Monday, 10 May 2010

“Ship-shape and Hartlepool-fashion” - Research Project


Whether you’re searching for the Mary Rose or a 19th century steamship lost in the Mediterranean, research is the key to success!

NAS NE, supported by Tees Archaeology and Hartlepool Museums & Heritage Service, is inviting anyone with an interest in ships and the sea to take part in “Ship-shape and Hartlepool-fashion”.

This international research project aims to discover the histories of nearly 2000 ships built in Hartlepool between 1836 and 1961; to track their voyages, learn about their crews and passengers, and discover their final resting places.

There is a huge amount of “hidden” information about these ships just waiting to be discovered, but we need your help to track it down – much of which can be done from the comfort of your own home!

All we would ask you to do is first complete and return a Project Volunteer Form (please email gary.green@hartlepool.gov.uk for a copy of the form)

We will then provide you with the names of two Hartlepool-built ships and ask you to track them through a run of digitised Lloyd’s Registers (covering the period 1930-1945), available on the PortCities Southampton website (http://www.plimsollshipdata.org/), recording any significant changes of information, for example, new owners, or a new Captain etc., on a project-specific recording form (also available as a download).

Then simply send your completed recording form back to us and we will add the data to the ‘Hartlepool-built’ website – with your contribution fully acknowledged of course.

For more details please follow this link to the NAS NE webpage
http://www.nauticalarchaeologysociety.org/projects/shiphape.php

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

Saltburn Guided Walk April 1st 2010



















Rachel Grahame and Gary Green of Tees Archaeology, and Beth Andrews of the Tees Valley Wildlife Trust, led a walk to explore the rutways cut into the rock on the shore under Huntcliff near Saltburn as part of the Tees Valley Wildlife Trust project 'Alum, Alchemy and Ammonites'

The event was attended by 26 people who enjoyed a sunny walk along the shore to Bird Flight Goit and back, looking at a building eroding out of the cliff thought to be the Saltburn alum house, and many examples of rutways on the rocky foreshore

For more events related to the project go to http://www.teeswildlife.org/events.htm

For more information on rutways go to http://www.teesarchaeology.com/new/saltburn.html

Thursday, 25 March 2010

Redcar Library - Saturday 20th March 2010





















On Saturday 20th March 2010, Redcar Central Library held A Local and Family History Festival, in conjunction with the North East Festival of Learning.

Stalls from all over the North East presented the residents of Redcar with an array of learning opportunities and Tees Archaeology were no exception.

The day was a great success with people enjoying a quiz, trying their hands at pottery reconstruction and the odd game of Anglo Saxon Taefl !

Wednesday, 24 March 2010

Tees Archaeology Dayschool 2010

The 2010 Tees Archaeology dayschool will be changing venues this year.

We will be presenting our Dayschool from Middlesbrough College on Saturday 13th November 2010 and the Dayschool will take the theme of Maritime Archaeology.

We obviously have a lot of details to finalise, but will keep you fully informed here, on our website and will be posting out Dayschool booking forms to everyone on our mailing list.

If you would like to book or would like more information please email ian.jones@hartlepool.gov.uk or telephone Tees Archaeology on 01429 523455

Digging up Life: A six-week course from the Centre for Life, Newcastle.

Digging up Life: A six-week course from the Centre for Life, Newcastle.



A popular, bite-sized series for archaeology enthusiasts returns to the Life Science Centre from May 13 2010 and runs every week until 17 June with the field trip taking place on Saturday 26th June. The cost for the course is £30 with an additional charge of £10 for the field trip.

Designed for adults and young people (from around 14 years old) who are interested in unearthing the treasures of the past, Mini Archaeology is a six-week course of evening lectures, held 7-9pm in the Life Theatre.

Life has teamed up with Durham University's Department of Archaeology whose archaeologists, all experts in their particular field, will deliver each of the six sessions. Areas covered will include Anglo-Saxon Kings, Rock Art of Northern Britain, the Iron Age and the Reformation.

The first lecture looks at "The earliest inhabitants of Britain" presented by Dr Mark White, Reader and Head of Department while colleague Dr Ross Barnett, Research Associate, will look at "Lions, leopards and lynx" and ask if they could have been the native big cats of Britain.

The course will end with a field trip investigating the archaeology of Northumberland through the ages. It will be led by Ian Colquhoun and Peter Rowley-Conwy.

Further course details at http://www.life.org.uk/life-science-centre/whats-on/events/mini-archaeology.

For more information, or to book, contact Niamh Lightfoot, tel 0191 243 8223 or visit http://www.life.org.uk/.
Life Science Centre
Times Square
Newcastle upon Tyne
Tyne and Wear
NE1 4EP

Located right next to Newcastle train station.
http://www.life.org.uk/life-science-centre/get-in-touch

Mini archaeology will be followed by Mini Medical School which returns by popular demand in September 2010.

FULL COURSE DETAILS

Thursday 13 May
Dr Mark White: The earliest inhabitants of Britain Dr Ross Barnett: Lions, leopards and lynxes - native big cats of Britain?

Thursday 20 May
Peter Rowley-Conwy: Pioneer farmers in northern Britain Greger Larson: Dead dogs, dead pigs: the DNA of domestic animals

Thursday 27 May
Chris Scarre: Stonehenge
Margarita Diaz-Andreu: Rock art of northern Britain

Thursday 3 June
Sarah Semple: Anglo-Saxon kings, kingship and gold Anwen Cafell: Human skeletons: stories from beyond the grave

Thursday 10 June
Tom Moore: The Iron Age: pre-Roman people in Britain Claire Nesbitt: Talking to the Wall? Excavating the Roman legacy in northern England

Thursday 17 June
Mike Church: Archaeobotany and experimentation in northern Britain Pam Graves: The archaeology of churches: before and after the Reformation

FIELD TRIP
Saturday 26 June - Ian Colquhoun, Peter Rowley-Conwy, Cost £10.

Thursday, 11 March 2010

Guided Walk Alum Quarries Mulgrave Woods - Saturday 24th April 2010

For the Cleveland I.A. Soc., Simon Chapman will be leading a walk on Saturday 24th April to look at alum quarries in Mulgrave Woods. The meeting place is in the car park at East Row, near Sandsend, outside the former cement mill at 11 am. (NZ 861125).

This circular walk will be over 4 miles in length along well-defined tracks with some moderate gradients but may be muddy in places. There are three sites of alum quarrying, the site of an ironstone shaft, and a number of drifts into the hillside seeking cementstone.

In addition, the ancient and recently conserved ruins of Mulgrave Castle may be visited.

Hopefully, tea and biscuits will be provided at the walk's conclusion, but please bring a packed lunch and some good weather.

Look forward to seeing you there,

Simon Chapman

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

The Tall Ships Races Hartlepool 7-10 August 2010



HARTLEPOOL will be centre stage when it hosts The Tall Ships Races 2010 in August.

Labelled England's biggest free event this year, organisers are pulling out all the stops to make sure it is a huge success and lives in people's memories for years to come.

Up to one million visitors are expected to attend the four-day jamboree.

The ships are expected to arrive in Hartlepool on Saturday 7 August after sailing from Kristiansand in Norway in the second and final race.

They will stay until Tuesday 10 August when they will bid a grand farewell in an impressive Parade of Sail.

For further information please visit http://www.hartlepooltallships2010.com/

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

Saltburn Alum Guided Walk - Thursday 1st April 2010

Saltburn Alum Walk - Thursday 1st April 2010

The Tees Valley Wildlife Trust have a new 2 year project, supported by the Lottery through the Heritage Lottery Fund, about the alum industry of East Cleveland. As part of this the Trust is running a series of free guided walks.

For further details about the walks or the project please contact Beth Andrews on 01287 636382 or email beth.geo@gmail.com

Join Tees Archaeology for a walk to explore the rutways cut into the rock on the shore under Huntcliff and the remains of Saltburn's Alum House. This walk includes areas of uneven rocky foreshore which may be slippery.

The walk will last for approximately 3 hours and will be led by Rachel Grahame of Tees Archaeology.

Meet at Cat Nab car park, Saltburn (NZ 668 215) at 9.50am on Thursday 1st April 2010.

Thursday, 4 February 2010

Historic Market Towns of the North - Dayschool

Cleveland & Teesside Local History Society and The University of Teesside Centre for Regional and Local Historical Research are holding a joint Day School at the Europa Building, University of Teesside on Saturday 20th March 2010.

The dayschool will consist of six 45 minute lectures from Robin Daniels, Barry Harrison, Mark Whyman and Gill Cookson.


Tickets are now on sale for £12, £8.50 and £6

Lunch is provided at a cost of £4.50

For further details please email j.grimwood@tees.ac.uk

or visit the news page at the Tees Archaeology website to download a booking form.
http://www.teesarchaeology.com/new/home_page.html

Wednesday, 3 February 2010

Guided Walk - Yarm Sunday 18th July 2010


Discover the medieval town and find out if there was ever a castle at Yarm.

No pre booking is necessary, please meet at Yarm Town Hall at 9.50am. the walk will last approximately 2 hours and will be led by Robin Daniels.

Friday, 22 January 2010

Guided Walks Norton 6th & 12th May 2010

Thursday 6th May 2010 & Wednesday 12th May 2010

Saxon and Medieval Norton
Guided Walk

2.00pm - 4.00pm

A 2 hour guided tour of the Saxon and medieval features of Norton Village led by Robin Daniels.

No pre-booking is necessary, please meet at Norton Library at 1.50pm.

Guided Walk Sunday 28th March 2010

Sunday 28th March 2010

Cowpen Bewley Medieval Village
Guided Walk

10.00am to noon

Examine the layout and
buildings of one of the best preserved
villages on Teesside with Robin
Daniels.

No pre-booking necessary.

Please meet at the Activity Centre of Cowpen Bewley Woodland Park, off the A1185 Seal Sands Road, Billingham at 9.50am

Monday, 18 January 2010

WEST HARTLEPOOL COMMEMORATIVE MEDAL

A recent enquiry revealed this information.

The medal is approximately 4 centimetres in diameter, and weighs approximately 26 grammes.

A small hole is pierced at the top, between the legend and the rim. Comparison with other examples indicates that this hole was intended for suspension of the medal from a ribbon.

Judging by parallel examples (see below), the medal is composed of some species of white metal alloy. There are traces of rust on both sides of the medal (primarily on the obverse), suggesting a ferrous element in the alloy.

Obverse :
Head of Queen Victoria, facing L, wearing a simple crown (i.e. without arches such as those seen on the Imperial State Crown and King Edward’s Crown), the rear part of her head being draped with a (widow’s) veil; the whole encircled by the legend
IN COMMEMORATION OF THE JUBILEE OF QUEEN VICTORIA 1887.
At the base of the neck are the words WATTS, BIRM. This latter probably indicates the Birmingham-based engraver of the original, from which multiple copies were then reproduced. I have not been able to identify this particular artist ~ further specialist research would be required.

Reverse :
Shield bearing the arms of West Hartlepool, flanked by 18 & 70, set within an octofoil; the whole encircled by the legend MAY WEST HARTLEPOOL PROSPER.

OBSERVATIONS
Hartlepool Museum Service has at least 3 examples of this medal in its collections.
Shown below are side-by-side comparisons of a Museum Service example with that brought in by the querent.

Obverse




Reverse





Amongst the range of designs employed for the royal head on Victoria’s Golden Jubilee medals, this particular one (or variants thereof) appears to have been relatively common. A cursory trawl of the websites E-Bay.co.uk and E-bay.com (accessed 28 July 2009) yielded examples from Australia and Canada, as well from as the United Kingdom.


Australia





Canada





United Kingdom





The fruits of this search included a parallel example of a Golden Jubilee medal issued by a civic authority, in this case, the Borough of Croydon (London) :





Queen Victoria (born 1819) ascended the throne in 1837. She died in 1901, having celebrated both her Golden Jubilee in 1997, and her Diamond Jubilee in 1897.

The significance of the date of 1870 on the reverse of the medal is not immediately obvious.

Although the town of West Hartlepool might be deemed to have been born in 1845, when construction of the docks commenced, its existence did not achieve formal recognition until 1854, when the West Hartlepool Improvement Act received Royal Assent. This legislation brought into being the West Hartlepool Improvement Commission, which comprised Ralph Ward Jackson and other local worthies. The Commission was empowered to make decisions concerning the running of the town, and was responsible for “paving, lighting, watching, draining, cleansing, regulating and otherwise improving the town of West Hartlepool and part of the township of Stranton, in the County of Durham, and for providing a cemetery and for other purposes.”

In 1870, a new Extension and Improvement Act was passed in Parliament, which extended the town’s boundaries. Three years later, a petition was presented to the Privy Council requesting that the town be granted a Royal Charter of Incorporation, but this was rejected by an official enquiry.

Finally, in her Golden Jubilee year of 1887, Queen Victoria granted West Hartlepool its desired Charter. In the November, the town became an incorporated borough and the Improvement Commissioners were replaced by the first West Hartlepool Town Council. However, the Jubilee fell in June, at which time Borough had not yet officially come into existence. The design of the reverse perhaps reflects this situation : the motto “May West Hartlepool Prosper” could be seen as expressing the hope for incorporation, while the 1870 Act was still considered important enough to deserve commemoration.


Our sincere thanks to JH for her excellent research.

Tuesday, 5 January 2010

Historic Billingham Guided Walk

21st January 2010

Historic Billingham Guided Walk

Robin Daniels of Tees Archaeology will be leading a guided walk lasting approximately 1 hour 30 minutes around historic Billingham.

If you are interested in attending, please meet at the entrance to St Cuthbert’s Church at 10.00am on January 21st 2010.

Tuesday, 15 December 2009

15th December 2009 AQA Archaeology AS level

Prior Pursglove Sixth Form College at Guisborough are offering the AQA Archaeology AS level starting September 2010 and then the A2 (to make the full A Level) starting September 2011.


There are 2 exams in the first year (AS) and coursework in the second (A2) year together with an exam.

“The Guisborough area, including the Tees Valley and the North York Moors is an area rich in archaeology of all periods.

From the Bronze Age burial mounds on the moors, to the Norman villages many of us live in; and not forgetting the industrial archaeology of the area which made many of the settlements of today.

There are few opportunities for people of this area to attend structured courses about archaeology and this course is led by somebody who has been involved in the archaeology of the area for many years.

As the head of Tees Archaeology, the local authority archaeological service for the area, I welcome this course and we look forward to working with the tutor and participants.“

Robin Daniels – Tees Archaeology


For further information please contact Caroline Anderson at Prior Pursglove Sixth Form College on 01287 280800 or email k.quinn@prior.pursglove.ac.uk

Monday, 14 December 2009

14th December 2009 - New Website Content


2 new pages have recently been added to the Tees Archaeology website.

These are a new and more detailed page relating to Kilton Castle and a new page based on Scheduled Monuments in Redcar & Cleveland.

We are also repairing all the little errors within the website, but this is taking a lot longer than expected, so please bear with us and if you notice any errors please contact us.

Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Tees Archaeology Dayschool - Saturday 7th November 2009









This years dayschool was a great success, with over 130 people attending a series of lectures and a performance by Misericordia. In addition, we also had a display of archaeological finds and a number of bookstalls (which reported healthy trading on the day!).

Next years dayschool is already being prepared and will take the theme of Maritime Archaeology.

Further details will follow.

Portable Antiquities Scheme Finds Afternoon in Hartlepool

Frances McIntosh the Finds Liaison Officer for the North East will be at Sir William Gray House in Hartlepool on Tuesday 12th January from 2pm until 4.30pm. She will be there to identify and record archaeological objects found by the public so if you have an objects which you think date to pre-1700 found in England and Wales then bring them along.

To find out more about the Portable Antiquities Scheme you can go to www.finds.org.uk

If you would like to contact Frances separately then her contact details are as follows-

Frances.mcintosh@durham.gov.uk

0191 370 8843

Frances is based at Durham County Council and works only two days a week.

Archaeology Exhibition in the APSE Hartlepool Art Gallery December 2009 - February 2010



Dug up from the Past

From a prehistoric woolly rhino bone to your granddad’s clay tobacco pipe this is a chance to discover the rich archaeology of Hartlepool through the ages.

Displays will include finds from the Prehistoric Submerged Forest, Roman Catcote and Medieval Headland Hartlepool.

The exhibition will be held in the Hartlepool Art Gallery, Church Square, Hartlepool, Tuesday - Saturday only.

For further details please telephone 01429 869706.