
Excavations on the Romano-British Industrial Site at Broomhey Farm, Cooling
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A London City Church Estate in Kent: St Botolph's, Sevenoaks, 1646-2002
Refortification at Rochester in the 1220s: a Public/Private Partnership?
Excavations on the Romano-British Industrial Site at Broomhey Farm, Cooling
Alec Miles
EXCAVATIONS ON THE ROMANO-BRITISH
INDUSTRIAL SITE AT BROOMHEY FARM,
COOLING
ALEC MILES
Eight years of emergency excavations in advance of deep ploughing
on farmland at Cooling revealed an almost complete Romano-British
industrial site (NGR TQ764/767) dating from the first to early third
centuries AD. The excavations which were undertaken for the Lower
Medway Archaeological Group over the period 1966-1974,
uncovered a large wedge-shaped mound on the first-century saltings,
which showed evidence of hut foundations, salt-boiling hearths and
pottery manufacture; also further evidence for other mounds built up
on the Roman saltings over a wider area. Information gained from the
excavations will be of wide significance in resolving many longstanding
problems posed by the Romano-British settlements of the
North Kent marshes of the Thames and Medway.
The excavated area is on the Thameside Marshes, being part of a
site possibly covering an area of 1.Sha; further occupation extends to
the higher ground on the south comprising Thanet Sand with the odd
patch of Woolwich Beds, currently occupied by pear orchards. The
site, on land belonging to Broomhey Farm, is some 1.2km north-east
of St James Church, Cooling, between two spurs that jut out into the
marshes, Northward Hill to the east and Cliffe village to the west.
The post-Roman rise in sea-levels has resulted in the deposit of some
0.3m of silt over the highest parts of the mounds; however the building
of the sea-wall nearby in Medieval times protected the site from
further silting.
The site has a long history of finds. The earliest reference is in the
Numismatic Chronicle (vii (1867), 7) which records a denarius of
Gordian III and Tranquillina. The next reference to the site comes in
Archaeologia Cantiana (XLII, 1930, xlviii), where R.F. Jessup reported
a mound of friable soil, irregular patches of burnt material, a
quantity of the poor pottery called briquetage and occasional fragments
of a more substantial fabric. The burnt material proved to be
309
ALEC MILES
inned marsh
A D
gher ground
Fig. 1 Location of sites at Broomhey Farm, Cooling.
310
EXCAVATIONS ON ROMANO-BRITISH INDUSTRIAL SITE AT BROOMHEY FARM
pieces of the stem, leaves and root of a species of rush (Juncus).
Among the pottery fragments were burnished black sherds of soft fine
clay ornamented in La Tene fashion with cordons, and pieces of
rough gritted red ware which may be perhaps referred to the culture of
Hallstatt. Three years later, a further report in Arch. Cant. (XLV 1933,
xliii), states that: 'On land at Cooling belonging to Fred Muggeridge,
whose excavations have previously revealed considerable quantities
of pottery, a Roman kiln and two skeletons were recently uncovered'.
Mr Cook reports 'That as the graves had been cut through the layer of
burnt clay and pottery debris surrounding the kiln, it is evident that
the pottery was in disuse before the date of the earliest burial, which
seems to be about the beginning of the second century AD. The cemetery
consists of cremations and inhumations'.
In 1936, Maidstone Museum's gazetteer records that a local newspaper
stated that nine more kilns were discovered and that pottery and
briquetage from the excavations was in the Museum. In several
conversations held with Fred Muggeridge before his death in 1972,
further details were given. He stated that when excavating the first
kiln, which was contained in a mound, a rush floor was found. Later
excavations had uncovered more kilns in a row, on the slightly higher
ground of the pear orchard just off the marsh (TQ 765/766); these
kilns were presumably those mentioned in the newspaper report.
They were not destroyed but re-covered with soil and pear trees
planted between them.
More information was recovered from a series of glass photographic
negatives taken in the 1930s and currently located at Rochester
Museum, Maidstone Museum and Eastborough Farmhouse,
Cooling. These photographs are all of the first major kiln find, showing
it in varying stages of excavation. They show a permanent type of
updraught kiln with a solid floor with the well preserved remains of
the shallow dome, the loading vent visible at the top (Swan 1984, 35,
pl.4). One glass negative shows Roman pottery dating from the first
and third centuries arranged around the kiln, including pottery from
the adjacent cemetery and other excavations in the immediate area. In
1979 RCHME photographed the entire collection.
THE LATEST EXCAVATIONS
The site was re-located in 1966 as part of a wide ranging study of the
Romano-British occupation sites (Miles 1975, 29-39) in the North
Kent Marshes. On learning that within a few years the site would be
deep ploughed and drained prior to changing the land use to arable
farming, it was decided to undertake an emergency excavation. It was
311
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ALEC MILES
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