Pupils of Richard Newman Primary School looked at the location of their school on a Victorian road and the sort of people who would have travelled by. They drew artwork about these characters and produced a collage booklet of their work.
Download On The Road
Tuesday, 22 April 2014
Thursday, 3 April 2014
Saturday Test Pitters
Last year we dug our test pits during a two-week field season. This year we plan to dig test pits on regular Saturdays through the summer and autumn. Please get in touch if you would like to join in. We pkan to search for remains of old farms shown on Victorian Ordnance Survey maps and the mills at Smithies.
Saturday, 22 March 2014
To the Woods at Athersley North Primary School
Here is the children's collage booklet produced by pupils of Athersley North Primary School during the art workshops. They explored the Victorian history of their school as a woodland.
Download To The Woods
Download To The Woods
Friday, 21 March 2014
Monday, 10 March 2014
Digging again in 2014
We will be digging more test pits in Athersley, New Lodge and the Smithies this year!
We plan two weeks - one beginning on Saturday May 24th and the other on July 5th.
For the week in may we hope to dig six days of test pits at Smithies. We will be looking for evidence of the mills that were there. There were two mills during the Victorian period.
We will post more details about the July season here soon.
Please get in touch if you would like to get involved. Call Chris on 01226 722571 or 07963 586767, or email bill@inheritage.co.uk.
We plan two weeks - one beginning on Saturday May 24th and the other on July 5th.
For the week in may we hope to dig six days of test pits at Smithies. We will be looking for evidence of the mills that were there. There were two mills during the Victorian period.
Barnsley Smithy Mill was north of Smithies Lane. It began as a
corn mill during the late 1200s, when it was recorded in a charter of
neighbouring land. It continued in this use until 1870 when it was converted to
a paper mill. Barnsley Smithies Fulling Mill began as
a wool-washing mill circa 1350, probably to process some of the
large quantities of wool and fleeces from Monk Bretton Priory, after
King Edward III invited Flemish weavers to England in 1338 to train English
weavers in making finer cloths. The waterwheel would have been powered by
a leat taking water from behind a weir on the Dearne. In 1608-10
a fulling mill ‘belonging to le Smithies’ is recorded. By 1666 it appears to
have been converted to a paper mill when it was included in the will of Edward
Roades of Monk Bretton. The last documentary reference to it is in 1768 when
John, son of John Wood, papermaker of Burton Smithies, was baptised.
In 1854 two Smithy Mills are shown close to each other north of Smithies Lane on the first edition of the Ordnance Survey. The more northerly was for wool and the southerly one for corn. By the 1892 Ordnance Survey both appear to be part of the Valley Paper Works.
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| Smithies in 1854 |
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| Smithies in 1892 |
Please get in touch if you would like to get involved. Call Chris on 01226 722571 or 07963 586767, or email bill@inheritage.co.uk.
Tuesday, 18 February 2014
Athersley Schools Test Pits
Here is a short, non-technical, report of results from the test pits dug by pupils of the three primary schools in September 2013.
Schools test pits.
Schools test pits.
Monday, 17 February 2014
Archaeology Report 2013
| The team excavate at St Helen's Church. |
Here is the report of what we found during the first season of archaeological test pits in Athersley and New Lodge as part of the HLF ‘Hands on History’ project.
Download the full report.
Download the finds report tables.
| Digging an Athersley garden. |
In September 2013 we excavated 42 archaeological test pits in the gardens, primary school grounds and grounds of St Helen's Church, Laithes Lane, of Athersley and New Lodge. The excavations revealed widespread archaeological evidence from the 18th century through to the modern times, even a piece of medieval pottery was identified. This evidence comes from pottery, clay pipes, glass, animal bones and industrial residues (iron and glass slags). Deliberate burial was also revealed in the form of a dog who is still remembered locally and chance loss was also found in the form of an 18th century gentleman's fob seal.
| 18th century gentleman's fob seal. |
| Impression of the Greek or Roman figure on the seal. Could it be Bacchus / Dionysus? |
The report outlines the aims, methodology and results of the 2013 test pit programme, together with an analysis and interpretation of the results. There are plans showing the locations of test pits.
The test pit programme was managed by Dr. B Bevan and the Romero Community, and supervised by Chris Scurfield. Volunteers from the local community excavated the test pits. Further test pits were excavated by over 100 pupils from three local schools, generating future interest in the archaeology, and also revealing some unexpected results.
We are very grateful to all the owners of gardens and land who offered sites for test pits:
New Lodge: Beryl Russell, Nicola Kelley, Frank, Mike and Rebecca Jones
Athersley North: Athersley North School, Lyn Shepperd, Lorraine Sykes, Brooks
Ridough, Megan Palmer, Ashleigh McKnight
Athersley South: Father Marshall, Richard Newman & Athersley South School, Carl
Yeates.
Cartwright, Mary Dalton, Kate Faulkes, Pearl Green, Abbey Jones, Sylvia Nixon, Joanne Mann, Conor O’Connoll, Daniel Parkes, Megan Palmer, Glenis and Mark Ravenscroft, Ashleigh McKnight, Beryl Russell, Brooks & Luke Ridough, and Carl & Poppy Yeates.
Thank you to all the pupils and teachers who took part from Richard Newman, Athersley North and Athersley South schools.
The excavation of the test pits, finds analysis and production of this report were funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund.
New Lodge: Beryl Russell, Nicola Kelley, Frank, Mike and Rebecca Jones
Athersley North: Athersley North School, Lyn Shepperd, Lorraine Sykes, Brooks
Ridough, Megan Palmer, Ashleigh McKnight
Athersley South: Father Marshall, Richard Newman & Athersley South School, Carl
Yeates.
| Beryl, Sylvia and Chris backfill the first test pit, New Lodge Crescent. |
Thank you to the volunteers who dug the test pits and washed the finds: Carol Clair, Robert
Cartwright, Mary Dalton, Kate Faulkes, Pearl Green, Abbey Jones, Sylvia Nixon, Joanne Mann, Conor O’Connoll, Daniel Parkes, Megan Palmer, Glenis and Mark Ravenscroft, Ashleigh McKnight, Beryl Russell, Brooks & Luke Ridough, and Carl & Poppy Yeates.
Thank you to all the pupils and teachers who took part from Richard Newman, Athersley North and Athersley South schools.
The excavation of the test pits, finds analysis and production of this report were funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund.
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