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Basic Information

  • Housing masonry fronting onto South Tenter Street

Sub Groups

  • Sub Group: PCO06_149
    • 19thC walling and associated features
  • Sub Group: PCO06_170
    • 19thC wall

Group Description

    • In the north of Zone 1, in the west of the site area, was the remnants of a number of 19th century structural elements. In the main this consisted of external garden or internal basement walls running on a north to south orientation. This consisted of walls {504} and {510}, and basement slab {509}. This was all built into large construction cut [538]. Under concrete slab {509} was a number of rubble make up deposits that consisted of (550) and construction trample (551). This overlay (552) a layer of material thought to have been reworked by construction activities and possibly augmented by other dumping. These masonry elements formed subgroup 149, and a later addition to this was wall {511}, which was formed sugbgroup 170, and as a whole these walls formed Group 51.
      • Chaz Morse
    • 19-10-2011
    • In the north of Zone 1, in the west of the site area, was the remnants of a number of 19th century structural elements. In the main this consisted of external garden or internal basement walls running on a north to south orientation. This consisted of walls {504} and {510}, and basement slab {509}. This was all built into large construction cut [538]. Under concrete slab {509} was a number of rubble make up deposits that consisted of (550) and construction trample (551). This overlay (552) a layer of material thought to have been reworked by construction activities and possibly augmented by other dumping. These masonry elements formed subgroup 149, and a later addition to this was wall {511}, which was formed sugbgroup 170, and as a whole these walls formed Group 51.
      • Chaz Morse
    • 19-10-2011

Dating Information

    • The masonry elements of this subgroup are clearly late Post Medieval, being built from frogged yellow stock brick and reused unfrogged red brick. The construction trample elements did not yield any datable finds, but were overlying the Post Medieval agricultural soils.
      • Chaz Morse
    • 19-10-2011