Archaeology and Conservation in Derbyshire (ACID) - Issue 19 - January 2022

Page 32

A century of fieldwork

Recording a potential circular site on Strines Moor

T

he Hunter Archaeological Society was founded in 1912 and named after Joseph Hunter (1783-1861), a Sheffield-born genealogist and antiquarian, later Assistant Keeper of Public Records. Though Sheffieldbased, our remit covers the whole of South Yorkshire as well as north-east Derbyshire. Early on, the Committee tried to buy the site of Rotherham’s Templeborough Roman fort to save it from destruction and did a watching brief at the Sheffield Castle site. Freddie Preston and Leslie Butcher, members of our former Field Research Section, designed and set up the Hunter Index of Sites and Monuments in the late 1940s, which evolved into the present-day Historic Environment Record. Members have been involved over the years in fieldwork and excavation, for example at Swine Sty, Dennis Knoll and on Strines Moor. Members are also in demand to sit on a range of external committees and advisory groups, and we are called on to campaign on The socket stone of a wayside cross known as New archaeological issues of Cross, in a remote spot on Bradfield Moor in the north-eastern part of the National Park, is one of the concern. In a normal year, the sites regularly monitored by Hunter members. 32

ACID | 2022

Society runs a varied programme of winter talks in Sheffield, organises walks and visits to excavations and sites of interest, and publishes papers in its biennial Transactions. Of course, 2020 and 2021 have not been normal years and, in common with many similar societies, the benefits to our members have been limited to lectures via Zoom. A really important and popular initiative that members undertake is regular monitoring of the condition of Scheduled Monuments (SMs), up to now in Sheffield and the eastern National Park. The SMs vary from earthworks, crosses, moats and motte and bailey castles, to deserted medieval villages, an abbey, dovecote, industrial sites and parks and gardens. Completed forms are sent to South Yorkshire Archaeology Service (SYAS) and thence to Historic England, to enable them to respond to any serious concerns. Until lockdown intervened last year, we were gearing up to visit Rotherham sites for the first time. Now we are preparing to do nine sites for the Peak District National Park Authority and 12 sites in the area monitored for SYAS in close liaison with Peak Park and National Trust rangers. Some Hunter members have visited a site for 10 or more years – it’s a great way to get to know your area, help to look after the sites and get some exercise. Anyone with an interest in our cultural heritage can join the Society (current annual subscription £15) and are invited to take a look at our website: https://sites. google.com/site/hunterarchaeologicalsociety and click on Membership. Or contact our Secretary, Dr Ruth Morgan, at: secretary@hunterarchaeologicalsociety. org.uk. The website also has information on excursions and the Transactions, and there are three self-guided trail leaflets. - Mandy Hayes, Ken Smith, Ruth Morgan and Phil Sidebottom


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Articles inside

Picturing the Past

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page 36

The search for Sir John’s “mighty howse”

3min
page 31

Bookshelf

3min
page 33

Our year in pictures

0
page 35

Navio and life at the edge of Rome

3min
page 29

News

7min
pages 26-27

Zooming in on history

2min
page 30

A century of fieldwork

2min
page 32

Laying siege to the vegetable patch

2min
page 28

Curating our cultural heritage

2min
page 25

Managing the Dove in the Middle Ages

3min
page 24

Monitoring heritage sites from the air

2min
pages 18-19

Life on the Edge

3min
page 23

New light on Roman and Medieval Bolsover

2min
page 22

The aerial archaeologist

5min
pages 16-17

Find of the Year: The face of the rebel ‘Emperor of the North’

2min
page 21

Mam Tor magnified

3min
page 15

Foreword

4min
pages 2-3

Celebrating the first 70 years

3min
pages 6-7

New light on Iron Age Derbyshire

3min
pages 10-11

What they ate in medieval Derby

3min
page 13

Learning to live with lockdown

6min
pages 4-5

Haddon’s lost village

3min
page 14

Identifying Derbyshire’s special landscapes

3min
pages 8-9

Scout’s honour (cover story

2min
page 12
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