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ACTIVITIES Archaeology Projects (external) |
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THE HATHERLEIGH LANDSCAPE GROUP The Hatherleigh History Society Landscape Project Group
had its first informal meeting on 2nd May 2001. THE HATHERLEIGH LANDSCAPE GROUP It was with some regret that the group put its mill project on hold earlier in the year. Most members felt that this project was proving a little ambitious and unwieldy for a group such as ours, particularly as few members have any practical archaeological experience or expertise. Instead we have turned our attentions to something much moremanageable - the parish tithe map. Hatherleigh is lucky enough to have its own copy of the map and the apportionment from which to work, and over the last few months we have been mapping field-names onto photocopies. Once this has been completed, we plan to look at the 1839 names in relation to information dating from about 40 years ago given by past workers on one of the large estates within the parish, as well as consulting work on local field-names undertaken by the WI and dating from about the same time. Quite accidentally this work ties in very nicely with our recent involvement with the Community Landscapes Project (CLP) based at Exeter University. With the help of the CLP, our tithe detail will soon be digitised, enabling certain aspects such as land-ownership and land-use to be plotted and mapped separately. Our group very much welcomes the input offered by the CLP for as most of our members come from a historical rather than archaeological background, we feel a definite need for the support of local bodies such as this to enable us to produce relevant and useful work. We look forward to a mutually beneficial relationship. THE HATHERLEIGH LANDSCAPE
GROUP - Deborah Laing-Trengove The past year has moved at a fairly sedate pace for the group. Most of our monthly meetings have been taken up with transcribing details from the Hatherleigh Tithe Apportionment onto A3 copied sheets of the Tithe Map itself, allowing us easy access to information for future research. This work is now all but complete. At our January meeting we called on Terry Green and Colin Humpreys of NDAS to talk to us about field-names and to to inspire us as to what to do next! Although nothing concrete was decided at the meeting, the conversation over a pint in the local pub afterwards did inspire me to re-examine some tiles that I had found whilst walking over our local common, Hatherleigh Moor. Out of an initial small collection of rather amorphous pieces, one diagnostic piece has now been confirmed by John Allen to be part of a Roman box-flue tile (tubulus). This type of tile, which is literally box-shaped, would have formed part of a hypocaust system, functioning as a conduit for warm air and smoke within the walls of a building. Typically the tiles have a surface scored with irregular wavy lines (combing) to provide a key for wall plaster. A further look at the find-spot yielded pieces of roof tile (tegula and imbrex) as well as plain tiles that would have been stacked in pilae to support the floor. The ceramic evidence, the close proximity to water and a large extant pit several metres from the finds all pointed towards an industrial kiln site. Bill Horner visited the site in early March and provisionally confirmed it to be a tilery. Only about a hundred of this type of site are known in the country and only one other in Devon (Exeter). Clearly this is a very exciting find for us because, as we were all long aware, “the Romans never got this far”! As the site will need to be more thoroughly investigated, it is my hope that as much of the work as possible will be carried out by local societies and professionals. To make a start we are holding a weekend of field-walking in May. Members of NDAS are invited to join us. Looking toward the longer term, we are hoping to get a buildings project going in Hatherleigh to learn more about the development of the town and the buildings within it.We plan to survey the Bridge Inn in May/June as a taster and to provide some initial training. Finally, I must say thank you to everyone for making me welcome at my first NDAS committee meeting. I look forward to greater involvement in the Society’s activities and hope to see some of you in Hatherleigh in the near future. Investigations at Hatherleigh: an Update - Deborah Laing-Trengove (Newsletter No 8 2004) Since May, work on the Roman tilery site at Hatherleigh
has been progressing well. Some ACE members spent a day dowsing the site
in early May and a few weeks later we held the planned fieldwalk, focusing
on the initial find spot and an adjacent stream. As the site was not ploughed,
the area that could be searched was quite small and thanks to a very good
turn out, the work was concluded in a much shorter time than anticipated.
A grid had previously been laid out and parties of volunteers were set
to searching the grid squares on either side of the stream. They found
tile fragments, lumps of baked clay, kiln wasters - at one point in very
large numbers –and one piece of tile that appeared to have a tally
scratched on it. This was a very enjoyable as well as productive day with
hundreds of pieces of tile In order to pre-empt any unwanted intrusive activity on the site, an informal metal detector survey was carried out in June. This yielded only three horseshoes, but was worth doing as it showed that the grass growth was such as to make any activity of this sort impossible. After an impassioned plea to the CBA, prompted by some unexpected fencing work on the site, Challenge Funding was acquired for a geophysical survey. Subsequently a fluxgate gradiometer survey was undertaken
by Ross Dean in July and the interpreted results indicate a number of
areas of interest. In line with the report recommendations, we plan to carry out some further geophysical survey work in the next few months to extend the area surveyed and hope to carry out further archaeological investigations in the future. The Hatherleigh Landscape Group has also been involved with other projects during the summer including recording gravestones in the local churchyard, an ongoing project, and concluding work on the tithe map. In June, group members with the help and tutoring of Colin Humphreys carried out a building survey at the Bridge Inn, Hatherleigh. Although this proved rather less straight forward than expected, the event generated enough interest to merit an ongoing project. There is enough local interest from residents to make the project viable and interesting, with offers of several properties to investigate in the coming year. Hatherleigh Moor: Update Deborah Laing-Trengove (Newsletter No 11 2006) We have previously reported on the discovery by Deborah Laing-Trengove of fragments of Roman tile near a stream on Hatherleigh Moor. In Spring 2005 NDAS members assisted with a fieldwalk during which many more fragments of Roman tile and brick were found together with suggestions of a kiln. In recent months John Allen (formerly of the RAM Museum, now of Exeter Archaeology) together with the Finds Liaison Officer for Devon has visited the site and taken away material for closer examination. A note is to appear in the Proceedings of the Devon Archaeological Society. Meanwhile on the other side of the Moor another tile has been found, suggesting that this industrial site might have been quite extensive. SouthWest Water say that they need to renew some pipes across the Moor. The work will entail a watching-brief. A Roman Tilery on Hatherleigh Moor You may remember that in the Autumn 2004 edition
of the NDAS Newsletter Deborah Laing- Trengove reported on a field-walk
on Hatherleigh Moor in which NDAS members had participated. |
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