Thursday 21 July 2022

Keeping you posted

This week we have found more postholes and cleaned up the foundation. 

Another posthole being excavated. One of three we have found in a line.
 

The foundation is now looking very nice and shows the courses that still exist.

This piece of Ham stone came up from a small trial trench and is the same as two examples of architectural stone now in the local pub.

This very nice stone-lined posthole indicates a very large twin gate (put together with the other two postholes) or the small building that is indicated on one of the images we have of this elevation.

This posthole has been cut through this foundation.

The foundation has certainly been knocked about and only survives as a handful of stones in a line heading ot the bottom of this image, with the posthole on the opposite side. The other two postholes are situated next to the baulk, one by the bag and the other by the yellow bucket.  

Trying to find the foundation, but it fades out as it heads NW.

The posthole that cuts through the scruffy foundation. It has been dug the same way as the others two; first a pit and then a stone-lined hole for the timber post.

The third posthole with the very nice stone lining.


This small trial trench was dug to see if the neat foundation ran toward the garden wall, just to the right of this digger (it did), and it produced a nice bonus of the Ham stone fragments. 

Tuesday 12 July 2022

Wait for one house and then you get two!?

Well, it may be that we have an old house and a new house, made from the old one. It's all quite complicated, so we will leave all that to the final report, which will be summerised here a.s.a.p.

Meanwhile, here are some latest pictures of this seasons digging so far.

This year we have opened a small trench on what we hope is the NW corner. 

It was nice to see that several courses of this wall survived.

Apart from the wall foundation we had a rare posthole feature. It is a square at the base of a  circular pit, which would have been needed to hold a substantial timber post in place.


From what we can see the wall to the left was one side of a gap with the posthole on the right holding a timber post which probably held in place a gate or large door. This may be the gap that allowed access to the inner courtyard, which we found in 2019. 

Another angle on the wall courses.

From the wall we have another foundation that is at a right angle, and that is the one we are digging at the moment.

The new interpretations will need some thinking and discussion within the group. The archaeology is one of only several ways of researching a site and we have people looking at the archival material and surviving drawings of the house. Each can add information about the history of this important structure. It will then be a case of interpreting all this information and coming to some conclusion as to the building and modifications that happened over the two hundred year life of Stalbridge House. 

We all hope that our findings and all the artefacts can go on show for the education of local people and visitors to this historic village, home to one of sciences most important figures, Robert Boyle.       


 


AGM 2024

 The DDCAG AGM took place and we discussed the forthcoming sites that we will be working on this year. The DMV in East Dorset was presented ...