lxxxviii
RESEARCHES AND DISCOVERIES IN KENT,
1905-1907.
COMMUNICATED BY GEORGE PAYNE, F.S.A.
RocIIESTEn..-During the extensive works connected with the
laying of cables £or electric lighting, telegraph, and telephone, tbe
whole length of the High Street was cut through in the year 1905.
At Eastgate the remains of massive masonry connected with
the drawbridge over the moat were met with. In front of
Leonard's shop rock-like masonry occurred on the site of the
Roman gate. Towards Star Hill several trunks of elm trees,
neatly bored out, which bad served the purpose of a water conduit,
were found, having been i n use up to quite recent times. These
wooden pipes measured from six to ovel' seven feet in length and
fifteen inches in diameter, the orifice being six inches in diameter
at one end, diminishing to four inches at the other, each pipe
being shaved off at the smaller end to enable it to fit in the next.
The Roman l'oad was found to have been much cut about by
successive trenchings £or mains of various sorts opposite the
Cathedral Green. The section exposed-the best obtain.able
throughout the operations-is sbewn on the next page .
.A.bout ninety paces beyond the spot where this section was
taken, the ancient way, on its course to the river Medway, seem s
to run a little to the north side of the High Street, as it was
not met with between Jenkins' sho1, and the bridge. In front 0£
RESEARCHES AND DISCOVERIES IN KENT. lxxxix
the King's Head hotel a.11d Commin's shop adjoining, the foundations
of a Roman building were discovered, consisting of tiles aud
flint firmly bedded in exceedingly hard mortar. Amongst the
debris cast up were found pieces of flange and flue tiles. This
building stood by the side of the road here, and, as the hotel stands
upon the site of the Medireval Market, it is possible that what we
saw may have been connected with the Roman Forum, which
doubtless preceded the market, as at Dover.* From Cronk's Alley,
all up the High Street, the earth beneath the modern road was very
black, containing a large quantity of huge flints, horn cores, and
Moder'n road-metal
Boulder's of
Romon t"oad.
Pebble. ltr'avel,
t'Ommed.
Sha(p gravel,
r'ommec:i
I
E.ar'th, ehalk 1
,1- far'g'e"6
flinre, rammed--
very hctr'd · at batle.. 1
I
Na tu l"al t,r'a ve I
'
jaw-bones of hos longifrons,
the tusk of a
boar, the skull of a
dog, innumerable oyster
shells, and several
pices of Roman tile.
When digging a manhole
in front of the
Bull Hotel, ' made '
earth was cut through
to a depth of 11 feet
9 inches before the natural
soil was reached.
At the bridge no trace
of the wall of the city
was seen, the excavations
not being of sufficient
depth. At the
eastern end of the
city, Leonard's premises
(late Miss
Spong's house), on the
southern side of the
site of the east gate,
have recently been extended into the garden in rear, which in my
Paper on " Roman Rochester "t was described as the earthen rampart
against the Roman wall of the city. This is proved to be
correct, as the section exposed to view clearly shewed the slope of
• See Canon Puokle's Vesti,.ge.r of Rotna1i Dove1·, .drck: Oatit., Vol. XX.,
p. 182.
t .d.t·ch. ·Oant., Vol. XXI.
XC . RESEARCHES AND DISCOVERIES IN KENT.
the rampart. During the alterations an immense quantity of
earth was removed, revealing the inner facing of the wall in its
original state. The only objects found were potsherds and a bone
netting needle of Roman date. On the outer side of the wall, and
at some distance south of Eastgate, the new Baptist chUl'ch,
now in course of constructiun, exteuds into the city moat. The
excavatious, which necessitated the destruction of a lu.rge portion
of the eastern side of the moat, shewed that the moat at this spot
was 112 feet in width. While the work wrui in progress the workmen
found many fragments of Roman and later ware and the
remains of a human skeletou. It is a matter for profound regret
that this fine moat is being built upon, as it is unquestionably one
of the most interesting featut·es of the city, having formed part of
its ancient defences from the Roman period until long after the
fourteenth century.
Turning to the various discoveries which have been made in
the immediate neighbourhood during the past two years, we have
again to thank om· numerous friends for prompt notification,
whereby a rich harvest has been reaped for the Rochester
Museum.
In my report on Celtic Interments at !field Place Farm,
Shorne, made in 1899 and printed in Vol. XX[V., attention was
drawn to a causeway which runs from Lower Higham across
the marshes towards Thong and Shorne, now known as the Land
·way, for which a high antiquity was claimed. Siuce tliat date
Previous
Previous
Abstract of Proceedings 1905-1908
Next
Next