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FSARG 2008-9
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Project outline
As reported earlier, the FSARG team has decided to carry out a multidisciplinary study of Ospringe. The early stages involve pulling together the considerable amount of research done on the area over the years and pinpointing the outstanding questions about the settlement. These are likely to centre upon a) Medieval Ospringe, especially the period before the building of the Maison Dieu and including manorial and church investigations b) the Upper West Brook valley in prehistory c) recording and investigating the fast-disappearing vernacular landscapes.
Justification: In 2003, the Kent Archaeological Team working with English Heritage produced a detailed archaeological assessment of Faversham in a volume on Kent’s Historic Towns (KHTS). Ospringe was not included, even though the historic part of the village falls within the modern Faversham town parish. We do not think that the history of Faversham is understandable without Ospringe, and intend to redress the problem. There are also a number of significant gaps in Ospringe’s historical record, notably the mid medieval state of play and the prehistoric, and we would hope to address these as far as possible.
Multidisciplinary aspects: We are working closely with Mike Frohnsdorff, the Maison Dieu team and English Heritage for the medieval history side and with Dr Paul Wilkinson for the Roman aspects. We intend to introduce the skills of environmental archaeology involving local palaeobotanists, probably in 2009. The possibility of some creative work on the theme of Ospringe’s past is being explored.
Community aspects: The small size and community strengths of Ospringe are enabling a great deal of contact with and involvement of local people. Ideally, we would like to work with such groups as the school, church, allotment society and also with local landowners.
Details: The approach for 2008 is mainly exploratory and preliminary, with much archive research, geophysics surveying, small scale test pitting and perhaps some auguring. From this should come a clear focus for work in 2009?
Final product: The main end product will be a detailed archaeological assessment of Ospringe, using the model contained in the KHTS. Simon Mason, the Kent Archaeologist responsible for this area, has indicated the Kent team’s support for this, and it will be archived at Maidstone. We would also hope to put on an exhibition at the Maison Dieu and publish a book for local people and visitors. The site archive (material, paper and digital) will be lodged with the Faversham Society and be available to any researcher who wants to use it.
Funding: No specific funding is needed as, thanks to the Kent Network grant, we are well set up for the immediate future.
Update on progress
During April and May the following progress has been made:
Resources
Field work
A very detailed house to house survey has been carried out using the townscape material. Many questions arose from this exercise which are currently being followed through.
The whole area has been walked in a general way, including the large allotments site, and decisions made about possible field walking locations.
A geo-resistivity survey has been carried out in an open, unexcavated part of the Maison Dieu site, and permissions gained for some other selected areas in and around the village.
Contacts
We have made
friendly contacts with the Maison Dieu trustees, the Vicar, the
school and board of governors, the Allotment manager and many local
people, who are already showing interest. A meeting has been
arranged for Wednesday June 18th in the Primary School
for all local residents who want to know more about their village
and the project. We are also beginning to feel at home in the Ship,
Ospringe’s only surviving pub.
Next stage
The field season is from Saturday 19th July to Sunday 10th August. We already have clear ideas about where we want to be focusing our efforts and will be confirming permissions over the next two weeks. Watch this space for another update in August, during our post-excavation phase.
Other work
Running alongside the new project, considerable work has been carried out on archiving the Hunt the Saxons material, paper and digital records. The Finds team is at present setting up a sophisticated pottery reference system for Faversham using the fabric series of the Canterbury Archaeology Trust, and is looking forward to applying their expertise this summer. Another small group is working hard on the illustrations for the Hunt the Saxons publication, due for publication at the end of this year.
Very busy as you can see! Once again, I must express my awe at the levels of skills and initiative developing amongst team members. The training sessions over the winter have paid enormous dividends. On-going thanks for all the effort and I’m looking forward to the summer season.
Pat Reid
May 28th 2008.
1. Introduction
Note that we no longer use the term ‘test pit’ for our mini-excavations. After all, we are not ‘testing’ the site for a future large scale dig - we are using a specific technique appropriate in highly constrained situations and the stand alone term ‘keyhole’ is more accurate.
2.
Ospringe itself
Ospringe is a small village located on Watling St,
the road which has linked London- Rochester-Canterbury-Dover since
Roman times. Since the 1960s, the village has been bypassed by the
M2 motorway, which runs one mile to the south, but the A2 (modern
Watling St) is still very busy, carrying much industrial traffic
through to the M2 link road. Ospringe in situated in a sheltered
south to north valley, through which until the 1960s ran a small but
powerful chalk spring-fed river, the Westbrook. The rounded hills
on either side of the valley are chalk, and the valley floored with
alluvium. Deposits of recent brick earth and gravels also are found
in the area.
3.
Community contacts.
For the
Understanding Ospringe project, preparatory and follow-up
meetings were held for local people and the FSARG team. These were
well attended, with lots of questions and discussion. From the
preparatory session came an abundance of offers of gardens and other
kinds of cooperation and the follow up session generated lots of
interest in next years programme. During the 2008 main season, the
project was based in the front garden of a house in Water Lane,
which meant that local people could call in at any time, talk to the
finds team and even carry out some finds processing. At weekends,
staff at the nearby Maison Dieu Museum sent their visitors along the
road to visit the base. Finally we made good use of the excellent
Ship Inn on Ospringe St, and had many useful and interesting talks
with Ospringe people.
4. Desk
top investigations
Before any decisions could be made about
practicalities of the project, resources were chased to give as much
support information as possible. The following list shows the
materials used so far.
Historic maps (range at present 1750- 2008)
Documents
Previous archaeological interventions ( Arch. Cant. and other journal articles, ‘grey’ documents from commercial digs, SMR/HER information)
Published accounts e.g. Hasted
Swale conservation records for buildings
Informal
oral accounts of vanished lifestyles
A lot of information was found on the Roman presence at nearby Syndale hill (thought by many to be the site of Durolevum mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary) and on the Hospital of St Mary, a pilgrim’s hospice founded in 1234 down in the valley. Of the latter, two buildings have survived, either side of the former Westbrook to the south of the main complex and the A2. One of these buildings is known as the Maison Dieu and houses impressive archaeological material from the excavations on Syndale hill in the 1920s and the excavation of part of the Hospital complex in 1977 prior to development.
Apart from these two well investigated topics, very little was recorded. Prehistory was represented by six SMR entries, all unprovenanced stray finds, although some excavation reports mentioned, in passing, finding worked flint. There seemed to be no archaeological evidence whatsoever for activity during the eight hundred years between AD410 and AD1234 (building of St Mary’s). To the south of the village, midway between the A2 and the modern M2, lies the parish church of St Peter and St Paul, well away from the main village but close to a Domesday manor, Queen Court. Between the two buildings lies a sheltered basin through which the Westbrook formerly flowed. Queen Court’s present timber framed building is probably 15th-16th century in origin. Very little attention has been paid to these intriguing buildings and their place in the landscape of the valley.
Finally, it was brought home to those of us who have not had local childhoods just how much of the village setting and character has changed in the last 100 years. Mainly this involves loss – of hop fields, brickfields and works, chalk quarrying, inns and stables, post office and village shops. There is not even a community hall nowadays, although the junior school thrives. The only surviving public amenity is a single public house, the Ship. Saddest of all, the stream that gave rise to the settlement in the first place has long gone, pumped away at source by Southern Water and the springs are dry.
5. Field work
a) House SurveyOR
6. Findings
The most striking and unexpected finding was the shallowness of the archaeology in Ospringe village, so that in most keyholes, prehistoric levels were reached at around 90cm. In the older parts of Faversham previously investigated by FSARG, the maximum keyhole depth of 1.2 metres often reached only the late medieval/ early post medieval, with any surviving prehistoric much further down.
The only period for which the finds were more abundant than in Faversham Town was the Roman. Given the importance of nearby Syndale in Roman times, this is not surprising, but it must also be acknowledged that in Ospringe we were far more likely to be reaching deposits of this period. The Roman material from Ospringe can mostly be seen as residual, but in K44, around 8 metres south of the A2, North Kent shell tempered ware (not a burial deposit) was found associated with a surface of large flints with oyster shell in the crevices. Was this a glimpse of the original Roman road? In short, does the present course of the A2 in the village follow the old Roman road or is it, as up on Syndale Hill, it running parallel to the Roman road, around eight metres to the south. Investigating the Roman history of the area is not one of our priorities – there are plenty of others doing that at the moment – but we cannot resist e making further investigations to do with the routing of the road through the village itself.
So far, the evidence is against any marked development of this village site during the early and late medieval periods although there were small amounts of pottery from the main medieval period (1200-1450) in all eleven keyholes (K50 the most) In one location north of Ospringe St there are hints of another stone and flint medieval building. Keyholes are, of course, only micro samples of the local archaeology, so it may be that we have missed significant locations and we have not yet investigated the eastern end of the village but the signs for Proposal 1 are not promising. Along Water Lane, a few highly abraded sherds of Saxon period pottery have been found: we are not Hunting the Saxons here but the evidence for their presence, however slender, is very interesting.
The post medieval and 19th-20th century evidence was rather puzzling. Hardly any good quality post medieval pottery or glass was found, although there was a fair amount of the difficult to date London red wares from this broad period. This is in marked contrast to Faversham Town, where the post medieval period is well represented as prosperous by the archaeology and by the handsome buildings and fronts dating from this period. Whilst surrounded by ‘posh houses’ such as Syndale, Ospringe House, the Oaks and the Mount, the village itself does not have any such impressive buildings and the archaeology suggests a modest standard of living. By 1800, the North West part of the village was occupied by a Napoleonic era infantry barracks, from which only the officer’s houses survive. Keyholes 45, 46 and 48 are worth examining for further information on the barracks.
The most exciting finds this summer were of prehistoric sites. K53 (Water Lane) revealed late Iron Age material and possibly earlier pottery sherds. K59 (former Anchor pub in Ospringe St) at a depth of around 1 metre was yielding grooved ware, Neolithic flints, calcined flints and two teeth of an auroch, amongst other early material less easy to identify. These are described in detail in the keyhole reports. The field walking has also yielded a number of worked flints and discarded flakes, from the Mesolithic period onwards.
7. Final
comments and ways forward
Our work so far
has already revealed that our predictions about the importance of
the Middle Westbrook valley in prehistoric times were well founded.
We have already greatly increased the knowledge of this. As a
result, we have prioritized training in worked flint recognition and
will be having prehistoric pottery training in early 2009. Next
year we will be completing the village study and moving up towards
the Queen Court/ Church area, which could be very productive.
Another priority which has shot to the top of the table is for developing environmental archaeology techniques for our kind of work. This is already under discussion and training arranged for the Easter season. If only we had had the skills when finding the Neolithic material … though we did take a sample, it must await skill development.
As to the broad medieval period, although evidence is tipping (for negative reasons) towards a modest past for Ospringe, the two possible scenarios are still up for testing. We constantly remind ourselves of the old archaeological warning … ‘absence of evidence is not necessarily evidence for absence’ and our decisions next season will continue the testing further.
Finally there is the Roman road. Although there have been a number of excavations of Watling Street, including a couple nearby at Syndale, I am not aware of any attempts to interpret what happened to it during the succeeding centuries. It is hard to imagine the local early Saxons maintaining and repairing it. I would welcome contact from anyone who has solid evidence which could help to illuminate this.
8.
References
In the interests of readability, this report has not
been footnoted, but a full bibliography is in preparation for 2009.
Acknowledgements
As always, the list is long, and I hope I
do not miss anyone out. Firstly, thanks to Mike Frohnsdorff and John
Owen, local historians who were very helpful on the documentary
histories of the Maison Dieu and Queen Court respectively. Gratitude
to Andrew Mayfield and Edward Salter at Invicta House for giving us
such brilliant access to the SMR/HER. Thanks to the Brays for
permission to field walk, to all those wonderful householders who
let us into their pretty gardens, took such an interest and kept us
refreshed and to the Barkaways who arranged for the horse to be out
of the way whilst we geo-surveyed the Maison Dieu plot (sorry we
didn’t find a gold cup). Thanks to the Maison Dieu trustees, the
Vicar and the Ospringe CofE Junior School Board of Governors, all of
whom showed interest and helped out in different ways. Thanks to
Lisa Murley for a lovely article about the Neolithic finds in the
Faversham News. Last but most important of all, thanks and whole
hearted admiration for the members of the FSARG team - around 35 of
you have been involved in one way or another this year, working
close to professional standards. Roll on 2009.
Dr Patricia Reid
Meticulous excavation in
the
re-opened K61
Larger scale excavation took place at the Bier House site, close to Ospringe Church (K65, 66). The Bier House is a 19th century building, but lies on the site of a spring, now dry. We hoped that the spring and stream bed might contain evidence of prehistoric activity. This, sadly, was not the case although an unfamiliar type of stone tool was found in the field layer. These will be looked at closely in November by our visiting expert.
Our largest trench so far OA65
b) Eastern end of Ospringe village
The five metre trench K63
c) Hospital of St Mary of Ospringe
A wall of the Hospital
of St Mary K62
K62 ready for an Open Day
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