33a . New House, or Newhouse as it came to be called,
was not very attractive in appearance in its later years, as a Victorian
front, with cement rendering, had been imposed on its brickwork. The house
was investigated at the time of demolition and an interesting account of
it, by Mr Michael Drake, appeared in the Newsletter of the Fawkham Archaeological
Group for December, 1965. While of the opinion that the house probably
belonged to the late 1600s, Mr Drake mentioned that part of an earlier
timber frame wall, which might have been from a previous farmhouse, was
incorporated in the building.
34. KAO, Q/RP1 9.
35. The confusion as to the location of the discovery doubtless
arose because, as mentioned in Bancks, op. cit., 50-1, the few
houses in the vicinity of Scotgrove were in the Hartley postal district.
Mr Philps report on his excavation of the tile-kiln (and on trial holes
dug at the time within the earthwork) is in his Excavations in |
|
West Kent 1960-1970 (1973), 22-—3; references
will also be found ibid. for the initial misapprehensions as to the
nature of what had been found and for Mr Jessup’s correct
identification.
36. The 1967 survey was by the Fawkham and District Historical Society
under the direction of the late J.E.L. Caiger and was the subject of a
report by Mr J.A. Keen which, with a reproduction of Mr Caiger’s plan,
appeared in AC LXXXII, 285- 7. The evidence of the closure of the well
comes from a newspaper cutting in the DCL marked ‘June 1852’, in which
this was said to have been done ‘many years ago’. The impressive
excavation of the site, carried out with the consent and interest of the
owners, the Hemesley family, was initiated in April 1972 by the Fawkham
and Ash Archaeological Group under Mr Roger Walsh. Reports on the progess
of the work have been published in AC LXXXVII, 237-8, LXXXVIII, 220,
LXXXIX, 218 and XCII, 249.
Mr E.P. Connell is the director of excavations. |