Connell may like to know it is now open to the public on Saturdays for guided tours at 2pm, 3pm, 4pm and 5pm. (Phone: 081-946-7643) Other Members may have seen Lucinda Lambton’s programme on TV recently and want to go there. Built in 1687, with an exciting history, descendants of the same family still live there.

OUTING REPORT – RICHMOND, JUNE 23 MARY BARNETT

Only 34 of us turned up for the June outing to Richmond. Illness accounted for a few absentees and possibly many members have done Richmond under their own steam.

The town and its stately homes were well worth a first or second visit and our itinerary was relaxed by HADAS standards. Gracious living, art collections, the beauty of the river, woodlands and meadows made a welcome change on a sunny day from our habitual dogged treks across muddy fields and windswept hills, much though we enjoy that sort of outing.

Richmond is well preserved in all its elegance made up of the cream of domestic architecture of the past several centuries. This is due to the vigilance of the local organisations and to the royal dimension. Much of the area is Crown land not up for grabs. Queen Elizabeth lived at Richmond Palace, built by Henry IV or V, and in fact she died there. Nothing remains of the palace now except the Tudor gatehouse and buildings known as Wardrobe Court.

Our small party enjoyed the luxury of three guides, members of Richmond Voluntary Guides, who met us from the coach outside the Star and Garter Hotel and led us down Richmond Hill and round the town. The views from Richmond Hill were spectacular, the hill itself lined with gracious terraces and houses. Our guide pointed out the residences of illustrious figures from the past, such as Sheridan and Kean, who settled in Richmond to enjoy the good air and pleasant environment.

In these days of rampant development and market forces the people of Richmond have to work hard to preserve their town. The well-known architect, Terry Quinlan, has introduced the styles of 17th and 18th century into the new Riverside Development that bears his name. Evidently local opinion is sharply divided about the complex of office buildings. HADAS members weren’t sharply divided; some thought Richmond had got off lightly.

At any rate the development does not stick out like a sore thumb as does a stark office building not far from the Thames – “That’s one that got away, before Richmond was declared a conservation area,” said our guide, who lives near the offending block.

We managed to fit in Richmond Green, the town museum housed in the Old Town Hall, and coffee, before being taken in our coach to visit Marble Hill House, Orleans House and gallery and finally Ham House.

Marble Hill House is an early 18th century Palladian villa where the mistresses of George II and George IV lived for a time. It was restored by the GLC and houses a fine collection of furniture, paintings and Chinese porcelain. It is administered by English Heritage. At Orleans House Gallery we viewed the collection of paintings and prints of Richmond and Twickenham bequeathed with the house to the locality by Mrs Ionides on her death in 1962. An interesting feature of the house is an octagon room richly decorated and containing the Royal medallion portraits and busts.

In three groups, we took the historic Richmond ferry, a small boat with an outboard motor and a lively boatman who told us “We’ve not lost a person overboard yet”! Across the Thames we went to Ham House, the spacious 17th century home of the Duke of Lauderdale and his second wife, Countess Dysart. Ham House is one of the best preserved houses of its period with much of its original furnishings and a large collection of pictures, including Lely’s picture of the Duke and Duchess of Lauderdale. The property is now owned by the National Trust and administered by the Victoria and Albert Museum. The garden has recently been restored to its original design.

The Duke was a minister in Charles H’s secret court, the Cabal; (the ‘1’ in Cabal stands for Lauderdale). Before Ham House, he lived at Lauderdale House, the 16th century mansion, now a community centre, on Highgate Hill.

We enjoyed a thoroughly interesting and pleasant day, the more so because we had a real peach of a coach driver. On his way to pick us up he was diverted back to base for a change of coach. We started half an hour late but he managed to get us to our starting point to meet our friendly and very well-informed guides on time. And our driver did not complain when we returned to the coach for the journey home dripping wet from the first rain of the day. Our thanks to Dorothy Newbury for arranging the outing.

BOOKS

MAPS AND PLANS For the Local Historian & Collector – David Smith

Batsford Local History series, paperback, 0 7134 5192 0 £15.95

WHARRAM PERCY: Deserted Medieval Village – Maurice Beresford & John Hurst

This title is one from a new series from English Heritage/Batsford edited by Stephen Johnson, Academic Editor at English Heritage.

Paperback, 0 7134 6114 1 £10.95 (also in hardback £19.95)

COURSES IN ARCHAEOLOGY 1990-91

For details of enrolment & other courses, contact: Birkbeck College (University of London) Centre for Extra-mural Studies, 26 Russell Square, London WC1B 5DQ, telephone 071 636 8000 ext 3854.

(D /T = daytime, E = evening)

CAMDEN AEI, Longford St, NW1: Digging up the Bible (D/T)

CITY LIT, Stukeley St, WC2:

Greek Civilisation: Writers in Translation (D/T)

Introduction to Egyptian Hieroglyphs (E)

Aztecs & Maya, Ancient & Modern (D/T)

Industrial Archaeology (E)

MUSEUM OF LONDON, London Wall, EC2

The Prehistory of the Thames Valley in its British Context – NICK MERRIMAN (E)

INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY

The Rise of Civilisation: World Prehistory & Protohistory – NICHOLAS JAMES (E)

WEA, BARNET, Ewan Hall, Wood Street, High Barnet

Industrial Archaeology – 1st Year Tutorial Class – D P SMITH, (Monday evenings)

WEA, MILL HILL & EDGWARE, Union Church, Mill Hill Bdwy, NW7

The Celts & Their Heritage – MRS D SERJEANTSON (Friday mornings)

WEA, SOUTHGATE, United Reformed Church, Fox Lane, Palmers Green, N13 Byzantium and the World of Late Antiquity – TONY ROOK, (Wednesday mornings)

Courses for the 4-year Diploma in Archaeology will be held at the Institute of Archaeology, Gordon Square; courses for the 3-year Certificate in Field Archaeology will be at the City Lit (and other venues less accessible from North London).

MEMBERS’ NEWS

George Ingrain, our Birthday Boy of the month (July) has reached his 90th. Still a regular participant in outings and lectures, and in the past a digger on excavations at Church Terrace, Hendon, Fuller Street, Woodlands, West Heath, Finchley Old Rectory, White Swan, Golders Green and Cedars Close, he was on the Committee for several years and ran the Library from 1974 to 1980. To start with he would turn up at lectures with his little attaché case full of books and when he handed over to June Porges in 1980 it had become a real library. Happy Birthday George!

Brigid Grafton Green – we are pleased to see Brigid back on the Outings Circuit. For the information of new members, Brigid was Secretary of HADAS for 14 years and Editor of the Newsletter for 16 years. She was the Master Cook at our various functions ­Roman, Arabian Night and the “historical feast” at our 21st Birthday Party.

Desborough Brooks. Those members of the Society, mainly in Hampstead Garden Suburb, who knew Desborough Brooks will be sorry to learn that he died suddenly in July. He had joined the Society 3 years ago on retiring from business. He enjoyed our lectures greatly and had hoped to take part in other activities.

Newsletter-232-July-1990

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 5 : 1990 - 1994 | No Comments

Newsletter 232 July 1990 Edited by Anne Lawson

DIARY

Saturday July 21st Harlow Museum, Cressing Temple – Coggeshall Barn. (Details and application form enclosed)

Saturday August 25th Piddington Roman Villa

Friday August 31st – Sunday September 2nd Shropshire Weekend. Now fully booked – but any late applications can be put on a waiting list in case of cancellations.

Saturday September 29th
Camden Town Walk – Muriel Large

Tuesday October 2nd – Lecture Season opens with “Excavations in West Africa” – Paul Craddock.

Saturday October 6th – MINIMART

THE CASE FOR CHANGE OF NAME LET’S GET THE FACTS RIGHT Brian Wrigley

As Secretary of the Society, whose duty it will be to do the work involved in carrying out the Society’s instructions, I do not think it appropriate for me to join in with my personal opinions in the discussion; however, I am concerned that the debate (and I welcome plenty of debate!) should be on a basis of correct FACT, so I feel I must tell members the precise wording of the resolution passed at the AGM, which was (not as unfortunately misquoted in Jennie Cobban’s article in the June Newsletter):

“This “Meeting calls upon the Committee to consider changing the name of the organisation to reflect more accurately the scope and geo­graphical boundaries of its activities today.”

The Committee is NOT empowered to change the Society’s name: this can, under the Constitution and Rules of the Society, only be done by a General meeting at which all Members attending are entitled to vote; obviously, if the Committee after consideration, recommend a change, their recommendation will have to be put to, and voted on by, a General Meeting notice of which shall have contained particulars of the proposed alteration.” (Rule 9)

Whilst on the subject of correct information, can I also mention that the amount of the Society’s fire claim, which was paid in full, was £3064.50 (three thousand and sixty-four pounds fifty pence), and not the larger sum mentioned in the June Newsletter.And as a footnote to the above:-

The Committee discussed the resolution at their meeting on 8th June, and it was decided that before any action was taken, the membership should be given a chance to express their view – either in the Newsletter or to the Hon. Secretary. Preferably in writing so that a correct record can be made.

(Yes, let us have as many members’ views as possible on this issue. ED.)

WHAT’S IN A NAME

With reference to the question raised at the Annual General Meeting of the Hendon & District Archaeological Society as to the change of the Society’s name of HADAS, I wish to register my opposition to this. I was present at the AGM, sitting at the back of the room, at the time of the discussion and it was obvious to me that not very many people were aware that a vote was being taken, nor in fact, were 100% sure as to what they were voting for.

I was one of the two people who were totally opposed, not only to the name being changed, but to the Committee, a Sub-Committee of any of the Society’s valuable time being spent in this way. The amount of work involved in such a change is enormous and the time it would take for the Society to become known by another name would also take a considerable period.

I am confident if people, especially new members, who are really interested in HADAS will take the trouble to enquire as to what area we cover, in fact I personally have taken many calls of this nature, and on offering an explanation of our work and the areas we cover, usually manage to assure people.

Whilst I have no wish to bring Politics into Archaeology, I would just mention a case which comes to mind of the Liberal Party, the SDP and the Social & Liberal Democrats and the long discussions as to what colour their rosettes would be and under what name they should present themselves and look where all that has got them. It has only made for much confusion amongst the electorate and possibly the death of one or more parties – LET THIS NOT HAPPEN TO HADAS.

Please can we leave the name of HADAS alone and get on with some “REAL ARCHAEOLOGY” which after all, is what the Society is really about.

Joan M. Wrigley

“FAKE? THE ART OF DECEPTION” AT THE BRITISH MUSEUM by Audrey Hooson

In May 25 HADAS members had the good fortune to be given a guided tour of this exhibition by Dr. Paul Craddock of the Museum’s Research Laboratories. Since there are over 600 exhibits on display from all periods and cultures our guide selected for special comment items of archaeological interest plus some with an especially noteworthy history. The cases containing Piltdown Man and other “discoveries” made by Charles Dawson at the beginning of the century and finds from Glozel reminded us that today’s expert may be tomorrow’s embarrassed nan.

The concluding sections of the exhibition concern the craft of faking and methods of detection. This was an equal conflict but modern scientific analytical methods applied by large organizations such as the BM have changed this. Among the examples shown are the use of the scanning electron microscope, ultra-violet radiation, X-radiography, X-ray fluorescence (XRF), TL dating, C-14 dating, and oxygen isotope analysis. These results are compared with documentary and stylistic evidence. However, there are still many objects which can neither be authenticated nor declared fake.

Every exhibit is of interest and many are of great beauty. It was intriguing to consider the way in which their monetary and artistic value is changed by re-attribution. The reasons for faking are as diverse as the artifacts themselves and many pieces that were made as as acknowledged copies later became used as fakes. The BM has actually purchased known fakes in order to examine their manufacture and to use as reference material.

It is an indication of how fascinating Paul Craddock’s tour was that a number of Fake HADAS members were acquired during the afternoon. The exhibition continues until September 2nd 1990. Admission £3, concessions £2. The very interesting catalogue is £14.95 in paperback.

DIGGING NOW Andy Simpson

As always, volunteers are welcome. Details from Hon. Sec.081-959 5982 Arthur Till 081-368 6288, Andy Simpson 081-205 6456 (evenings).

Despite the recent and belated heavy rain, work on the three trenches at the 19-25 High Street site in Chipping Barnet has now started in earnest.

As mentioned in Newsletter 231, little of archaeological interest is visible in Trench No. 1 at the front (N-E) of the site, other than a post hole in one corner and a possible pit in one of the other corners, both cut into natural clay and sealed by the floor makeup of the shop; no date has yet been determined for these features.

The centre trench, on the other hand, is proving to be very productive; this has led to extensions being marked out to the North and East. An overall modern soil layer appears to seal a pebbly surface, possibly a yard surface, which itself seals a greenish tinged sandy matrix that contains much medieval pottery, approximately of the 1150-1300 period. With the exception of later pots/postholes, the archaeological material is within a foot or so of the surface.

The third trench at the rear of the site is currently being emptied of modern pit fills and construction trenches for garage walls, recently demolished. Finds from the trench so far are mainly Victorian.

CHURCH FARM HOUSE MUSEUM NEWS

The exhibition Picturesque Hendon held at Church Farm earlier this year, and based on paintings and drawings (from c. 1790 to c. 1930) from London Borough of Barnet’s Local Studies Collection, was a great success. Indeed, so successful was it that a sequel, using paintings, drawings and photographs of Finchley from the early 1880s to the 1960s, will now be shown at the Museum this summer. Again selected from the wealth of pictorial material held by the Local Studies Collection, Picturesque Finchley will run from 21 July to 2 September, and will include work by artists such as George Shepheard, F K Agar, G R Smith, E Harcourt Smith, Walter Colbert and Herbert Norman, amongst many others.

JOHNSONS of HENDON

Church Farm House Museum intends to mount an exhibition on this important photographic firm, which was based in Hendon until 1973. I would be very pleased to hear from any HADAS members who have material either manufactured by, or otherwise associated with, Johnsons, which they might be prepared to lend or to donate to this project. Also of interest would be photographs of local subjects which were processed using chemicals or equipment made by the company. Please contact me at 081-203 0130. All information or material used in the exhibition will of course, be credited. GERRARD ROOTS

EDGWARE IN 1851 by NELL PENNY

Nostalgia is a growth industry today. Some city folk fondly imagine nineteenth century villages of thatched cottages the gardens rioting with old fashioned flowers. They picture generations of rustic wiseacres living in the same cottages as their ancestors had done before them.

I don’t think this is a true picture of “Merrie England”. Many of the cottages were rotting shacks inhabited by families “on the move” in search of work. I am going to use the 1851 census of Edgware to help prove my point.

In 1851 Edgware was a small parish stretching from the modern junction of the Al and A41 in the east to the Edgware Road – but not across it. Northward it included the southern part of Elstree. There were 146 heads of households in the village. Like all villages within a ten mile radius of the City and West End it was starting to become a commuter satellite of London. There were five omnibuses daily to the City. And most of the houses were along the eastern side of Telford’s renovated Watling Street. The heyday of the stagecoach was over, but the railway network was not complete and the passing coach trade provided employment for ostlers, more than the usual quota of innkeepers and shopkeepers and a farrier.

1851 CENSUS – EDGWARE

HEADS OF HOUSEHOLDS – PLACES OF BIRTH

The pie graph shows what a small proportion of Edgware householders had been born in the parish and what a large proportion had not moved far from their birthplaces in Harrow, Hendon, Willesden etc. It is dangerous to generalise from such a small sample as Edgware, but the high propor­tion of “foreigners” in the parish is a reminder that the poor man’s bogey of having to prove a settlement when applying for relief, had all but disappeared in the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834. And I need to remind myself that most working people had not bounded from birthplace to Edgware in one leap. The police sergeant who lived in the Stonegrove area had been born in Scotland but he may have been recommended by his officer when he left the army. Similarly the mail cart driver in the High Street may have made several moves from his native Suffolk.

Edgware had not a significant number of gentlemen’s houses but there was a sprinkling; a F.R.C.S. born in Somerset lived in the High St., Hill House was the home of a gentlewoman annuitant who had been born in Worcester, and Stonegrove Cottage housed the Page to the Gentlemen of Her Majesty’s Chapel Royal.

There were six farms listed in the census plus Stonegrove Nursery Garden, cultivated by a man born in Surrey. In the fifteenth century All Souls’ College Oxford had owned practically all the village, but by 1851 the College had sold two-thirds of its property, rarely to the men who farmed the land. According to the Tithe Award of 1845 86% of the land was grass, 7% arable and a tiny 18 acres woodland was all that was left of that part of the Middlesex Forest which had covered the northern half of the parish. Manor Farm, 500 acres, with the farmhouse off the High Street, was the largest. It was rented by Henry Child who had three adult sons living at home and employed 16 labourers. Grove House Farm appears to have been between tenants so the enumerator did not record its acreages the farmhouse was tenanted by a farm labourer who had been born in Hayes. Samuel Lipscombe born in Middlesex farmed 220 acres at Pipers Green Lane Farm. Again we do not know the size of Edgwarebury Farm where the farmhouse was tenanted by a farmer’s son. There was a small farm of 15 acres on Elstree Hill worked by a man born in London, and a bailiff had been put in the farm at Beacon Hill.

However, the majority of the -foreigners” in Edgware parish were labourers or labourers’ widows caught at one stage of their migratory lives perhaps: a shepherd from Buckinghamshire, a bricklayer and a pauper charwoman, both from Hertfordshire, an agricultural labourer from Ireland, a dressmaker from Essex, a laundress born in Norfolk, and a gardener from Oxfordshire.

<u>LIGHT, HEAT AND POWER</u>

This is the second instalment of the article by Geoffrey Gillam, Chair­man of the Enfield Archaeological Society. Part I appeared in Newsletter 228 (March 1990), and discussed candles and oil lamps. – Ed.

Development of the oil lamp continued, but they too were hazardous with the risk of fire from the unenclosed wick or from an upset lamp. In 1784 Aime Argand patented a lamp with a round burner, a tubular or hollow wick and a glass chimney. These refinements gave a steady flame within the protection of the chimney and the heavy metal base now fitted preven­ted the lamp from being easily overturned. Messrs. Bertrand and Carcel added a clockwork pump in 1800 which further improved the design of the lamp, and in 1865 Joseph Hinks introduced the use of vaporised fuel in his new pressure lamp. Glass globes placed over the chimney of the lamp diffused the light and many of these globes bore intricate and pleasing designs. Other lamps were fitted with green shades to reduce glare and came to be known as “student lamps”.

Lace makers needed strong light in which to carry out the detailed work of their trade and they soon discovered that if a glass sphere filled with water was placed between the lamp and the lace being made, the light was then considerably improved.

Oil lamps, as well as candles, are still used for occasional dinner parties – they are also held in reserve in case of a power failure. One of the more bizarre forms of oil lamp was to be found at Ypres during the First World War when soldiers floated wicks in the rancid oil of sardine tins to provide at least some illumination in their trenches.

FUEL. Olive oil was plentiful in Roman times and was used as the fuel for lamps throughout the Roman Empire, even though the use of oil lamps was confined to those rich enough to afford them; the poor, as in later ages, had to make do with a rush light or tow steeped in tallow. The little pots with handle and spout used to fill Roman lamps are dug up from time to time on archaeological sites. They are similar in shape to tettines (feeding cups) for which they are often mistaken. One such lamp filler was found during the excavations on the Roman site in Lincoln Road, Enfield in 1974.

A glance at the street directories of the 19th and 20th centuries will show numbers of shops which sold fuel for oil lamps, spare wicks, wick trimmers, lamps chimneys and globes, candles (always sold by the pound weight), candlesticks, candle guards and candle snuffers. A distinctive feature of shops which sold lamps oils, as well as a wide range of other types of oil, in the London area was the large red-painted storage jar placed above the shop front to advertise the product being sold within These jars were the subject of some interesting articles in the “London Archaeologist” in 1977.

As well as obtaining oil from animals and vegetable sources, mineral oil from natural seepages was known and used from quite ancient times. Pliny in AD 50 mentions the use of oil found on the shores of the Adriatic; during the 13th century Marco Polo refers to oil obtained from the Baku oil springs and used for lighting; a Japanese history of 1615 makes reference to “burning water”.

Whales were a major source of oil, the exploitation of which began in the 10th century. The Basques were the first to organise whaling as a commercial activity – by the 14th century whales had disappeared from the Bay of Biscay and whaling fleets began to penetrate the Arctic in their search. Whaling was an industry which in its early days must have provided fuel for most of the lamps of Europe.

The Victorians used oil for their lamps obtained from rape-seed as well as from animal sources, but the discovery of new fuels, mineral oil and paraffin in 1830, further improved the performance of oil lamps and made obsolete many of the existing types. It was not, however, until 1859 with the discovery of petroleum oil from a well dug in Pennsylvania specifically for that purpose that the widespread use of oil lamps occurred.

<u>LIGHTING THE LAMP.</u> The use of tinder boxes continued until the end of the 18th century. During the 1780s a form of phosphorous match was invented, but igniting them was often a dangerous business. In 1826/7 John Waller invented the friction match, from which came lucifers (immortalised in the words “While you’ve a lucifer to light your fag” from the song of the First World War, “Pack up your troubles in your old kit bag”) and congreves. Safety matches as we know them were invented in Sweden in 1855.

<u>THE GREATER LONDON SITES AND MONUMENTS</u>

<u>RECORD FOR BARNET AND HADAS ARCHIVES</u>

Earlier this year, we received from The Museum of London a printout of their newly computerised Sites and Monuments Record for the area of the London Borough of Barnet. This, intended to contain all the archaeo­logical information for the Borough, is obviously not only of great interest but is also an invaluable and indispensable tool of our trade in Borough archaeology. However, the paper printout is 40 metres long: What we need to produce is a concise version in a form that can be readily copied and circulated for manual use, without a computer at hand, for research and reference.

Alice Watson, who devoted much hard work in 1988 to the RCHME Excavations Index, and produced there from our own HADAS computer record of excavations now on “floppy disc”, was intending to continue this work on the new SMR. Unhappily, because of work demands, she has had to say she cannot continue. We are most indebted to her for all the work she has done and her help will be much missed.

We must now look for someone else in the Society able to carry on with this work on the SR and continuation of our own computer records. It may be a job that could occupy two people – one to do the cross­checking and research, and one to operate the word processor. Are there out there some volunteers who would like to take on this job, which is essential and could also be informative and interesting? If you can help, please get in touch with Brian Wrigley – 081-959 5982 or at 21 Woodcroft Avenue, NW7 2AH.

<u>OUTING TO QUAINTON, BUCKS 20th MAY JOYCE I.CORLET</u>

The day out to Quainton, Bucks was described as being a leisurely one and it was just that, but as usual packed with interest. Ted Sammes gave us a running commentary en route. .We drove over Boxmoor which I was surprised to find was in a valley while the Common was on higher ground.

Barely discernable in a field further on a white stone marked the grave of Snookes, the last highwayman who was executed in 1801. He had robbed a mail rider on horse back and took a number of £20 and £50 notes worth a very great deal in those days. While in hiding he ran out of small change and foolishly gave a boy a £20 note to go and buy him some provisions. This naturally aroused suspicion and eventually led to his capture

Further on we saw a notice advertising Terry Cottle’s circus, the only circus in Britain which has no animals. Originally he wanted to take the circus abroad and ran into difficulty with taking animals, so decided to have a circus without then.

After coffee at the White Hart Inn in Quainton we walked to the village green where we were met by Mr Elliot Viney FSA, President of Buckingham Archaeological Society. He showed us the ‘Preaching Stone’ on the village green which in Medieval times travelling preachers used as their ‘pulpit’.. He then escorted us round the Church of the Holy Cross and St Mary probably originally built by the knights Hospitalers in 1200. This church seemed to have a fatal fascination for builders as it was rebuilt in 1380 and again in the 16th century and yet Again in 1877.

The Quainton Windmill Society took members it two parties to visit the tallest windmill in Bucks with six floors, which they have been restoring since 1974.

After lunch railway buffs had a field day visiting Quainton Railway Station Museum with its many vintage carriages including an underground train from the District Line. Our day was completed with a ride on a steam train and then tea in a converted railway carriage.

<u>THE BOHEMIA SUMMER AND WINTER GARDENS AND CINEMA. FINCHLEY.</u>

The Hendon Times for June 7th carried the news that Vacuum Interrupters is to leave its premises at 68 Ballards Lane, Finchley by Christmas. This site is of considerable historic interest and some vestiges of its past still remain.

Originally a music hall, The Alcazar, was built on the site, which in due course was enlarged into what we would now call a leisure centre including an open-air tea garden, a winter garden, where orchestral concerts were given, and a dance hall. This was about 1900 because the buildings are not marked on the 1894-96 OS map.

The cinema ‘remained in operation at least until June 1916 because a film of Lord Kitchener’s death, which occurred in that month, was shown there, but in the later years of WW1 it was used as a balloon factory.

After the war the KIWI Polish Company took it over and it is reported that the first automatic filling line for polish tins was installed there. Later Derwent Radio, which became Vacuum Interrupters, which is now part of GEC, occupied the premises.

The site can be identified because the row of shops fronting Ballards Lane is obviously more modern than those on either side. However; behind the shops the old music hall still remains. It has been gutted internally but the arched roof and the proscenium arch remain – or at least they did in 1976 when I was shown round, and there is no reason to suppose that there has been any change since then.

At that time the Works Superintendant told me that when the floorboards were taken up for maintenance polish tins were still found underneath. In due course this may be a site worth watching. BILL FIRTH.

THE MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY’S URGENT MESSAGE…

This is to remind you that some members have still not paid their subscriptions and I should be pleased to receive them shortly. The subs are as follows:

Full Member: £6.00

Senior Citizens and Juniors £4.00 each

Family Members: £2.00 each.

Schools and Corporate Members: £8.00 each.

With many thanks, Phyllis Fletcher – Membership Secretary 31 Addison Way, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London NW11 6ALA

MEMBERS NEWS

We sadly report the death of Mr. E. Halse from Edgware. He has been a member since 1980 and frequently attended HADAS Lectures.

And again sadly, Mrs. Isabella. Jolly died suddenly one week after-the death of her husband. Isabella has helped on the clothes sales at all Minimarts and was a regular at outings before her husband became ill.

BOOK REVIEW

THE STORY OF MILL HILL by John W. Collier
published by the Mill Hill Historical Society
£3 (add 50p p/p) from Mr. Ralph Calder,

2 Featherstone Road, NW7 2BN

This 94-page booklet, illustrated with a map line drawings and well-reproduced photographs, is the last word from that keen local historian who was such a good friend to HADAS – the late John Collier, for many years secretary of the Mill Hill Historical Society. He died last autumn, and up to the time of his death he had been collecting material for a “little book to help those who live in Mill Hill to find greater pleasure as they walk about by seeing something of the past behind the present.” The booklet has been completed and edited, as a memorial to John, by the Chairman of the Mill Hill Historical Society, Ralph Calder.

The early history of Mill Hill is, in fact, the early history of Hendon and is inextricably entwined with it. The first recorded appearance of the name Mill Hill does not occur until a document of 1533, and its first appearance on a map is on Norden’s map of Middlesex of 1593. These documentary references were pre-dated, however, by the Black Survey of Hendon (1321), which pinpointed – without mentioning the place-name Mill Hill – the mill which stood on the high ridge (now the Ridgeway) between Holcombe (then Hocomb) and the top of what is now Hammers Lane.

After its general historical introduction (which pays tribute, among other things, to HADAS’s discovery of a Roman presence on Copthall Fields, and to the records of medieval Hendon discussed in HADAS’s “A Place in Time” booklet), the Story of Mill Hill studies then suggested walkabouts in the area, describing in detail what is to be seen there today – walks, for instance, from Lawrence Street to Hammers Lane, around Nan Clark’s Lane and Moat Mount, down Bittacy Hill or around the Broadway and The Hale.

The second part of the booklet switches from walks to local institu­tions -with notes on schools, churches, inns and various societies, as well as on one-off organisations like London University’s Observatory (linked with “the only University degree course in astronomy in England and Wales”) and the National Institute for Medical Research (which “has a world role in tracking and containing” ‘flu).

You will find all sorts of unexpected facts sandwiched into this (mainly recent) history of Mill Hill. The first edition, by the way, came out last March and is already almost a sell-out. A second revised edition is in hand. BRIGID GRAFTON GREEN

THE TADBOURN Bill Firth

Recently I was looking through a pile of rather dated “glossy” magazines when I lit upon the November 1988 issue of “Hertfordshire Countryside” and inside I found an article on the Tadbourn.

I wonder how many members recognise this stream, I certainly didn’t, but Folly Brook (Folley Brook on some maps) will be more familiar.

According to the writer, Julian Waters, the name derives from the same man, Tata, who gave his name to Tata-ridge and thus to the Tata-bourn in the valley.

An why should the Tadbourn feature in a Hertfordshire magazine? Well, before London Boroughs, the Tadbourn formed the boundary between Middlesex and Hertfordshire almost throughout its length from its source (visible from the road according to Mr. Waters) near Highwood Hill to its confluence with the Dollis Brook at Woodside Park. Hertfordshire could reasonably claim a half share in the stream.

Mr. Waters also mentions the Wallbrook, the “brook of the serfs” which rises near Wykeham Rise on the ridge and flows down through Bluebell Wood into the lake through which the main stream runs.

(Bill’s article includes that fascinating study the origin of place-names. Whilst “Tata” is of impeccable Saxon origin, “Wallbrook” could hint at surviving Celtic occupation of the area, since “wealh” has been interpreted as meaning “Briton/Welshman” as well as serf. Perhaps the two forms were interchangeable. The origin could also lie in the similar words “weall” – wall or “weald” – wood. The problem is discussed in depth in K. Rutherford Davies’ book, “Britons and Saxons – the Chiltern Region 400-700”, published by Phillimore in 1982. – Ed.)

Newsletter-231-June-1990

By | Past Newsletters, Volume 5 : 1990 - 1994 | No Comments

ISSUE No. 231 JUNE 1990 edited by Andy Simpson

DIARY SUMMER OUTINGS – SEE INSIDE for Explanation of Outing Procedure

Saturday, 23rd June RICHMOND – MARBLE HILL and HAM HOUSE (Details and application form enclosed.)

Saturday 21st July
HARLOW MUSEUM (Finds from Temple of Minerva) and CRESSING TEMPLE, BRAINTREE (Knights Hospitallers)

Saturday, 25th August PIDDINGTON (Roman Villa)

Friday 31st August to Sunday, 2nd September
SHROPSHIRE WEEKEND – now fully booked, but any member who wants to go is advised to get on a mailing list in case of cancellations.

29th September
CAMDEN TOWN WALK – Muriel Large

The lecture season starts on 2nd October with Paul Craddock talking about his excavations in West Africa.

19 – 25 HIGH STREET, CHIPPING BARNET

HADAS work on this site began on Saturday, l9th May, when Brian Wrigley and the Editor were on site for the initial concrete stripping, using the JCB driver provided by the contractor. It quickly became apparent that little of archaeological sig­nificance remained in the area fronting the High Street, since the natural clay was immediately over lain by the concrete floor of the demolished shop building. However, stripping of two areas in the centre and rear of the site revealed hopeful signs of buried soils. Excavation is scheduled to start in late May. Anyone interested in joining the excavations is very welcome to contact Brian (959 – 5982) Arthur Till (368 – 6288) or the Editor (205 – 6456). All ages and all levels of archaeological experience are welcome

STOP PRESS! DIARY ADDITION

UNTIL 8th JULY at CHURCH FARM HOUSE MUSEUM EXHIBITION on the “BATIK GUILD” An exhibition of wall hangings, clothing and accessories. (The first published reference to Batik was made by Sir Stamford Raffles.) DEMONSTRATIONS every Sunday afternoon.

FIELD WALKING the THREE PIPE LINE PROJECT

A long delayed HADAS project.

Work on clearing the top soil from the track of the 18 M. pipe line has now commenced at the Edgwarebury Farm site. By Thursday l0th May, it had already crossed two fields in a N.E. direction, and the cleared area was also partly fenced. We may now walk this freely at week-ends and (with the permission of the site agent) during the week. It will now continue towards the Scratchwood service area of the M1.

This first section is accessible from Edgwarebury Lane. The pipe line will later cross the M1 by tunnel, about where the North access roads part from the motorway to the main Scratchwood service area, progressing at about 430 Metres per day.

S.W. from Edgwarebury, top soil removal and fencing commenced on 11th May, and will progress towards Brockley Hill at about the same rate. We do not know yet the exact programme, but a construction site is planned at Brockley Hill to work towards Edgwarebury and in the opposite direction along Wood Lane. There may also be one between the M1 and Arkley, so progress may be very rapid.

The clearance of all the top soil is expected to take about four weeks, and then cutting and laying of the main pipe, at about 1 metre deep, will follow swiftly. This is a mechanised process and with continuous bucket excavation will need watching if we are to be able to learn from the deeper layers. This can be planned when we know more about the details of the programme.

In the first stage during clearing the top soil, it should be possible to walk the cleared and fenced areas in evenings and week-ends, and to observe and examine the surface exposed and the heaped soil excavated from these areas.

As some members may recall, we did field walking at Brockley Hill, just after ploughing and seeding, when new soil was exposed, in 1987/83. This was on what was then planned as the route of the pipe line (now modified). We were then of course, expecting and looking for Roman material, but we also found post-Ice Age flint tools, much Roman brick and tile, and also Iron Age and other items.

The very large surface area that will be exposed between Brockley and Arkley by this wide track offers a unique opportunity to explore many times in the Brockley area, a new section of which is traversed – including the crossing of Watling Street towards the top of Brockley Hill, which may expose the original foundations.

Little is recorded about some of the other areas that the route passes, such as Edgewarebury Farm near Clay Lane (reports of early building remains), Moat Mount area, a suggested Iron Age site, through Scratchwood, possibly a remnant of the great Middlesex Forest, and across Barnet Road to near where a Roman route from the north is reported to have been traced, and also near where in earlier times a Saxon name was used.

We are looking for all kinds of artefacts, for worked flints, tiles and brick, signs of past building, small items such as pottery sherds, traces of fire such as charcoal, metal and other worked objects. All of these, if properly recorded, can indicate settlements, occupation sites, roads, etc.

Editor’s note: By Sunday, 20th May, topsoil had been stripped westwards as far as the A 41, this area being intensely walked by HADAS members, a distance of some 1,000 metres in all. Little of great archaeological import has been located in this stretch; the finds begin with 18th/19th century pottery and much modern-looking red tile. The exceptions are four sherds (possibly Roman) and two flint flakes.

ARCHAEOLOGY AND BARNET’S UNITARY DEVELOPMENT PLAN
BRIAN WRIGLEY

Better news this month – the Borough Planning Dept. have been in touch with us to arrange a joint meeting with HADAS and the Museum of London’s Dept. of Greater London Archaeology. We are to discuss the archaeological provisions of the proposed Plan, which are at present very brief, and (we and the Museum think) inadequate. The meeting is fixed for 21st June.(Meanwhile several objections to the Plan have been formally lodged by the Secretary on behalf of the Society.

EXCAVATIONS at CHURCH FARM, EAST BARNET by JOHN HEATHFIELD

The Barnet Court Rolls for 1610 refer to a tenement and a parcel of land next to the cemetery of East Barnet Church. By about 1810, this was referred to as a “decaying tenement” and was replaced about that time by a farm house, later to be incorporated into the Church Farm Boys’ Home.

In Apri1, 1990, an exploratory trench 8 metres long and 50 cm. wide was dug about a metre away from the cemetery fence. Extensive remains of the farm house were found, this was shown clearly on the early ordnance survey maps. At the East end of the trench a wall of 9 inch brick work was found. This may relate to the earlier tenement. Since the site is on a school playground, it was back-filled. It is hoped to explore further during the August school holidays.

(It is worth noting that as well as being an inter-disciplinary project, using both archaeological and documentary evidence, this excavation involved several local soc­ieties. John and Janet Heathfield, and other members of HADAS, worked with Gill Geer of the Barnet Local History Society and Bill Griffiths of British Heritage. Thanks are also due to Mr Davies, Head Teacher of Brunswick Park J.M.I. School – Ed.)

THE TUDOR HOUSE, HIGH ROAD, WHETSTONE by VICTOR JONES

Following on from work in 1989, it is hoped to return to complete investigations, both within the house itself and to dig in the courtyard and on the site of the adjacent 19th century building when it is demolished, probably in August. This remarkable building, 500 years old, is now to be preserved.

Together with the adjacent Tudor House (reported in Newsletter No. 225, December 1989) it is a unique monument to the knowledge and skill of its Tudor builders, and also to Whetstone’s long history as an important stopping place for travellers on the Great North Road.

The HADAS programme last year included investigation of the timber framing, concurrent with excavations to the rear. Initial examination suggested that the building was much older than first thought. Smoke staining in the roof suggested that it might also be a twin-hall construction. Discovery of foundations for an extra bay at the back support this view. A precise date could not be established for the building, despite the use of the latest dating techniques by the Timber Research Group of the Museum of London.

The dig itself was quite productive, despite considerable post-medieval disturbance. There are a few sherds of medieval pottery and some evidence of metal-working in the form of small charcoal scatters, possibly of the seventeenth century. A long and complex documentary study (with help from Pamela Taylor) traced records of ownership of the two houses back to the late 1400s. This task was greatly assisted by Mr Rodwell, Snr., of Charles Pilgrim Trust Ltd., who use No. 1268 High Road as com­pany offices. They are a local building company, and they have fully restored their building and kindly showed HADAS members how this was done. During this visit the name of one of the earlier occupants of No. 1264 was noticed carved into a floor board in an upper room. This was discussed, and HADAS were shown various leases and doc­uments collected by the company, which led to the tracing of documents in various record offices which dated back to the late 1400s – No. 1264 to 1485, and No; 1268 to 1505. It is probable that they were both built somewhat earlier, 1264 in the reign of Henry II and 1268 in the reign of Richard III – both much earlier than pre­viously suggested for these buildings. We hope to complete the drawings of the house, as it appears to be unusual in several ways.

HENDON AND DISTRICT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY

­THE CASE FOR CHANGE

“HADAS should change its name to reflect more accurately the scope and geographical boundaries of its activities today”

At the ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING, Percy Reboul requested that the Committee consider the above motion, which was duly passed.

Changing the name of a well-established society like HADAS is bound to arouse strong emotions, especially among those members who helped to establish the society twenty-five years ago. However, the baby that was born in Hendon all those years ago has grown up to become an active, Borough-wide society, and for this reason I agree wholeheartedly with Percy that HADAS both deserves and needs a new name.

I consider that many prospective members are deterred by the name Hendon and District Archaeological Society, which suggests (however erroneously) that the society is biased towards the history and archaeology of the Hendon area.

Changing the society’s name to reflect the fact that we look after the archaeology of the whole Borough would encourage people in other areas of the Borough to join, or, if they are already members, to take a more active part within the society. These members would feel that ‘their’ town or area had an equal chance with others of figuring in HADAS’s research and excavation programme, and would thus be more willing to come forward and become involved.

In conversations and negotiations on behalf of the society in areas outside Hendon, the reaction – more often than not – on hearing the name Hendon and District Arch­aeological Society is: Hendon? What are you doing here, then?” I have consid­ered pre-recording an opening sentence for such conversations beginning, “Hello, this is Hendon and District Archaeological Society, but we do cover the whole of the Borough.” Our name should be self-explanatory.

It has been suggested that HADAS’s name is far too well-known to change. I take issue with this opinion. HADAS is certainly, I would imagine, well-known in Hendon. It is also pretty well-known in Chipping Barret now, because redevelopment in Chipping Barnet has necessitated an almost constant HADAS presence in the town over the past couple of years, which has led to a great deal of publicity in the local press. I find it unlikely, however, that we are equally ‘famous’ in, for example, Brunswick Park, Cricklewood, Totteridge, Colindale or Golders Green, to take a few places at random; and yet it is in these very areas that we most need more actively involved members to monitor redevelopment, to alert the committee to anything we should be keeping an eye upon, and to undertake historical and archaeological research.

Changing HADAS’s name to rid ourselves of an undeserved parochial image and to emphasise our Borough-wide interest is vital if we are to increase awareness of the society’s role throughout the Borough and indeed, if we are to continue to increase our knowledge of the Borough’s archaeology. We need to de-emphasise Hendon and make it crystal clear that all parts of the Borough are of equal im­portance to us archaeologically.

Should we make a change, the most logical choice for a new name would be ‘The London Borough of Barnet Archaeological Society. It would of course be necessary as a matter of courtesy to consult LBB on the issue, but need not necessitate consultation with other archaeological or historical groups – as far as I know, no other group uses ‘Borough of Barnet’ in its title.

Another possibility would be ‘North West London Archaeological Society’. This name blurs somewhat our area of interest, and would require consultations with several groups, but has the advantage that it contains neither ‘Barnet’ nor ‘Hendon’ in the title, which would put an end to the petty jealousy between the two towns.

All in all, a new name for HADAS would require a great deal of consideration.

I must emphasise that the opinions expressed on the previous page are my personal ones and in no way should be taken to represent the views of any member of the committee, so any bullets or arrows loaded in Barnet or Hendon should be aimed my way – not at the HADAS committee!

Editor’s note: Should HADAS change its name ? After a long debate at the A.G.M. last month, the meeting voted in favour of the committee considering such a change, and this will be duly discussed at future committee meetings. Before this, however, the committee would be glad to hear the opinions of the members, including the arguments for and against the change, for inclusion in the Newsletter. Let us have your opinions, for or against, and forward them to the Secretary or the Editor of the Newsletter. Lively debate is vital and will help us to reach the right decision for the society.

HADAS OFFICERS: 1990 – 1991

At the A.G.M. on 8th May 1990, the following were nominated and elected unopposed as society officers:

Chairman: Andrew Selkirk Vice Chairman: John Enderby

Hon. Sec: Brian Wrigley Hon. Treasurer: Victor Jones

Committee: (11 nominations for 13 vacancies)

Christine Arnott, Deirdre Barrie, Alan Lawson, Margaret Maher, Phyllis Fletcher, Peter Pickering, Ted Sammes, Dorothy Newbury, Jean Snelling, Myfanwy Stewart, Andrew Simpson.

OUTING PROCEDURES

For the benefit of new members we should explain that application forms are enclosed with the Newsletter at the beginning of the relevant month, and you are advised to send them in as early as possible as it is “first come – first served”. Applications are not acknowledged, but if you want to confirm, please ring Dorothy Newbury (203 – 0950). If you know in advance that you wish to participate in a particular outing or may be away when the application form appears, please ring Dorothy as above, at the beginning of the season. On the other hand, if you make a late decision please ring, as there are often can­cellations.

MEMBERS NEWS

ANN KAHN is back home again after a long spell in hospital. She is confined to a wheel-chair but is as cheerful as ever and looking forward to moving into a more convenient flat.

ANN YOUNG who moved away to Rochester a few years ago but retained her membership is anxious to return to the Hendon/Barnet area. She misses HADAS lectures and outings. If anyone knows of a flat or small house, please let her know.

MONASTIC EXCAVATIONS in NORTH LONDON VIKKI O’CONNOR

The April lecture was given by Barney Sloane of the DGLA, who discussed two recent monastic excavations in North London. Despite technical problems with two slide projectors he provided us with a very detailed picture of the areas excavated. (Because of the equipment it nearly came to shadow pictures with a candle, which would have been appropriate?)

The Priory of St John of Jerusalem, founded c. 1140 as a Hospitaller Priory by Jordan de Briset, was excavated by the DGLA in the latter part of 1989 to locate remains of the Priory to the north of the crypt and church and to trace the trans­ition of the site from religious to secular use following the Dissolution.

The original circular nave of the Priory church was located from the stone-robber trenches only 12 circular churches are known in Britain, with 3 or 4 still standing. A later re-build following a fire during the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 indicates a narrow building to which aisles were added. A thick external buttressed wall of the 13th century crypt has been revealed and the site developer has been persuaded to incorporate plate glass for viewing as a feature of the development. It was noted that one of two 13th century burials found in the cloisters had its arms folded square.

A lay cemetery was located, probably that of the infirmary, with both shroud and coffin burials. The Priory was duty-bound to take in foundlings and these burials included the skeleton of a 4-year old. A medieval surveyor’s error was implied by an abandoned wall construction cut which was about 50 off the line of the completed cemetery wall. The eastern cemetery wall was found to be exactly on the line of Hollar’s engraving of the Prior’s apartments, of which some decorated floor tiles survived. Although the stone foundations were removed in the 17th century, the remaining robber trenches will enable a ground plan to be drawn.

To the north of the cemetery was a 14th century well and to the east of this was a tower built in the early 1500’s which is believed to have been part of the north nave aisle, projecting beyond the line of the church which was demolished by Protector Somerset in 1547. In the 17th century, the Earl of Aylesbury owned the land and excavations showed that he re-used priory stone for his own mansion.

The second site – the Augustinian Priory and Hospital of Blessed Mary-without-Bishopsgate (St Mary Spital) was founded in 1197 by Walter Brown, to provide a hospital for sick poor, women giving birth, orphans, waifs and strays. If any child was directed to their doors, the 11 canons and 7 sisters would take them in up to the age of seven. The site was recorded archaeologically in the 1930’s by Frank Cottrill during re-building work in Spital Square, the accuracy of which has been verified by the recent DGLA excavations.

A series of drains, latrines, and pits were excavated and the Museum of London’s Conservation Dept. have made felt replicas of a prize find – the first PAIR of medieval boots discovered, which were small with patterned sides and a shape cut out to accommodate a bunion The Priory suffered from regular winter flooding which could be the reason why the external walls of the 1235 church were built on foundation arches. Later, circular ragstone piers wet added to support the vaulting with circular columns and circular scalloped capitals, a style of 1150 rather than 1250 – was this purely nostalgia? Several hundred bodies have been recorded in the cemeteries, and one rare viscera or heart burial was discovered in the transept.

The Hospital was one of the largest in the country and at the time of the Dissolut­ion provided 180 beds. The Museum have much information to assemble for their full report. Meantime, in case anyone missed it, the Autumn London Archaeologist had a detailed article on St Nary Spital.

Footnote: Barney Sloane left two excellent 8pp offprints (Nos. 3 and 4) covering the two excavations: ‘The Priory and Hospital of St Mary Spital’ and ‘The Royal Mint Site’. Ring 203 – 0950 if you would like to borrow them to read. They will be deposited in the library when it is re-established.

THE YEAR’ S ACTITIVIES, OUR RESOURCES, POSSIBLE NEW LIBRARY FOR 1990.

by Victor Jones

At the A.G.M. the writer had the pleasure of presenting a “good health” report on the society’s finances. Happily, this year we were able, not only to write off much of the cost of our computer equipment, and to pay (with the help of a grant from L.B.B.) the expense of a major new book, but to end with a moderate surplus.

Our general activities were much increased this year. We undertook three arch­aeological excavations at various places in the Borough; we finished the writing, published and launched our new book “A Place In Time” and then sold about half the copies (approximately 1,000 at the time of writing- Ed.); staged exhibitions at the LAMAS archaeology conference; and smaller general exhibits in Finchley and Barnet. A large month-long promotional exhibition for “A Place In Time” was mounted in the Hendon Library.

There was also an interesting programme of outings to archaeological sites, and the winter lectures, which were well attended, covered a wide and varied range of subjects. Other activities included the annual get-together at the “Mini-mart” (fun and lunch as well as fund-raising). Not least was the annual dinner at The Old George Inn and the very interesting visit and lecture at Southwark Cathedral.

It is also pleasing to report that, due to the efforts and persistence of our Secretary, our claim for the loss of the Society’s Library in last year’s fire at Avenue House has been met in full at £3,667. We can now consider replacing it with something even better. We are in great need of somewhere to house our collection of maps; site records, and our many photographs. Indexed Newsletter files, drawings, etc.– and in due time our new library with standard reference books, etc..etc..etc..

I always appreciated the presence of the “Book Box” prepared by June Porges for our winter lectures. It generally attracted a lively pre-meeting discussion around June as members chose from the books she was offering. I think that this is a feature which we should resume. June, until her recent resignation, had been our Hon. Librarian for a number of years, during which she made a great contribution to the society. This was in building up and arranging and listing the collection of journals and books, despite great difficulty due to the restricted space in our old room at Avenue House. Always the material was efficiently arranged and displayed. It was not, however, well used, since it was in a very small room, difficult for two people to work in at the same time, and in any case without any surface on which to lay out references. Access through the offices at Avenue House, and restricted use to “office hours”.

Now the new room at Avenue House has none of these disadvantages. It is larger, and entry is possible direct from the carpark entrance. It is large enough to have a table at which one can consult reference books and maps, prepare reports, and even hold small meetings. The shape is suitable for housing a small well-ordered library. Now our insurance claim is settled, we can start planning and we are looking for members to help in this, and in running the library when it is finished.

I should like to take this opportunity, on behalf of the society, to thank June for her quiet and sustained work with the library; also for her help, and that of her late husband, Hans, with the “Mini-mart”; with occasional mini-bus driving; and exploration for outings. All these contributions were such appreciated. We hope that despite her recent great loss we may still seek her advice and guidance in developing our new library.

CLERKENWELL’S HIDDEN HERITAGE

A joint exhibition by the Museum of London and the Museum of the Order of St. John of recent facts and finds under the buildings of historic Clerkenwell is on from 20th JUNE – 25th AUGUST (not on Bank Holiday weekends not 22nd June).

DON’T FORGET JOIN US on site this season! New diggers and new members always welcome – FULL TRAINING in excavation and recording will be given….

NEOLITHIC SITE FOUND!!

Neolithic settlement dating from 5,000 B.C. has – been unearthed by archaeologists working on new flood relief project at Horton, near Staines. Human bones, primitive tools and basic household items have been discovered. (From “EVENING STANDARD”)

Ted Sammes has visited the Horton site and reports that some later Roman evidence was found above the Neolithic material.

Newsletter-230-May-1990

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ISSUE NO. 230 Edited by Liz Holliday MAY 1990

DIARY

Tuesday, 8 May ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 8.00pm for 8.15pm at Hendon Library. Business meeting followed by slides of cur Whetstone dig. (If any members have slides of other HADAS activities during the past year, please bring them to be shown – time permitting).

SUMMER OUTINGS

Sunday, 20 May QUAINTON. Details and booking form with this Newsletter.

Saturday, 23 June RICHMOND, MARBLE HILL AND HAM HOUSE,

Saturday, 21 July HARLOW MUSEUM (Finds from the Temple of Minerva-subject of February’s lecture) and CRESSING TEMPLE, BRAINTREE (Knights Hospitallers).

Friday, 31 August – Sunday, 2 September SHROPSHIRE WEEKEND. Wall, Ironbridge, Shrewsbury, Wroxeter etc.

Enquiries, advance booking and further details about all summer outings should be made to Dorothy Newbury on 203 0950.

MINIMART 1990 Saturday, 6 October

OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES TO START THE 90s Report by Brian Wrigley and Victor Jones

The Excavation Working Party has not met for over twelve months – its members being for too busy excavating. When the digging behind The Mitre, Chipping Barnet finished, it was high time to consider excavation and fieldwork activities for the coming summer. A number of interesting and challenging projects emerged, some ❑f which are being overtaken by events as you read this.

THE THREE VALLEYS WATER RELIEF PIPE PROJECT is due to start at the end of April. This involves cutting an 18 metre wide strip, 9 inches deep from Brockley Hill to Arkley, crossing archaeologically interesting areas in the north-west of the Borough. The route has been changed slightly from that previously suggested, so it is important to take advantage of this opportunity. We are hoping to organise site-watching

f the turf-stripping and any excavations in the area. This will need plenty of person-power, particularly of any members who can be available during the working week. If you would like to take part in this unusual site-watching and field walking project, please let Brian Wrigley (.959 5982) or Victor Jones (458 6180) know as soon as possible.

19-25 HIGH STREET, CHIPPING BARNET adjoins the old route of the Great North Road, before Barnet Hill was engineered in the early 19th Century. This site may well reveal some evidence of medieval occupation. We already have permission from the helpful developer, who also offers us, at very reasonable cost, the services of his JCB and driver for the initial stripping. Andrew Simpson, Arthur Till and Brian Wrigley will be organising the dig – so please let one of them know if you would like to take part. Experience is not essential as we have decided to treat every HADAS dig as a training dig where new members can gain experience alongside more seasoned veterans. If there is enough support, sessions of recording, drawing, levelling and find-processing will be arranged. Please get in touch with Andrew (9 Cranfield Drive, NW9 – 205 6456), Arthur (55 Brunswick Avenue, N11 – 368 6288) or Brian (21 Woodcroft Avenue, NW7 – 959 5982).

CHURCH FARM, EAST BARNET. John Heathfield has kindly offered to take charge of a further dig on this site, in conjunction with British Heritage and Barnet Local History Society and with the agreement of the Borough, who own the site. Such is John’s enthusiasm, that by the time you read this, the exploratory trenches will, we believe, have been completed over the Easter• week-end! A further report will appear in due course.

Finally, the very welcome news that restoration of the WHETSTONE TUDOR HALL (last year’s major dig at 1264 High Road, N20). has been approved and will go ahead in the late summer We have been asked to return to complete our project in the house and dig in the courtyard, probably in July.

ARCHAEOLOGY & BARNET’S UNITARY DEVELOPMENT PLAN Report by Brian Wrigley

Members who are aware (and I am sure there are many) that the Borough of Barnet has recently been considering the draft Unitary Development Plan, may have been wondering if HADAS has done anything about this. The answer is – YES. The draft was sent to us, as well as many other bodies, for comment. We returned our submission. which concentrated on the few, short, archaeological references, in January. We did not feel that the draft Plan dealt adequately with either the local interest in the past or the opportunities which redevelopments can offer for investigation. The Museum of London also returned a submission and we supported their suggestion of a discussion between the Museum, the Borough and ourselves.

Neither we, nor the Museum, received any reply (despite two reminders) until AFTER the draft Plan had been finalised by the Planning Committee in April. We never got our discussion.

The Planning Committee accepted the recommendation made to them by their Officers, that both our and the Museum’s suggestions be dealt with during the the first review of the Plan (date unspecified).

MINUTES OF THE 28th ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING HELD AT HENDON LIBRARY ON TUESDAY, 9 MAY 1989 at 8.30pm.

In the Chair: Vice-President Daphne Lorimer. 51 members attended.

The Chairman welcomed members,

Apologies for absence: Brian Jarman, Ted Sammes, Bill Firth, Margaret Maher.

Minutes of the 27th AGM on 10 May 1988 and of the Special General Meetings of 1 November 1988 and 4 April 1989, which had been circulated in the Newsletter, were approved and signed.

The Annual Report (copy in the Minute Book) was given by the Chairman, Andrew Selkirk, and accepted nem con (proposed Bill Bailey, seconded June Forges).

The Accounts (copy in the Minute Book) were presented by the Hon. Treasurer, Victor Jones, who expressed gratitude for the sum raised by the Minimart. The Accounts were accepted nem con

Newsletter-229-April-1990

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NEWSLETTER 229 APRIL 1990 Edited by Deirdre Barrie

DIARY

Tuesday April 3rd Recent Monastic Excavations in North London by Barney Sloane. Mr. Sloane is the senior archaeologist with the Department of Greater London Archaeology at the Museum of London. His talk and slides will cover several sites including his recent excavation at St John’s Gate EC1.


Tuesday April 24th
Afternoon visit to British Museum New Exhibition ­”Fake? The Art of Deception.” We have not reached the required numbers (25) to cover the cost of this visit. Please phone Dorothy Newbury (203 0950) if you can join the group, or write enclosing £2 to Dorothy Newbury at 55 Sunningfields Road, Hendon NW4. Pay your own entrance (£3) on arrival. Meet at the exhibition entrance at 2 pm. Dr. Paul Craddock will guide and talk to us on this fascinating subject.

Tuesday May 8th Annual General Meeting with slides of Whetstone dig.

SUNDAY May 20th Outing to Quainton – a leisurely one this time, on a

Sunday, visiting the tallest windmill in Buckinghamshire (which is being restored by a local society), the village church, probably built by the Knights Hospitallers, and the Quainton Railway Preservation Society Station for a short ride on a steam train.


Saturday June 23rd
Richmond, Marble Hill and Ham House

August 31st – September 1st and 2nd Weekend trip to Shropshire – Ironbridge, Shrewsbury, Wroxeter. This weekend is definitely on – we have sufficient applications. But if any latecomers would like to contact Dorothy Newbury Quickly (203 0950) it may be possible to increase accommodation numbers at the college and hire a bigger coach.


Saturday October 6th
MINIMART. Anybody moving house or who has a friend moving house, don’t forget our Minimart for any surplus bric-a-brac etc. A “Sales and Wants” slip is enclosed.

CONSTANTINIDES MEMORIAL LECTURE by Joanna Corden

A full house of members attending the Constantinides Memorial Lecture (given alternately by fellow members Percy Reboul and John Heathfield) were treated to a fascinating and erudite evening. There were engaging slides and a commentary based on extensive research, enlivened by anecdotes and reminiscences.

Two burning questions were at last answered: for those who were uncertain as to where Whetstone actually lies, the boundaries have provisionally been defined as extending from Lyonsdown and Northumberland Road in the north down the railway line on the east to Brunswick Avenue, across Bethune Park north of St. James Church, across the golf course to Woodside Lane on the

south to join the western boundary at the Dollis Brook. The east pa came within the parish of St. James, and the west within St. Mary Finchley As to the name of Whetstone, there is no definitive answer, except to say it was not named after the famous stone outside the Griffin Inn since there are at least three references which predate the Battle of Barnet. It meant “the western settlement” – west of St. James Church, and its change to its present location came with the diversion of the road north in the 14th C.

Whetstone was not always a place of apparent dullness through which one passed, the High Road in particular overcome by modern buildings; from the Middle Ages it was a hotbed of dissension and lawlessness, growing larger in the Victorian period, its greatest glory its pubs, and given life by its transport. There were some unexpected views, such as the surprising number of trees on both sides of the main road, and portraits of famous local personalities such as Mr. Gilmore and his two daughters, or the famous James Solomon outside the “Bull and Butcher”, known as “King” Solomon, and builder of Solomons Terrace. Of all the ancient pubs illus­trated, perhaps the most entertaining was the watercolour of the “Hand and Flower”, an idealised portrait, followed by a real photograph, warts and all.

Transport changed the appearance of the High Road, from the horse and cart along the turnpike to the horse bus, the tram and the trolley bus, not forgetting the railway, which in 1940 became the Northern Line.

The greatest contrast, however, was in the people: John Puget of Poynters Grove, Totteridge, whose father was a Governor of the Bank of England at the age of 30, and who put up the money for the Dissenters’ Chapel; John Miles, who built All Saints Church in Middleton Park; or Baxendale of Woodside, whose Carter Patterson Transport revolutionised transport. They contrasted sadly with the grinding poverty of the larger part of Whetstone population, which was mainly occupied in farming, ostling or serving in the local pubs, and of these farming was much the most important activity, since hay was a major export to London.

The dairy industry too played its part, with the Manor Farm Dairy on High Road, and Dollis Dairies making the sight of cows on the highway out­side the “Blue Anchor” a common one for a while.

Such hard work did not prevent children from attending school, although until 1907 education was dependent on private finance. The Miles family put up the money for the building in Friern Barnet Lane in 1853, and for the All Saints Girls’ School in 1881. Nor did work prevent people from enjoying themselves – there were some wonderful illustrations of carnivals, outings, charabancs (all male outings, apparently), even walks in Friary Park, and the humble cycle having its day, since everyone cycled.

The proceedings were brought to an end with the reading of the fulsome obituary of John Attfield who died in 1880, and whose name family legend attributed to the original Attfield who helped King John when he was sea­sick. It was a most enjoyable evening, and members were left feeling that a hitherto forgotten area of the borough was at last on the map.

OBITUARY

Hans Porges died on February 19th after a short illness, leaving many friends within and beyond the circle of HADAS to mourn his loss. He had been an active member since 1978, a regular attender of our winter lectures and a keen outing follower, preferring out-of-the-way, strenuous days and weekends to visits on the fringe of tourist country. His unobtrusive helpfulness endeared him to those who had screens and exhibits to transport or who were no longer able to attend meetings without assistance. Those who valued his hospital or home visits will not be surprised to learn of his steady devotion to his Meals-on-Wheels round. What may surprise some members is the fact that Hans, apparently the archetypal Middle European in looks, accent and carriage was a British citizen by birth, his father

Having been born in King Henry’s Road, Hampstead. We shall miss his presence , and extend our sympathy to June and their Children.

EXCAVATION AT THE “MITRE” by Andy Simpson

Despite continuing problems with the weather, work on the trial trench is now complete, and more medieval pottery has been found. The list supplied by the Museum of London, after some of the finds were taken there for identification, includes South Herts. pottery of the 1150-1300 period, Denhamware of 1150-1300, a 13th century London-type jug with applied strip and slip decoration, and London-type coarseware of 1150-1200. Post medieval types include Tudor greenware, Tudor brown type of 1550-1650, Metropolitan slipware of 1650-1700, and Cistercian ware of 1500-1600.

The possible Roman pottery mentioned in the March Newsletter is identi­fied as Alice Holt type sandyware. The Alice Holt kilns were in Hampshire, and were in production from the late 1st to the early 5th century, with their peak in the 4th century.

Fragments of possible Roman tile were also found in the same medieval context in the “Mitre” trench. It would be nice to know the source of these possible Roman fragments:

All in all, this small trench has been most productive, although no medieval structural evidence has been noted. The digging team is now taking a short break, having been digging most weekends and Thursdays since March 1989. We hope to decide on our next move shortly. Details, when decided upon, from Brian Wrigley (959 5982). New recruits welcome:

MEMBERS NEWS

Margaret Beevor – Like so many of our members, Miss Beevor has an art none of us knew about – she is to tutor a class on “Cake and Gateau Decoration” at Hampstead Garden Suburb Institute at Faster and in the summer.Valentine Sheldon – Miss Sheldon (born on St. Valentine’s Day) was a regular outing member, and an invaluable help at our Minimarts before she left London recently to live near friends up North. I am sure members who knew her will be pleased to know she is happily settled at last in a retirement home.

SITE WATCHING

The following sites, the subject of planning applications, could be archaeologically “sensitive”. Members living or working in the vicinity are asked to keep an eye on any development and report anything of interest to the Site Co-ordinator, John Enderby, on 203 2630.

NOTE FROM THE MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY PHYLLIS FLETCHER

With the April Newsletter you will find reminders of subscriptions due on 1st April. I would be pleased to receive your subscriptions as soon as possible. Those who pay by standing order, or who have joined since 1st January 1990, please ignore this request. Thank you.

Full membership £6.00

Each additional family member £2.00

Retired £4.00

Each additional family member £2.00

Group membership £8.00

(Miss P.J. Fletcher, 31 Addison Way, NW11 6AL)

HOW TO MAKE £1,000 IN THREE HOURS

Dorothy Newbury was the key speaker at the first forum of the Council for Independent Archaeology when she addressed the meeting at Northampton under the title “How to raise a Thousand Pounds in Three Hours.”

How do you raise £l,000 in three hours? The answer, of course, is to get Dorothy Newbury to run a minimart for you. The secret, she said, was that it was a Minimart, not a jumble sale. Dorothy runs a very superior operation. Any inferior goods are weeded out and sent to someone else’s jumble sale, and as a result the Chairman of HADAS has spent the winter going round in a very superior overcoat purchased for £4, while the Vice-Chairman has been parading in a very natty suit which he purchased at the Minimart. Indeed, he even tried it on at the Minimart on stage before the eyes of the assembled multitude.

Another secret that Dorothy revealed is that any object that might possibly be valuable is taken to an auctioneer to be valued – another useful HADAS contact. They often prove to be more valuable than the donor realised, but nevertheless the donors cheerfully accept that their donation to HADAS funds is sometimes more substantial than they intend!

Dorothy’s lecture was an outstanding feature of the first Regional Forum of the Council for Independent Archaeology of which HADAS had become a founder member. The Meeting, held in Northampton, featured six societies, the Upper Nene, the Middle Nene, the Coventry & District, the Manshead Society of Dunstable, the Ampthill Society of Redford, and HADAS, and we discussed how to run a society, and then what the societies were doing.

One of the outstanding lectures was that of the Middle Nene on their excavation of the Prebendal Manor House at Nassington. This was carried out at the request of the owner, who wanted to explore her medieval hall house. By the time the archaeologists had finished, the entire sitting room was excavated, revealing the remains of the Saxon predecessor and even an underlying Iron Age ditch. What made the slides so bizarre was that the pictures were still hanging on the walls.

Another lively talk was on the saving of the Church at Segenhoe on the Duke of Redford’s estate near Ampthill. The Church was thought to be late medieval and since it had lost its roof, it was destined for demolition under the Church Redundancy Act. However, when the archaeologists got to work, they soon demonstrated that the east end was Saxon: the only late feature was the tower added in the 18th century. When the facts were presented to the Local Council, they changed their minds and decided to preserve the Church after all.

After the meeting, we returned via the Piddington Roman Villa, which Dorothy inspected (“in the DARK”, she told us) in preparation for the HADAS outing in the summer. Afterwards, Roy and Liz Friendship-Taylor, who have already lectured to HADAS on Piddington, invited us back for tea, and we inspected their “Praetorium” or headquarters building, where their finds are all kept, situated incongruously in the roof of a garage. The HADAS outing to Piddington on August 25th promises to be of great interest.

On the way back, Dorothy admitted that she had enjoyed her day out, even though she tried to escape from giving her lecture, and had to be dragged to her feet by popular acclaim. She proved, as HADAS members will know, to be a natural orator.

THE “BATTLE OF BRITAIN EXPERIENCE” Andy Simpson

As an employee of the Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon, perhaps I can be forgiven for making a quick “plug” for our forthcoming major exhibition, running under the above title.

The “Experience” opens on 11th April, and is a major “re-vamp” of the former Battle of Britain Museum. Many new supporting exhibits and inter­pretative displays will show the full story of the Battle, including the role of the volunteer services and other civilians. A great deal of effort has gone into making this a comprehensive and informative exhibition. Come and see for yourselves: Admission prices include entry to the other parts of the Museum complex.

AN APPEAL!

“Byways” on BBC-2, Friday 23rd March, gave an interesting update of Dr. Francis Pryor’s excavations

at Flag Fen near Peterborough, which was a memorable HADAS outing in June 1988.

Several HADAS members missed this – did anyone record this on video? If so please contact the next editor – see end of this Newsletter.

CHAIRMAN’S CORNER

At last. The number of members in our Society is creeping up. Every year since I have been Chairman, the numbers have been falling – only very slightly, just two or three a year. But over the past year they have turned up again. This I am sure has been due to our active excavation programme notably the successful dig behind the “Mitre” where over 150 sherds of medieval pottery were recovered. Not only are we getting new members, we are also getting some younger members. One of our principal diggers has been Andy Simpson, who spent a number of years digging at Tamworth with an MSC team. He has now come south to join the staff at the RAF Museum in Hendon – he tells me he has always been keen on aeroplanes. While working at the Museum, he has been digging at the weekends with HADAS.

While on the subject of people, Victor Jones has broken his finger, trying to open a window. He has my heartfelt wishes for a rapid recovery, particularly as we need to have the End of Year Accounts:

T went over to Avenue House the other clay, to see our new premises there. my melancholy task was to view the burnt remains of the HADAS library, but was also able to see the new Garden Room that we have been allocated. This promises to be a real benefit to the Society. It is a very odd shape, with a projecting window in one corner, but it has its own door so that we can use it at any time. We must have a party there in the summer, with tea on the terrace: I am still trying to persuade the Committee to organise this, but when the time comes I do hope that you will all come and view our new domain.

Is there too much homework for our students of today? Nearly four out of ten archaeologists think there is, according to the results of a survey of Local Archaeological Societies I have been conducting in “Current Archaeology’. This is a survey for which I received a lot of help from

HADAS members, notably Jennie Cobban. In the Pilot Survey we asked

whether there were problems in attracting young people to societies, and one of the replies said, “Yes – too much homework.” So we put the question in, and although there are a large number of “don’t knows”, and one or two sharp replies of “Certainly not!”, yet clearly there were a number of respondents who did feel that young people would be better joining their local archaeological society than poring over their books.

Finally, to end on a personal note, I shall be lecturing at the Museum of London on Sunday 20th May, and posing the question “Was Roman London the City of the Emperor?” This is likely to be controversial, and I suspect is intended by the organisers to he a version of that well known arena sport of throwing a Christian to the lions – I play the part of the Christian. I will be followed by a large number of big lions – Hugh Chapman, John Maloney, Ralph Merrifield and Harvey Sheldon, who will all say why I am wrong. All HADAS members will be welcome to join in the sport – but please turn your thumbs up! Tickets from Citisights on 01-806 4325.

I seem to be letting myself in for even more controversy at the end of April at the Conference on the Institute of Field Archaeologists in Birmingham where I have been invited to address a session entitled “Adam’s Rib – the Role of Women in the Past”. I am not quite certain what I am meant to be saying. I suspect I am there as the”statutory male”, as the organisers suggested that I might be able to express a “sceptical point of view”. Do any members of HADAS, particularly the female members, have any ideas what I ought to say?

Andrew Selkirk, 9 Nassington Road, London NW3 2TX (01-435 7517)

AS this Newsletter was being typed, we heard of the passing of George Grafton Green on 22nd March. On behalf of HADAS members we offer deepest sympathy to Brigid Grafton Green. An appreciation will appear in the next newsletter.

Newsletter-228-March-1990

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NEWSLETTER 228 March 1990 Edited by Jean Snelling

DIARY

Tuesday March 6 Constantinides Memorial Lecture Views and Voices of Old Whetstone. Percy Reboul and John Heathfield will be looking at Whetstone as it was in Victorian and Edwardian times.

Saturday, March 10th LAMAS 27th Annual Conference of London Archaeologists. 11.0.-5.30. Museum of London. See following pages.

Tuesday, April 3rd Recent Monastic Excavation in North London by Barney Sloan , DUA, Museum of London. Mr Sloan has taken part in the excavations.

Tuesday, April 24th Afternoon Visit to British Museum New Exhibition Fake? – The Art of Deception,,with Paul Craddock. Application form enclosed.

Tuesday, May 8th Annual General Meeting, With slides of Whetstone Dig.

Sunday, May 20th Outing Quainton including Steam Railway Museum and ride on steam train.

August/September Weekend trip to Shropshire Several members have indicated interest in this weekend but we need more to make it viable. Details and application form enclosed. The agricultural college where we shall be staying has to have confirmation by the end of March.

Saturday October 6 MINIMART An awful omission on the programme card – sorry. Please mark it on your card now.

AN EXHIBITION OF HADAS FINDS, related to excavations, is now on show in the Central Library, the Burroughs, Hendon. It is at the far end of the lending library on the ground floor. Tel. 202 5625. Buses 143, 183.

Material is shown from Brockley Hill – prehistoric and Roman; Church Farm and Terrace, Hendon – Roman, Saxon, medieval; and on to the recent digs at High Road, Whetstone and the Mitre, High Barnet ­medieval. Much help with organising, selecting, assembling and illustrating has been given by Helen Gordon, Tessa Smith, Brigid Grafton Green, Ted Sammes, John Heathfield and Victor Jones. Our thanks to Liz Holliday for her original idea.

It is possible that a reduced version will appear later at certain local libraries, but for the time being the show stays at the Burroughs and members should not miss its full impact.

BULLETIN ON THE MITRE Andy Simpson

Despite the recent bad weather tending to interrupt the digging the hardy perennials of the ‘excavation unit’ continue their quest for traces of medieval High Barnet.

An area at the northern end of the trench (reported earlier), measuring some 4 metres long and 2 metres wide (the full width of the trench) has been particularly productive. In what appears to be the bottommost archaeological layer, a very pebbly grey-black content, there have been found upwards of 150 medieval potsherds, South Hertfordshire ware of about 1200 AD being predominant (the familiar globular cooking pot form); plus sherds of pitchers and some glazed fragments. This layer also contains charcoal flecks, some metalworking residue, and one or two fragments of bone. Its function or origin is still unclear; if it was a midden layer one would expect more bone. The concentration of pottery in such a small area is striking.

Some of the material from this layer has been taken to the Museum of London for identification; they indicate that it includes three possible Roman sherds. Now where did they come from? Meanwhile Jenny Cobban is surveying the pottery overall.

As ever, would-be diggers should contact Brian Wrigley, 959 5982.

FRIENDS AND MEMBERS

It is a pleasure to hear from Miss Vivienne Constantinides, daughter of the founder of HADAS.:- “Themistocles”. She writes:-I was so delighted to receive a copy of A Place in Time, which I am reading with great interest. What a long way – back as well as forward – since t he early days of the first dig at Church Farm. I still remember the excitement, and cooling off the young diggers with ice creams on a very hot day.This book will be treasured on my bookshelf, along with my copy of The Story of Hendon St Mary’s Church of England Schools (1957) and a small booklet, Hendon’s Parish Church (1942), in both of which my father had a hand.I wish that distance did not prevent me from visiting Hendon and joining in some of HADAS’ fascinating activities. But at least I have extremely happy memories. With kind regards and best wishes to HADAS for the years ahead.

Ann Kahn hopes to be able to leave hospital before too long. She is seeking a suitable flat. Our very good wishes, Ann.

Dorothy Newbury has been in Leningrad – but cannot escape long from HADAS.


LONDON & MIDDLESEX ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY – LAMAS

1) Conference of London Archaeologists Saturday March 10, 11am-5.30pm Museum of London Lecture Theatre, London Wall, EC2.

Morning session: reports with slides on work at Shepperton, Sanderstead, Orpington, Fleet Valley (City), and Middle Saxon Lundenwic. Afternoon session: Huggin Hill Baths and the Rose Theatre. There will be a display of recent work undertaken by local societies and archaeological teams. (Victor Jones would welcome help with the HADAS stall, displaying A Place in Time, etc. Tel.458 6180.) Tickets including afternoon tea, £2.50 for members of LAMAS; £5.50 for non-members. Pay at the door if no ticket got in advance. Many people take a picnic lunch.

2) Victor Jones has become a member of the Council of LAMAS.

He is concerned that too little of the lectures offered and also
the visits to sites both in and outside London are known to members of the affiliated societies, which includes HADAS. He has taken steps to ensure that information and posters are spread in future.

Lectures on Wednesdays at 6.30 pm are held in the Lecture Theatre of the Museum of London, London Wall. Coffee, tea and sherry are available from 6.0 onwards.

March 14. New light on Roman London, by Nicholas Fuentes, ranging April 18. The Middle Saxons, by Keith Bailey (Middlesex c400-c850)

May 16. Pepys and his music in London by Christine Brown. Readings

with music played on virginals.

LECTURE – FROM SHRINE TO TEMPLE Andy Simpson

HADAS mustered an excellent turnout on February 6 to hear Mr Ian Jones’entertaining and informative talk on the Temple of Minerva at HARLOW. As curator , of Harlow Museum Mr Jones’ enthusiasm for the site came across well.

A scheduled ancient monument, the site was originally dug in the 1920s and 30s, and was visited by Mortimer Wheeler who used it as his. type-site when establishing the distinctive form of the Romano-British temple. The site was re-excavated in 1962-71 and was then landscaped. This damaged the archaeology, and an outline was laid in slabs on an incorrect alignment. New excavations began in 1985.

These excavations have provided a history of the site, albeit with many unanswerable questions. The earliest find is a Paleolithic hand axe. Struck flints indicate Mesolithic hunter-gatherer activity with a possible flint working area. Neolithic activity left an axe head and pottery. Signs of religious use begin with Bronze Age cremations, at least half a dozen, with areas of burnt flint indicating intense heat; possibly the site of funeral pyres. From the late Iron Age to the late Roman period the site was in virtually continuous religious use.

An Iron Age round house was the focus for a superb collection of Iron Age coins, nearly a thousand in all, of high quality workmanship, mainly bronze but some silver and gold, mostly struck by Cunobelin, king of the Catuvellauni. There were other coins from Kent and from the Iceni and the Coritanii of Leicestershire. This round house may have beeh a shrine.

The complex stratigraphy of the site was further complicated by extensive Roman disturbance, including votive finds in a ditch. Many iron tools were found, possibly offerings, together with unusual iron strips of unknown function. A lull at the Roman conquest was followed by renewed activity around AD 80, including numerous post holes and a considerable quantity of military metal work including scabbard edge and fittings from armour. These were of both legionary and auxiliary cavalry type. Another military link is the exquisite tiny iron swords of the’gladius’type , only 10cm long.

The first Romano-British temple was built around this period. The cobbled footings of. the central tower, the cella, were well preserved. It had also a surrounding ambulatory and frontal porch with evidence of external painting. South of the- cella lay a cobbled area and traces of a possible second century colonnaded timber structure. The head of a limestone cult statue was found; a helmeted deity identified as Minerva. Also found was a crudely carved Celtic% style figure of a warrior god, together with bronze leaves and an iron chain, possibly from a priest’s regalia. Offerings of a medical nature including instruments were found. The coin sequence from this temple stretches from the period of the conquest to Honorius. A Severan rebuilding of the temple, c 200 AD, included reuse of moulded stone, an enlarged porch, courtyard buildings and a substantial gate. The exterior may have been plastered and painted red. Slight traces of an inscription were also found.

Occupation continued at least into the late 4th century. Owl pellets and collapsed plaster indicate partial dereliction in C4, followed by a Roman floor level laid above the collapse extensive renovation in late C4 included new plaster and a possible second storey to the courtyard side, evidenced by external buttressing. The courtyard level was partly raised and tesselated floors installed, of which a tiny piece remains.

There is evidence of a dark age building in the courtyard with stone packed post pits and dark age pottery which is very similar to Iron Age pottery. This may provoke re-examination of supposedly IA pottery from other sites. This site was severely robbed from medieval times, being known as Stonegrove Hall. It now lies at the heart of an industrial estate. This was a thoroughly enjoyable lecture.

(Andy reminds us that memories can be jogged by an article on this site in Current Archaeology, December 1988. Editor)

OIL LAMPS AND CANDLES

We are priviledged to reproduce part of an article on Heat, Light and Power by Mr Geoffrey Gillam, chairman of Enfield Archaeological Society. The full article appears in the Society’s bulletin for December 1989 and the following issue. Here we pick up Mr Gillam’s script on the early history of Oil Lamps and Candles. In our next Newsletter we shall carry on with the later development of lamps and fuel oils. Our grateful thanks to Mr Gillam and our Enfield friends.

Mr Gillam began his paper by pointing out that, while the timing and places of man’s early use and control of fire are unknown Legends on the origin of fire for human use are widespread in world cultures.

OIL LAMPS

Oil was being extracted from animals for use in primitive lamps from very early times and in the caves at Lascaux in the French Dordogne a hollow stone had been filled with oil and provided with a moss

wick to give light to the cave painters in the innermost recesses over 12,000 years ago. By the late Paleolithic, Magdelanian people were using lamps with a spout and a wick of moss. In Athens in C7 BC

lamps had been developed with a separate nozzle pierced with a small hole to allow the height of the wick to be controlled to give an even flame. Further developments in the design of clay and metal

lamps took place during the Greek and Roman periods. It was soon found that if more light was required it was of no use to enlarge the wick since this made the lamp smoke, and that the only way to improve the illumination was to add more nozzles; many examples of multi—nozzled lamps can be seen in museums. Two single nozzle Roman lamps were dug up in Edmonton some years ago — unfortunately they were later stolen from the local collection at Houndsfield School. Churches used oil lamps and many gifts of lamps to individual churches enabled them to be brilliantly lit; in the 5 th century churches were probably the only buildings showing a light at night.

CANDLES At the beginning of C2 AD a form of candle consisting of flax threads twisted together and coated with wax or pitch was in use . The use of candles for domestic as well as for church lighting was widespread during C3, and their use increased following the loss of lands growing olive oil as the Roman empire collapsed. It was not until 011 that candles were being placed on church altars. Candle sticks of Roman date in pottery or metal or occasionally in wood have been found all over the Roman empire; several have been discovered in London where a metal candelabra was also found.

The best candles were made of half mutton and half beef fat, they did not melt too easily nor break too readily. It has been recorded that a slaughtered ox yielded enough tallow to make three hundred candles at four to the pound. Beeswax as a source of candle material was always three or four times as expensive as tallow and a pound of beeswax cost as much as a day’s pay for a labourer in the Middle Ages. At one period officials of the king’s household received candles as part of their salaries. Guilds of wax and tallow chandlers were formed during C14. Many householders made their own candles, but this was forbidden under the candle tax laws in 1710. This would have had little effect on the poorer members of society who had always to make do with rush lights consisting of the dried pith of rushes soaked in bacon grease; they gave a very poor light and stank abominably. Sales of candle ends were considered to be one of the perks of the job by servants in some large houses. Sizes and shapes of candles differed and a variety of materials were used in their manufacture. Problems with the wicks were eventually overcome with the production of an improved plaited wick after 1820.

The better lighting afforded by the use of many good qualitycandles dramatically altered social life but there were problems. At receptions, balls and other indoor gatherings the heat from so many candles caused the wax to melt and as one candle used as much oxygen as two people, ladies often fainted. There was also the increased risk of fire in spite of candle guards and even lanterns.

The activities of the whaling industry resulted in the use of spermaceti dandles which burned very easily with a clear steady flame. They became the basis of the unit of light that we know as candle power.

To be continued.

VARIOUS TEMPTATIONS

Saturday March 17 at Northampton

Andrew Selkirk and Dorothy Newbury are speaking at this event and would be pleased to be joined by HADAS faces and voices. Congress of Independent Archaeologists, Joint Conference organised by-the Upper Nene Archaeological Society and the Middle Nene Group.

10.0-5.30. (Coffee from 9.30) at St Church room.

Six archaeological societies will present their methods of organisation and accounts of their work, including Piddington Iron Age and Roman site and Prebendal Manor House, Nassington.

Tickets including buffet lunch and afternoon tea £5.50 – or omit lunch £2.50 from 86 Main Road, Hackleton. Northampton NN7 2 AD.

Offers of or requests for transport to Victor Jones tel 01 458 6180. Saturday March 24 A day on the Herts/Essex border.

Illustrated talks on and visits to Rye House Gatehouse, Much Hadham Forge and Harlow Bury Chapel. Led by Katharine Chant, Museum Development Officer for Hertfordshire.

Fleet at 10.0 am at Rye House Gatehouse car park (Hoddesdon)

Tickets £12.50 adults, £7.50 concessions – Lunch included. Bookings/information from Lee Valley Park Countryside Service, tel 0992 713838.

We owe news of this outing to Mrs June Gibson of the Greater London Industrial Archaeology Society. Her husband is Rick Gibson of HADAS so between them they cover a lot of ground. Mrs Gibson says that the Lee Valley Park Countryside Service issue a mailing list on their very varied activities in 1990/91 with some items that might be of interest to HADAS members.

Picturesque Hendon Exhibition at Church Farm Museum till March 4

(see February Newsletter)

All is not lost for members who have missed the splendid exhibition of paintings of Hendon. The temporary display, which gives just a hint of the remarkable local artistic wealth in the Borough’s Local History Collection, is a sign of things to come.

The aim of borough archivist Pamela Taylor and Church Farm House curator Gerrard Roots is to give more examples from the collection a permanent hanging place at the museum, historical views in a historical location. And as all those who have seen the current selection – which from right-to-the-last-word representations of monuments in Hendon Church to much more impressionistic views of of sun-dappled traffic-free lanes and landscapes that are now under bricks and tarmac – will agree, that must be a good thing.

Newsletter-227-February-1990

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NEWSLETTER 227 February 1990 Edited by Liz Sagues

DIARY

Tuesday, February 6

IAN JONES, curator of Harlow Museum, will describe New Excavations 1985-89 at the Temple of Minerva, Harlow. For the last five summers Harlow Museum staff,

helped by members of the EAS, have been re-excavating the site of the Harlow Temple.The main aim was to examine the pre-Roman history of the site

and to answer some of the questions

left by previous excavations. In general those aims were achieved, but there were also a number of surprises which have added greatly to knowledge of the site

and left a new set of questions to puzzle over.

The site is now known to be far more complex than was previously thought. Although there is a single find dating from the early Palaeo­lithic (an axe incorporated in the Roman cobbling) the first use of the site dates from the Mesolithic period after 8000 BC. Part of the working area used for making flint tools was discovered, indicating the use of this well-drained gravel hill by the side of the River Stort as a tem­porary encampment. There have been some Neolithic and Bronze Age finds, plus important Iron Age remains. Then came the Roman structures, thought to have been built in three phases. The latest important discovery came during the final season and concerns the final period of the building’s life. Come along on February 6 and hear more.

Saturday, February 10 One-day school for adults on Archaeology in the City of London, at the Museum of London. Ring 600 3699 ext 200 for details.

Tuesday, March 6th Constantinides Memorial Lecture on Whetstone By Percy Reboul and John Heathfield.

Saturday, March 10th LAMAS Archaeological Conference at the Museum of London. More information later in this Newsletter,

Tuesday, April 3rd Recent Monastic Excavations in North London by Barney Sloane, from the DUA, Museum of London.

Tuesday, April 14th Afternoon visit to a new exhibition, starting in March, at the British Museum, entitled Fake? ­the Art of Deception. Paul Craddock, who is known to many of us, has agreed to give us a talk on the subject while we are there. Numbers will be strictly limited. Details and cost later.

Tuesday, May 8th Annual General Meeting

Sunday, May 20th Outing to Quainton, Buckinghamshire. Please note – this is a Sunday outing).

September, 7,8,9 We are proposing to have a weekend trip to Shropshire, spending a day at Ironbridge, with accommodation and meals at Harper Adams Agri­cultural college (two nights). Cost will be approximately £75-£85 inclusive of coach, food, accommodation and guides. The college needs to know numbers as soon as possible, so please ring Dorothy Newbury, 203 0950, if you are interested.

The programme secretary hopes arrangements will be completed in time for the 1990 card to be included in this Newsletter.

PLEASE NOTE ONCE AGAIN: The Hendon Library doors are often locked, for security reasons, on our lecture evening. Please DO NOT GO AWAY, keep banging until someone lets you in.

NEWS OF MEMBERS

Paul and Michaela O’Flynn Paul has taken a new job at Nottingham and Derby Hospitals and of course they will have to move up there. They have frequently been on outings and were among our minority young member­ship. Michaela will be down here for several months yet until they can sell their house. They want to know of any societies in the Nottingham/ Derby area. They intend to retain HADAS membership and will join us on any trips to their area. We shall miss them.

Is there a mass emigration to Derby? Another member, Mrs Jacques, also moved to Derby-from Hampstead Garden Suburb just before Christmas. She also has retained membership and will join us on any Derbyshire trips.

Marion Le Besque (nee Newbury), another of our younger members. Her husband has taken a new job at Dorchester Hospital, and she has moved to Dorchester. She is in an 1820s cottage, and from maps it looks as if it was built on the old Roman road – so we may end up on an archaeo­logical weekend digging in their garden.

Bill and Margaret Dibben, staunch Minimart helpers and outing attenders, have been in America for eight weeks. The day after their return they spent the afternoon collecting for the North London Hospice charity at Brent Cross. When they got home to St Albans they found their house had been broken into and ransacked. Charity didn’t begin at home for them.

We are pleased to report that Frieda Wilkinson is no longer in plaster, though she has to walk with a crutch and have physiotherapy treatment. But with true HADAS stoicism she says she is now hopping on and off buses and is not in the least downhearted, even though the doctors say she may now be subject to arthritis.

Membership Secretary Phyllis Fletcher has just spent three weeks in the Bahamas, but before she left she was able to tell the committee that membership stood at 361, an excellent figure.

Ann Saunders has been persuaded by the powers-that-be at St Martin-in-the-Fields to delve into the church archive – a most splendid one, she says – to produce a new combined history and guide to one of London’s best-known churches. The colour-illustrated book is full of fact, serious and entertaining, and costs £1 from St Martin’s.

A TIMELY PUBLICATION

Sales of the new HADAS book, A Place in Time, are going well, reports Victor Jones.

About 750 copies have been sold so far, about half to the borough and the rest in general sales, and inquiries have come from as far afield as France and Holland. Barnet Libraries has asked HADAS to mount an exhibition on recent work to complement the printed words, and that will start a borough-wide tour at the Central Library, Hendon. It should open there on or about February 10 and run for a month.

A PICTURESQUE PAST

The new exhibition at Church Farm House Museum recalls the times when the main records of Hendon were made on canvas rather than photographic paper. Picturesque Hendon – Paintings from the 1790s to the 1930s incorporates work from 16 named artists and some anon­ymous brush-wielders, depicting landscapes and buildings, churchyard monuments, ponds and rivers and rural scenes long gone, and much of nostalgic and historic interest. Why, cameras apart, were the brushes put away? Curator Gerrard Roots suggests two reasons – suburbanisation made the area less attractive and, with greater social equality, there are now fewer gentlemen and ladies with time on, and brushes in, their hands. The exhibition runs until March 4.

A MAGICAL, BUT NOT MYSTERIOUS, TOUR

Liz Sagues reports on the January lecture

Why, asked Ralph Merrifield more in sorrow than anger, is ritual a banned word? HADAS’s new president, giving his presidential address, has argued the case for ritual’s revival – at least as an archaeo­logically acceptable interpretation of certain past happenings – in his book Ritual and Magic in Archaeology.

That, too, was the title of his lecture, though its scope had to be more limited. “I was becoming increasingly worried that a whole aspect of human life was becoming ignored by archaeologists,” he explained. The book was his response. “I had the intention of trying to persuade archaeologists that there was a real subject here and above all it ought to be reported properly and this was not being done.”

He provided examples – a cow skull buried beneath a recently-discovered Roman waterside building in Southwark, two halves of a sheep’s jaw neatly placed on a beam in another waterside building on the City bank of the Thames, neither foundation deposit mentioned in published reports.

But he concentrated more on the positive – what could be reported rather than what had been deliberately overlooked. His first slide, of the ritual surrounding the honouring of death in Bronze Age Crete, set the scene for practices to follow. “The one most extraordinary thing about ritual practices is that they don’t change,” he said. “They go on exactly the same whatever happens in religion and philosophy. In order to survive they are constantly being reinterpreted.”

Characteristics of the Cretan scene, the animals being taken to sacrifice, the libations, the model of something important in the departed’s life, continued on in ritual through centuries and continents, even into modern practices, he argued. He offered examples of Roman sacrifices, of Saxon and medieval ones, animals buried as buildings were constructed, to propitiate whichever powers were regarded as influential then and there.

He even quoted a late 19th century example, recounted to the curator of the Cambridge Folk Museum, when the builder “of all things” a Metho­dist chapel instructed his young nephews to buy a horse’s head from the local knacker’s yard and buried it, with due libation of beer, in the chapel foundations. “These sort of things really do have a remarkably long life.”

But not all such deposits were below ground. Higher up in old houses, in recesses in chimneypieces especially, smaller creatures might be tucked away – dried cats, for example, or in the case of Lauderdale House, Highgate, four dried chickens. With the chickens were two old shoes – another frequent component of such deposits – a broken glass goblet, a candlestick and a strange plaited straw object.

Such practices, too, were as long-lived, frequent – there are more than 900 recorded instances – and widespread, with examples known through­out Europe and even in the United States and Australia. “One of the very peculiar things about this particular custom is the secrecy that surrounds it.”

Moving on to models, Dr Merrifield illustrated the huge range of votive miniature limbs found at the source of the Seine – long a holy place – and dating to the first century AD, deposited there so that the diseased members they represented might be cured. A similar ritual could be identified at Epidavros, some 15 centuries earlier; the Etruscans did it too; it was assimilated, through saintly relics and more votive objects, into the Christian Church. “The change from paganism to Christianity still permitted the continuation of identical practices.”

And so he continued, through the deliberate damaging of objects ­the bending of coins and swords, again in both pagan and Christian contexts – to written magic. The lead curses of the Romans served a useful social purpose for their issuers, allowing them to try to recover stolen goods, for example, or simply let off steam.

Magical symbols were sometimes used instead of words – and continued in use for a very long time, with examples from 17th century Gloucester­shire exactly resembling those used by the Romans. “But not all written magic was malignant – some was protective.” A magic “square” from Cirencester, reading the same from whichever direction it was approached, was one example – and was also another example of Christians taking over Roman tradition, reinterpreting the letters to turn them into a “paternoster” cross. There was a chicken and egg situation here, said Dr Merrifield. “Which came first?” He provided his own answer, by referring to similar squares from pagan Pompeii.

And he drew more magic threads together to conclude his lecture on a seasonal theme – celebration of the feast of Epiphany. Illustrating his point with a slide of the decorated pewter lid of a 15th century casket recovered from the Thames in the last century, which depicted the three kings and their offerings, he showed how such “purely Christian iconography” could be related to the Romans’ protective magical charms.

Such protective effects were still believed in today. Go to Germany on January 6, he said, and chalked on the doors will be graffiti in the form of the three letters C, M and B, the initials of the kings. Left there throughout the year, they were believed to give protection to the occupiers, a return to “pure magic” again.

He was, he continued, rather surprised to see the letters on the door of a church, and as well – particularly as the 1965 Vatican Council had refused to authenticate the three king’s story. “One would now imagine this custom was not approved by the church. I was eventually able to get to the bottom of this mystery, a remarkable instance of how things can be reinterpreted and brought back to religion again.”

An article in a German theological magazine explained that the letters were not the initials of the kings, but those of the phrase “may Christ bless the house” – “a perfectly acceptable prayer”. It was, concluded Dr Merrifield, “a beautiful religious legend turned to pure magic and reclaimed by the church”.

The 70-plus members who listened to his lecture – an excellent attendance, especially so soon after the New Year festivities – were charmed by the 1990 Merrifield magic.

MITRE, WITH HELPFUL BISHOP

Andy Simpson describes progress on the dig at High Barnet

With the Christmas break over and the last of the turkey eaten, the society’s “excavation unit” has resumed work, spurred on by new dis­coveries and, in the case of the writer, the prospect of a pint of Burton ale at lunchtimes… It should be mentioned that the landlord of the Mitre, the aptly-named Mr Bishop, has been very helpful, providing storage space for the society’s equipment.

Having disposed of the upper layers of yard surfaces, demolition rubble and the footings of Victorian outbuildings, and dealt with the finer points of shoring unstable trench sides, the team is now exca­vating a very pebbly grey soil level that runs for much of the length of the trench. This contains, in the upper level, a considerable quantity of coarse, unglazed medieval pottery, identified as Hertford­shire Grey Ware of about AD 1200, and at least one possible “pot boiler” cobblestone.

At this stage there seems to be a gap in the pottery sequence until about 1600, after which the sequence is continuous to the present day.

Excavation is continuing, and would-be diggers, ale-imbibers or no, should contact Brian Wrigley, 959 5982.

WELL, THE SETTLEMENT SITE REMAINS A PUZZLE

Victor Jones tells how an emergency excavation failed to find the location of early settlement in East Barnet

Late in August we received a phone call from Mr W. Griffith of British Heritage (a group active in East Barnet, and not to be confused with English Heritage). He said a small subsidence had been noticed in the field by St Mary’s Church. At first it was about 1.5 yards in diameter and saucer-shaped. A day or two later it was bigger, and a central hole about one foot in diameter and three feet deep had appeared. Brickwork, possibly a well, could be seen. The adjoining London Borough of Barnet junior school uses the field area for recreation, and for pupil safety reasons immediate action was necessary. The borough Education Department had been advised and was arranging to fence off the affected area until remedial action could be taken. It was suggested HADAS be advised because of the archaeological interest of the area.

St Mary’s Church is the oldest in the borough, founded in the late 1100s as a dependant of St Alban’s Abbey. It is at the top of a hill, at some distance from the present East Barnet village. This suggests there may have originally been a settlement nearer the church, which could have been moved, later, to a more favourable location, as was not unusual with some early settlements.

Some members may recall our work in 1983-4 near the church. Dave King, a long-time HADAS member, site-watched a building project near the school. The report in Newsletter No 143, January 1983, includes a site plan, a drawing with notes of soil exposed in foundation digging and information that the immediate area had been disturbed by 19th century building and was unlikely to have any earlier material. Brian Wibberly, another HADAS veteran, later searched part of the field for traces of past settlement, without unfortunately any definite result.

Later another HADAS member, Mary Alloway, traced the records of buildings near the church back to the 1800s (reported in Newsletter No 156, February 1984). The “Enclosure” map of 1817 shows only a house with barn, near the church. Mary produced sketches and plans of the stages of building from 1817 to 1930 and a view of the area as it was at the beginning of this century. A 1950s fire destroyed the buildings.

A meeting at the site was arranged to discuss the new problem, and included representatives of various other organisations, the Education Department, the school, Barnet Museum and local history societies, also Mr Griffith and others from British Heritage and interested local residents. The subsidence was inspected and brickwork and concrete could indeed be seen about four feet below ground level and looked to be part of a well. We agreed to undertake an archaeological investi­gation.

As the school required the use of the area as soon as possible, it was necessary any investigation should start immediately. To speed the work it was suggested HADAS should control the project and other interested groups would co-operate. We were offered the use of various documents, maps and photographs they had collected, and information from Gillian Geer of Barnet Museum on her work on the history of Church Farm was most helpful.

We began work on September 3, first laying out trenches in the sunken area, then erecting safety fencing surrounding them. In all this work we were greatly assisted by Mr Griffith and British Heritage in the provision of tools, materials and storage space and in under­taking much of the harder work, supplying fencing materials and tea. It was also necessary to close a passage from the field to the church and to take reference measurements from the church grounds for trench positioning. The sexton and the vicar were interested and helpful.

The project took about four weeks, working a day mid-week and week­ends. Members of the Barnet societies, the British Heritage group and our own dig team participated vigorously. Surface material was quickly removed and the base of the earlier farm walls soon emerged. The area around the well was exposed to the top four feet of brickwork, which, on inspection, did not appear to be very early. The dimensions of the exposed walls agreed with the drawings and information provided by Gillian Geer and others.

Below the foundations of these walls there was the natural undis­turbed gravel level, with no evidence of earlier occupation. An area between the well and the church, also part of the farm site, was also explored. New trenches were laid out in the third week of the dig, but after digging through a few inches of turf and soil the debris of the 1950s fire was soon reached. This was about 12 inches deep with little but slate and brick fragments recognisable. Below this was the undisturbed gravel. The site was closed at the end of the fifth week, with British Heritage again a great help, contributing to the back filling and clearing work.

Gillian Geer has kindly provided a note on the history of Church Farm and the conversion of the buildings to homes and a training school for homeless London boys – it follows this report. The presence of the remedial school as the training school’s successor is an interesting reminder of early charitable efforts to help London’s disadvantaged young.

Though no discovery was made as the result of the investigation it was valuable in eliminating one of several possible locations for the probable settlement for which this otherwise isolated church at the top of the hill was built. We hope to be able to return to East Barnet if other possible sites become available for investigation.

LEARNING ON THE LAND

Gillian Geer, MA, describes the history of Church Farm Industrial School, East Barnet

In 1860 a Lt.Col. W.J. Gillum bought Church Farm farmhouse, a farm cottage and 50 acres of land and here he established an industrial school for destitute or semi-criminal boys, called the Boys’ Farm Home. A management committee was set up headed by Colonel Gillum and the land was rented to the boys’ home at the nominal charge of £2 an acre.

Church Farm had been used during the Crimean War by a “purveyor of mules” for the army and the sheds previously used for mules housed the cows which the boys looked after. A trust deed of 1884 transferred the whole of the land, except for that where Colonel Gillum’s house stood, to the boys’ home. The farm then consisted of 48 acres, mostly pastureland, but potatoes, hay and onions were also grown. The boys did mostly simple agricultural work in the fields and garden, as well as tending the livestock: pigs, poultry and cows. The farm had water­cress beds and bunches were sold locally.

In 1933 Church Farm became an approved school. In 1937 the East Barnet site was sold and the home moved to Court Lees, South Godstone, Surrey.

NOTES AND NEWS

LAMAS Archaeological Conference, Saturday March 10, at the Museum of London: HADAS will again be there, with a display centring on the new A Place in Time book. Victor Jones (458 6180) would welcome offers of help in manning the stand and selling copies of the book. The conference starts at 10am and runs until late afternoon.

Green Past Times: London’s museums have, topically, gone green – in lecture series. Depending on when this Newsletter lands on your doormat, there are up to three opportunities to hear British Museum speakers on Green and Pleasant? The Ecology of Antiquity – February 2, Simon James on People and the Environment of Early Britain; February 16, Margaret Oliphant on Man and Nature in the Fertile Crescent; February 23, Nicole Douek (an ex-HADAS member) on The Balance of Nature in Ancient Egypt. All lectures at 1.15pm in the BM Assyrian Basement lecture theatre, admission free.

Green London is the Museum of London’s theme – and there are two Wednesday lunchtime (1.10pm) lectures left – London’s Weather Pattern: Past and Present, by David Cullum, on February 7, and Trees in the Urban Environment, by John Warburton, on February 14.

Avenue House: HADAS has an excellent new room there, with direct access from the outside. The library will be reinstated there as soon as insurance matters are finalised.

Tudor Whetstone: The report on the Tudor house is now being written, reports Victor Jones. HADAS work has proved it to be 100 years earlier than previously believed, and the project has been a highly successful amalgamation of digging and documentary research work. With much help from Pam Taylor, members have been able to trace house ownership deeds back to 1490. There may be a chance to return to the house later, to continue work,

Publicity-oriented: HADAS has a new publicity officer, John Heathfield.

Tempting Fate?: Advance information on Fake? – The Art of Deception (see Diary) reveals it is “an exhibition about deception materialised, about lying things wherever and whenever made… It is not, however, a history of crime; it does not discuss the relative morality of counter­feiting money, faking works of art and assisting fellow prisoners to escape from Colditz by forging German passes. What it does is to present such objects as a potential source of historical evidence.”

Among the objects to be seen will be the massive and magnificent Piranesi vase, and the display will span continents and millennia, concluding with a section on techniques used to make and unmask fakes. Wait for Paul Craddock to explain more.

A Better World Tomorrow? The exhbition of photographs of London in the 1950s, .60s and 70s by Henry Grant – who lived in Golders Green for much of that time – continues at the Museum of London until February 25.

Angelic Skills: The Work of Angels, the British Museum display of 6th to 9th century metalwork focusing on the Irish Derrynaflan hoard, is strongly recommended. Take time, and perhaps a magnifying glass.

Newsletter-226-January-1990

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NEWSLETTER 226: January 1990 Edited by Isobel McPherson

A Happy New Year to all our readers, at home and overseas – and a special word of thanks to our contributors, who responded to our appeal for early copy. In it came, not only early but, as near as dash it, immaculate. Would that the job were always as easy:

DIARY

Tuesday 2nd January 1990 Presidential Address by our new President Dr Ralph Merrifield, entitled The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic. Dr Merrifield wonders if members will have recovered from seasonal festivities, but we have assured him that we will all make a special effort to come to meet him (even if still suffering from hangovers.)

Tuesday 6th February The Temple of Minerva, Harlow by Ian Jones, Curator of Harlow Museum.

Tuesday 6th March Constantinides Memorial Lecture by Percy Reboul and John Heathfield.

NOT ONLY “A PLACE IN TIME” but a belated CELEBRATION OF TWENTY-FIVE YEARS

Anyone reading this new HADAS Book cannot fail to grasp that the Society is very much alive and digging, not only metaphorically but also literally. Brigid Grafton Green writing in the Preface provides an excellent potted history of the Society up to its 25th Anniversary in 1986. The book “is about human settlement in the area now covered by the London Borough of Barnet from the earliest times until the end of the Middle Ages”, starting when the Heath was an encampment and hunting area in the later Stone Age through to the Battle of Barnet in 1471.

The Society’s West Heath Dig provided a wealth of important evidence for the Middle Stone Age period, although “flints” might be difficult for some people to appreciate. However, moving on to the Bronze and -Iron Ages, we have some striking finds from Brockley Hill and Mill Hill. in the Roman period the Society has had some spectacular success, excavating the Pottery at Brockley Hill, the Thirlby Road Site in Burnt Oak and then the Roman Road in Copthall Fields.

HADAS has also been able to cast some light into the “Dark” and Middle Ages and establish a reasonably clear outline sketch of life within the Borough of Barnet, with various finds from the different digs as well as evidence from historical records such as Court Rolls.

Although the book is the work of several different authors (all members of HADAS: Brigid Grafton Green, Victor Jones, Myfanwy Stewart, Pamela Taylor, Brian Wrigley, Helen Gordon and Ted Sammes), they are to be congratulated for producing such a unified book, which is well illus­trated with photos, drawings and maps (although I think that the maps might have been made larger). Speaking as a two year old (archaeologically of course) I was enthralled. It is a good read and well worth having on your own bookshelf along with your trowel. I look forward to the publication of Volume Two which should bring us up to the early part of the 20th Century.

Finally, I should declare a vested interest, I happen to be looking after the sales of the book. Nevertheless, I do look forward to hearing from many of you. Send £4.50 50p for P & P or phone me and I will tell you of the nearest bookshop that stocks the book. (Alan Lawson, 68 Oakwood Road, NW11 6RN 01-458 3827)

CUICUL PETER PICKERING

Some members will recall that our daughter, Helen, went to Moscow at about the same time as Lady Braithwaite, but last May was declared “persona non grata” and returned unceremoniously to England. Since then she has been posted to Algeria, and we visited her there in November. Algeria, unlike the other Mahgreb countries, has not developed its tourist industry, but like them has several Roman cities excavated early this century. We therefore eagerly agreed with her suggestion of a trip to Djemila (Arabic for “the beautiful”), the ancient Cuicul. The journey from Algiers was over 300 kilometres, and we stayed a night in the large town of Setif, whose museum has two glorious mosaics, one of the triumph of Dionysus (lions, camels, an elephant, Indians etc. on a black back­ground) and the other of the birth of Venus surrounded by a border of assorted birds.

Cuicul lies on a ridge, just beyond the modern village, and through it pass to and from school the children from the farmsteads below. They are watched over by a number of custodians, who have little else to do; in the whole of a lovely hot November morning, under a cloudless sky, there was one Algerian couple looking round, and in the afternoon we saw six other visitors.

Cuicul has a little museum, which contains many fine mosaics – or rather is made from them, since the floors and all of the inside and much of the outside walls are mosaics of Venus, Hylas among the nymphs, Europa, Dionysus, hunting, mysteries, and a very lengthy poem to a

bishop. The town itself has everything a Roman city should have: baths, fountains, a triumphal arch (in honour of Caracalla), a temple to the Severi, a theatre with a stunning view beyond the stage wall, two fora, a market, and two large churches and a baptistery. Everywhere there are inscriptions honouring emperors (and not a few with the defaced names of emperors whom the city wished to forget it had ever honoured), and, even more frequently, letting passers-by know at whose expense the market or whatever had been erected. Particularly interesting were the table with standard measures in the market and an altar in the forum with carvings of the sacrificial victim and the implements used in the rite. Even if, as the guidebook Helen had been clever enough to borrow said, the excavation had been primitive and the restorations imaginative, the ensemble was beautiful and fascinating. We were privileged to see it in ideal conditions. Do the Algerians not understand about progress? They too could have hundreds of coaches, guides waving little flags and recounting legends in all the tongues of the earth, and lots of coca-cola tops everywhere. You do not even have to pay for entry to Cuicul. Nor do they have many postcards; sad, when photography in the museum is forbidden.

For the record, Cuicul is probably a native name. The city was founded as a colony of veterans under Nerva, and extended under Commodus. It survived the period of Vandal rule, and probably continued for some time after its last recorded date (553 AD); but when the Arabs conquered North Africa it must have been the ruin they called “The Beautiful”. It was a smallish city, and many similar probably lie unexcavated in Algeria.

CITY PARISH AND COUNCIL Ted Sammes

This was the title of the Local History Conference organised by L AM A S at the Museum of London on Saturday November 25th. It was their 24th annual history conference and was in celebration of the 800th Anniversary of the London Mayoralty and also the centenary of the London County Council.

As usual there were many societies showing their latest work and selling their publications. (It would be wonderful to see so many for the archaeological conference in the spring.)

The chairman for the day was Nick Fuentes, managing editor of the London Archaeologist, deputising for Derek Renn, which function he carried out with a light touch and some mildly humorous introductions. At the same time he admitted that he was more at home with dirt archae­ology than documents.

Dr Caroline Barron set the ball rolling by presenting many facets of the early Medieval City of London. The population of the City in 1300 has been estimated to be about seventy thousand, falling later as the result of plagues to about forty thousand. It did not regain this size until about the 17th century.

A surprising quantity of archival material has survived including four volumes of the transactions of the Court of Aldermen. They are very difficult to read and she estimated that it had taken her three years to get to grips with them.

The City Folk Moot stemmed from Saxon times being summoned by a bell to meet in the North East corner of what later became St Paul’s church­yard. By the 13th century the City was divided into Wards, each run by an Alderman who had to hold his own Moot. Over the years the pattern changed as the City grew and new, vital roles emerged, amongst them people responsible for keeping the streets paved, clean and drained. Often there were arguments as one ward swept its rubbish across the border into the next: The Beadle held a critical position and would have been able to read and write. Bread and beer were staple parts of the diet, as was also fish.

The Court of Common Council evolved from 1285 and in due course had its own coloured Livery for special occasions. Great secrecy was imposed on the proceedings of the Council. By the fifteenth century the Lord Mayor was only allowed to hold office for one year at a time. In the early period Lord Mayors were seldom knighted, but by 1500 the practice had become common.

Dr. T. Harper Smith took us through similar evolutionary processes in respect of the County of Middlesex. He believed that the position and evolution of local government in the County was a special case which had evolved because of the large land holdings of the Abbey of Westminster at Domesday.

After lunch John Richardson asked us to consider the evolutionary trials and tribulations of the Parish of St. Pancras. Population partly forsook the area round the old church and settled round a new chapel of ease in a less boggy area. This almost had the effect of rendering the old church redundant, the vicar refusing to preach there more than once a month. Similarly there were two burial grounds, side by side, charging different rates:

Finally he dealt with the destruction of Agar Town when the railways came to the area. They brought no compensation to the people living in the area and the disturbance of burials was considered a scandal.

Dr . Ron Cox gave a lively, running presentation on Captain Shaw, a distant relative of George Bernard Shaw. Captain Shaw was the first Fire Chief of the Metropolitan Board of Works. He had much opposition to over­come in combining a consortium of ten individual companies into one working authority. This action followed the Great Fire of Tooley Street, and the findings of a select committee of the House of Commons.

The final speaker, John Davis, talked on aspects of the London County Council, which (had it survived) would be celebrating its centenary this year. He said that we tend to look at the local aspects of Town Halls, gas and waterworks etc., but there is also Parliamentary power behind the scenes. His paper was very detailed but did not hold the same appeal for me, despite his witty comments.

All-in-all, it was a good day which I know many HADAS members missed. Local History can be fun!

Membership of LAMAS is open to all, the standard rate is £7.50, details from Mrs. Rita Springthorpe, Street Farm, Heath Road, Bradfield, Essex C011 2XD.

FRIARY PARK REVISITED – HOW THE EYE DECEIVETH! John Enderby

It will be recalled how some years ago, HADAS attempted without success to trace the foundations of the ancient Manor House of Friern Barnet in Friary Park. The old house, which was originally the manse or country residence of the Friars of St. John, is documented as the first “hospitium” for the entertainment of travellers on the northern road, being some nine miles from the City of London. This house was completely demolished about 1830, and the existing one built on a seemingly new site for a private owner (Edmund William Richardson) in 1871. The Estate was then bought by Sidney Simmons and the Middlesex County Council in 1909, passing to the London Borough of Barnet in 1965. The latter is now carrying out a survey for an extensive repair and refurbishment programme to the house, thought likely to cost over £300,000. During the course of the survey, an unexplained arched cavity came to light by the side of the coal shute.

A “state of the art” Fibre Optic Infra-Red Video Camera was hired (at £30 per hour!) and lowered through a tiny aperture. The resulting film appeared to reveal an extensive tiled chamber filled with clear water. This revelation caused much excitement for there had been mention in past writings concerning the original Friary of not only a Monks-hole, thought to be a subterranean passage leading to a confessionary, but also a Monks lavatory or bath. Had this at last been substantiated through a marvel of modern technology? Philip Wilson, an old friend in the LBB Planning office, quickly phoned me and arranged an immediate site meeting and the loan of the video film for further study. Having watched it, I was convinced like Archimedes, that I had every reason to yell “Eureka!”

After another site visit along with Brian Wrigley, the LBB agreed to open up the cavity. This was done, and I rushed over to Friary Park to assess the result, camera at the ready. I could hardly believe my eyes. Instead of the Monks Bath or possibly, subterranean passage, I saw before me a soundly constructed shallow well of patently late Victorian date. I then realised that the video camera had played a devilish trick on us all by “flattening” the picture it produced due to reflection from the standing water in a confined space: A salutary lesson, was thus learnt of the danger of taking short cuts in archaeology and allowing one’s knowledge of folk legends to colour facts. When the well was subsequently pumped dry prior to infilling, no artefacts were found in the silt and debris at the bottom, What could be more interesting is an examination of two more wells, one shown by a plumb line to be 200 feet deep, in the grounds at the back of the house. So, watch this space. Maybe all’s well after all.

SOUTHWARK CATHEDRAL VISIT AND CHRISTMAS DINNER – 5 DECEMBER

Once again some 65 HADAS members gathered on an early December evening for a social occasion to usher in the festive seasons the formula of a little erudition followed by a fine dinner proved as usual to be a winning combination.

At Southwark Cathedral – the Church of St. Saviour and St. Mary Overie ­we were received by Canon Peter Penwarden, Vice-Provost and Precentor, who proved to be an admirable guide. He skilfully took us through the history of this splendid Gothic building, starting with the legend of a seventh century convent church built on a riverbank site by a ferryman’s daughter, and dedicated to St. Mary Overie (over the water). In the 9th century the Bishop of Winchester rebuilt the church after a fire, adding a monastery, but both were replaced in 1087 by a Norman church of which a few fragments may still be seen. When this burnt down in 1206, it was replaced by a fine Gothic building, the first in London, and on which Westminster Abbey was modelled.

In 1539 it became the parish church of St. Saviour, but decay and collapse led to the reconstruction of the present nave, a copy of the marvellous Gothic original, coinciding with its promotion to Cathedral in 1897. The church has links with Shakespeare who worshipped here (his brother Edmond’s gravestone is in the choir), and with Harvard University, whose founder John Harvard was born a butcher’s son in Southwark in 1607; the Cathedral’s Harvard Chapel was paid for by grateful Americans.

A short walk into Borough High Street took us to the George Inn, dating from 1676 and the last remaining galleried coaching house in London, now owned by the National Trust. They had prepared for us an excellent meal, served by cheerful staff in a pleasant upstairs room. Conversation and wine flowed freely, and our only concern was for those unfortunate members whose acquisition of the flu virus had prevented their being with us. However, we were delighted to have with us not only three Founder Members of the Society, Olive Banham, John Enderby and Ted Sammes, but Colin Evans and his sister. Colin, who now lives in France, was an active member and still maintains his interest. It was very pleasant to meet him again.

John Enderby proposed, in a witty speech, a vote of thanks for Dorothy Newbury for having organised, with her usual efficiency, such a splendid evening that some members voted it the “best ever”. The waiting list will be even longer next year. STEWART J. WILD

Brigid Grafton Green writes: “One great attraction of Christmas is that it’s a time for catching up with news of old friends. It was a pleasure to hear from DAISY HILL – a Vice-President of long standing and secretary of HADAS in the late sixties. She retired to live in Chesterfield some years ago, but likes to keep in touch with events in Hendon – and the Newsletter helps her to do so. ‘I enjoy reading what you are all doing,’ she writes, and adds most generously ‘have enclosed a wee cheque for the funds.’ Thanks, Daisy, we do appreciate your interest and help.”

The December issue of the Newsletter was a joy to read (writes Percy Reboul) – and not because I got a mention: The delightful earpiece, line drawings and pictures, to say nothing of the quality of the typewriting made it, for me, the most attractive issue ever published.

Congratulations to Liz Holliday and all concerned.

THE “MITRE DIG AT BARNET VICTOR JONES

This has proceeded through December with a group of five of six enthusi­astic members and several new layers are being cleared; at one level medieval pottery has now been found. Digging has now been suspended for the holiday and will be resumed as soon as weather permits – and the landlord agrees.

THE IRISH QUESTION IN THE IRON AGE

David Keys (The Independent, Tuesday 12th December 1989), reported on excavations on a loop of the Shannon at Drumsua, near Carrick. The double earthwork, constructed in the 1st century B.C., and once thought to be part of an Iron Age Fort, spanned the neck of the loop, denying access to the south from two extremely shallow fords to the north. The largest of the two pairs of double ramparts was 90 ft. wide, 18 ft. high and 1¾ miles long with what is thought to be an entrance complex – perhaps a monumental entrance gateway into what became the Kingdom of Connacht. Each gate seems to have been around six yards wide and at least four yards high, though the evidence for this rests on greatly strengthened ramparts, with a wooden palisade, at this point and one giant post-hole.

Fifteen miles north of this site, an earlier earthwork known as Black Pig’s Dyke marks a possible territorial boundary between the warring tribes of Ulster and Connacht. This one is constructed to deter invaders from the south. Together, the two defensive systems throw more light on the long­standing hostility which is reflected in many of the ancient Irish tales. They also cast a long shadow.