ANNUAL REPORT
FOR THE YEAR 1954
ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31ST DECEMBER, 1954
Council presents its 96th Report, and Statement of Accounts for 1954.
(The Statement of Accounts will be circulated with the notice convening
the Annual General Meeting.)
ANNU.AL GENERAL MEETING
The Annual General Meeting was held at the Museum, Maidstone,
on the 28th April, 1964.
The President presented the Report and Accounts for 1953, which
were adopted. He referred to losses which the Society had sustained
through the death of a number of its members, including Mr. F. H. Day,
a Trustee, and Dr. Armstrong Bowes, for many years a member of Council.
A large number of new members had joined the Society during the year, but
more would always be welcome. Field work and excavations were in
progress in several parts of the County and the important Roman barrow
<xcavation at Holborough would be fully reported in A.rclu:.eologia Oantiana.
The President spoke appreciatively of Mr. B. W. Swithinbank's generosity
in preparing a-n index to volumes 46 to 64 of A.rclueologia Oantiana, which
it was hoped would be published during the course of the year.
After the luncheon adjournment a.bout 100 members and their friends
heard an address by the Rt. Hon. the Earl of Euston on the Preservation
of Ancient Buildings. Lord Euston, whose address was admirably and
fully illustrated, spoke of the work of the Society for the Protection of
Ancient Buildings, the Georgian Group and the National Trust, and
referred to a large number of buildings which, thanks to the activities of
these bodies, had escaped destruction, as well as to others, several in Kent,
which, unfortunately had suffered that fate. Lord Euston was warmly
thanked for his address.
THE LATE MR. B. H. ST. J. O'NEn..
It is with deep regret that Council must record the sudden death, in
October, 1954, ofM:r. B. H. St. J. O'Neil, one of the Vice-Presidents of the
Society. Himself a Kentish man, Mr. O'Neil found time, in spite of the
responsibilities of his office of Chief Inspector of Ancient Monuments, to
take an active interest in the affairs of the Society, and he was a regular
attender of Council meetings, where his experience and wise judgment will
be greatly missed.
MEMDERSHIP
55 new members were elected during the year, but there were a considerable
number of resignations so that at the end of the year membership stood
at approximately 1,032.
Mr. I. D. Margary, F.S.A., Major F. W. Tomlinson, F.S.A., and Dr.
Gordon Ward, F.S.A., were elected Honorary members in recognition of
the value of their services to the Society.
xl
REPORT, 1954
CoUNOIL
Four retiring members, namely: Mrs. E. V. Piercy Fox, Mr. J. Burgon
Bickersteth, Major Eric Clarke and Mr. W. Urry, were re-elected to serve
on Council for a further terro of four years. The other two retiring members,
Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen and Mr. F. W. Tyler, felt unable to
stand for re-election and Wing Commander VI. V. Dumbreck and Mr.
E.T. Mortimore were elected in their place.
LIBRAltY AND COLLECTIONS
Council records with gratitude the acquisition of the Saxon objects
which were found on the Conyngham estate a.t Bifrons by the gamekeeper
who continued to dig after the Society's excavations (under the direction
of John Brent) had finished in 1864. They represent an earlier and simpler
period of the Bifrons people and may help to elucidate the origin of the
unusual settlement. This material was kept at Bifrons and there remained
until the contents of the house were sold ; in 1947 the Earl of Mount
Charles (who had inherited the property from his uncle, the 5th Marquess
Conyngham) gave it to Major F. W. Tomlinson, F.S.A., who has now
generously presented it to the Society. It has been placed on exhibition
at Maidstone Museum with the rest of the Bifrons collection.
Council gratefully records also the gift by Dr. Gordon Ward, F.S.A.,
of his remarkable collection of manuscript and printed material relating
to the archaeology and history of the County. By arrangement with the
County Archivist the material in Dr. Ward's collection which is of an archive
nature will be housed with the County archives and will, of course, be
available for inspection by members of the Society. The other material
will be kept in the Society's room at Maidstone Museum.
Present and future generations of scholars will have reason to be grateful
for the munificence of these two gifts.
The following other additions by gift or purchase were ma
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