Roman finds at Holy Trinity Churchyard, Dartford
ROMAN FINDS AT HOLY TRINITY
CHURCHYARD, DARTFORD
GREG PRIESTLEY-BELL AND LUKE BARBER
Archaeology South-East was commissioned to undertake an archaeological
excavation on land to the north of Holy Trinity Church,
Dartford (Fig. 1.). The Church is situated to the east of the modern
town centre, immediately to the west of the River Darent. According
to the BGS l :50 000 map the underlying geology at the site consists
of alluvium.
Planning permission was granted for an extension to the Church
Hall in 1994. As construction would necessitate groundworks in the
area, and possible disturbance of buried archaeological remains, provision
was made for an archaeological evaluation. This, undertaken
in 1995, revealed seven undisturbed human skeletons and evidence
of at least fourteen disturbed burials, all of seventeenth- to early
nineteenth-century date. The burials overlay an occupation deposit
containing early Roman pottery encountered at a depth of c. l .8m
below the present ground surface (Kirk 1995).
As a result it was decided further archaeological investigations
would be required at the site prior to the onset of construction works.
It was agreed that the Roman deposits were to form the main focus of
the work and that only limited recording would be undertaken on the
post-medieval burials.
However, due to a misunderstanding by the developer a significant
part of the site had been excavated and cleared of burials prior to the
onset of archaeological work. This had resulted in the removal of
virtually all of the burials as well as some truncation of the underlying
Roman deposits. After consultations with the developers and
KCC, it was decided to excavate the surviving remains. The on-site
work was directed by Greg Priestley-Bell (Priestley-Bell et. al.
1996).
The site lies immediately to the north of the projected course of
Roman Watling Street which probably runs directly under the main
body of the church. Numerous Roman remains have been found in the
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C.
ROMAN FINDS AT HOLY TRINITY CHURCHYARD, DARTFORD
vicinity of the church. Other recorded Roman discoveries from the
town, including building foundations, numerous coins and pottery
(both local and imported) suggest that an important Roman settlement
existed in the area (Detsicas 1983, 80; Hutchings 2001). Much
of the material has been dated to the first century suggesting an early
foundation at the crossing point of Watling Street over the River
Darent.
The church is recorded in the Domesday survey of 1086, its tower
dating from before the Conquest. However, the main body of the
church dates to the fourteenth century and lies to the south of the
original tower. The extension to the church and the diversion of the
road around it explains the 'kink' in the otherwise straight Watling
Street/modern High Street (Fig. IB). A graveyard once existed to the
south of the church, but was removed with part of the west nave to
enable road widening. A probably slightly later graveyard was
located to the north of the church in the area to be developed. The last
burial is thought to have occurred towards the end of the eighteenth
century (John Gilbert, Church Historian. pers. comm.)
The site was cleared by hand of loose soil that had accumulated
during shoring work following the machine excavation. The shoring
effectively prevented the sections of the excavated trench (Fig. 1 C)
from being archaeologically recorded and as such the deposits
removed prior to archaeological excavation were correlated with
those studied during the evaluation. The section from the evaluation
(see Fig. 1 C, S l and Fig. 3, S 1) is deemed representative of the site's
stratigraphy.
All remaining skeletons were assigned an indi victual skeleton
number and briefly recorded before lifting. The position and
orientation of the burials were planned before lifting (Fig. 2). The
skeletal numbering, which was separate from the general context
numbering system, began at eight, taking into account the seven
skeletons recovered during the evaluation.
A section of the northern baulk of the excavation was cleaned and
a test-pit sunk into the gravels at this point to facilitate the study of
these deposits (Fig. 2B: GSF section).
Following the completion of the main archaeological excavation.
the site was visited a number of times in order to inspect further deep
groundworks within the previously excavated area and other groundworks
in the vicinity of the trench. These vis its produced more
artefacts but little new data regarding the development of the site.
77
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GREG PRIESTLEY-BELL AND LUKE BARBER
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