'Careful' Colin wearing a big hat in this hot spell. Stay hydrated and have a break in the shade if you are on site at the moment, as the finds are hot but so is the weather!
Sunday, 18 July 2021
Saturday, 17 July 2021
Egg & Cup for Breakfast
A very hot day today, so we had the pot washing crew under cover.
The base of a 'Bellarmine' jug.
The body of a Bellarmine jug.
The ditch produced a fine collection of stone balusters.
This fine carved stone is of the 'cup & egg' design. It would have been in a prominent postion.
The large stone is a particularly fine example.
At the moment it cannot be said that we have the cellar or the corner of the house definitively. We plan to open another trench soon to answer this question. This photo is of a wall (bottom right) and a limestone slab with a petrified wave pattern. is this a floor?
De-cellar-ration
We are gradually reducing the area that we think is the cellar, but as with most features in the excavation that is provisional.
This feature is a large ditch that cuts east west and is in front of the house. Not sure yet of its function.
This area is made up of burnt material inside this fragment of wall.
We have now reduced this area of burning and have found that it is a fill of a shallow pit.
Wednesday, 7 July 2021
The reducing of the the fills of the cellar continue.
Early clay pipe: In broad terms there were always two different styles of pipe in contemporary use; those with heels and those with spurs. Heel forms were the earliest style to be introduced in the late sixteenth century and remained the dominant form in most areas for at least the next century.
This mark will allow us to do some research into where this very early clay pipe was made.
Thursday, 1 July 2021
As expected the cellar area is coming up with a rich vein of finds from the top rubble layer. Hopefully that vein will continue into the lower dumps. The layer below the rubble is a nice mix of silt and burnt material, so fingers crossed that we will have more finds to show soon.
These finds are 18th-19th c.
Possible furniture stud; copper pin; metal button.
Rim, body and handle from the same vessel.
Sunday, 27 June 2021
Cellar-brations?
The first 5m square trench is being excavated stratigraphically to find the corner of the house at this location. This will allow us to measure the length of this elevation. Indications suggest that this is the location of the cellar, as shown on the painting by the small windows at the base of this wall.
The stratigraphy is being taken down by hand. Hopefully, this is where the cellar is located.
The North East facing wall foundation.
Our collection of ceramic is building.
Nice pipe bowl fragment. Decorated and with a makers mark.
Our metal detector continues to find artefacts that could be missed by the naked eye.
Our ceramic collection will hopefully allow us to build up a database covering the whole life of the house.
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