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An archaeological investigation in the rear garden of Ormiston Old School House was
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The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston
June 2009
Carried out on behalf of Mr K. Herd
Buildings Archaeologist and Heritage Consultant
TRAPRAIN HOUSE LUGGATE BURN WHITTINGEHAME EAST LOTHIAN EH41 4QA
T : 01620 861643 E : INFO@CHCHERITAGE.CO.UK
Table of Contents
1.0 SUMMARY 2
2.0 INTRODUCTION 2
3.0 OBJECTIVES 3
4.0 METHODOLOGY 3
5.0 RESULTS 5
5.1 Fieldwork 5 5.2 The Trenches and Elevations 5 5.3 Artefacts 5
6.0 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 6
ILLUSTRATIONS Figure 1: Location plan. Figure 2: Location of trenches. Figure 3: Section of western trench and elevation of southern wall Figure 4: Adair, Roy and 1st Edition OS map Appendix 1: Context List Appendix 2: Photo List Appendix 3: Artefact List References DES
100 km 1 km
Figure No. 1: Site Location Map
Reproducion of Ordnance Surveymap details with the permission of theController of HMSO Crown Copyright OS Licence AL 52480A0001
Glasgow
Edinburgh
Aberdeen
Inverness
North Sea
250m500
Area of investigation
Area of investigation
ORMISTON
The Old Schoolhouse, Ormiston
Figure No. 2: Site Plan
Areas of investigation
wall stump and brick wall interface.
Quions showing wall returninternal building features
25m50
Main Street
Cro
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oan
Old Schoolhouse
Sh
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Garages
section
wall elevation
The Old Schoolhouse, Ormiston
The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston – June 2009
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1.0 SUMMARY 1.1 An archaeological evaluation was required due to the potential for 18th
century, medieval or earlier remains being uncovered at The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston. The site is located in the rear garden plot of the aforementioned structure at the east end of the historic town of Ormiston. The work consisted of trenching along the lines of the proposed building foundations to investigate the potential for sub-surface archaeological deposits. These works were commissioned by Mr Ken Herd. The work was undertaken on the 1st June 2009, and was restricted to the areas affected by the proposed development.
1.2 The work will enable the East Lothian Archaeological Officer to decide on
the need for further work, or to advise the removal of this particular condition.
2.0 INTRODUCTION 2.1 Site location The site is located to the south of the Main Street, Ormiston and to the
west of Cross Loan in the garden of the Old Schoolhouse at NT 41548 69295 (Fig. 1).
2.2 Site History
The word Ormiston is derived from the family 'Orme' having possession of the land during the twelve and thirteenth centuries, hence the name of Ormiston or 'Ormistoun' as it was formerly called. ‘Toun’ meaning a 'farmstead' or 'farm and outbuildings,'. The estates in the area passed into the ownership of the Cockburn family in 1368, who were to remain the lairds of Ormiston for the next 400 years. The present Ormiston itself stands on the north bank of the River Tyne, at an elevation of about 276 ft. consisting chiefly of a broad open straight Main Street with a row of double story houses along each side.
Scotland's first planned village, Ormiston, was built circa 1735 on the model of an English village by one of the initiators of the Agricultural Revolution and the last of the Cockburn Lairds, John Cockburn of Ormiston (1679 - 1758). Using strict guidelines for its appearance he put housing for artisans and cottage industries (spinning and weaving) around the original 'mill hamlet'. When he did not achieve the expected return on his investment he sold it to the Earl of Hopetoun in 1747.
One of Scotland's first bleachfields were built here but by 1811 the both the linen trade and the brewery had closed. Ormiston became a mining village and continued until the closure of the pits in 1961.
The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston – June 2009
Page 3
One of the continuing mysteries surrounding the village is the location of the original medieval settlement, with one possibility that it lies beneath the current buildings (which all date to the mid 18th century or later), or that it may lie to the south towards the River Tyne. This investigation has perhaps added to the sparse information on this subject, with negative evidence being useful in archaeological terms.
Maps were examined from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries1, but all show the village in its current location (Fig. 4). The two features of note are between the earliest Adair manuscript from 1682 and the later engraved version from 1736 which clearly shows the improvements created by Cockburn. There is also a structure shown on the 1856 OS map, to the southeast of the site, which shows a building in the location of the building noted in the southern wall of the development site. An undated well was uncovered during works in the garden of Beech house, circa 100m to the northeast (A. Robertson pers. comm.) however, very little intrusive archaeological investigation has taken place at this end of the village. Given the unknown dating of the feature, it can have very little relevance or relationship to the present site.
3.0 OBJECTIVES 3.1 The objectives of this evaluation were to establish the potential for medieval
archaeology within this area, the type, preservation and depth, and to investigate the stratigraphy of deposits at this location. This investigation also characterised and identified the underlying ground makeup.
4.0 METHODOLOGY 4.1 We excavated a series of trenches along the area of the strip foundations and
associated services, using a small mechanical excavator with a 600mm toothless bucket.
4.2 The trenches were excavated by machine under direct archaeological
supervision to remove topsoil and modern deposits down to subsoil. 4.3 Further excavation required to fulfil the objectives of the evaluation was
carried out by hand, including cleaning of the base levels and sections. 4.4 Photographic recording of the southern wall was also carried out as an
additional recording exercise – at no extra to the client.
1 Adair – 1682, Reprint - 1736, Gen. Roy – 1755, 1st Edition OS 1856
Figure No. 3: West section and south Wall elevation
The Old Schoolhouse, Ormiston
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The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston – June 2009
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5.0 RESULTS
5.1 Fieldwork
The work was undertaken on the 1st June 2009. The turf topsoil [1000] was regular across the site ranging from 150mm to 200mm in depth and was already stripped. In the west half of the site (not affected by the construction of garages in the east half of the site) a layer of redeposited natural [1001] overlying a further topsoil layer [1002] were recorded between 200mm – 650mm. A sandy clay natural [1005] was encountered at 650mm to 700mm with a gravel layer [1006] beneath at c. 900 to 1000mm . The various datasets from the investigation are presented in the appendix section; Context list (Appendix 1 ) Photographic list (Appendix 2), Finds register (Appendix 3)
5.2 The Trenches (Fig. 2) 5.2.1 The trenches followed the line of the building foundation plan, and were
excavated down to the level required, which was in excess of the level were archaeological deposits were no longer present. Each trench was shown to have the same general makeup, except for the area to the east, which had been disturbed by the insertion of two garages and a shed in the late 20th century.
5.2.2 (See section on Figure 3) Beneath the topsoil layer [1000] was a layer of
redeposited natural [1001] that had been dumped from the construction of the shed and garages to the east. This overlaid a further topsoil layer [1002] which contained the only in-situ find located during the investigation – the neck and shoulder of a handblown 18th century bottle. This layer directly overlaid a level natural orange brown sandy clay [1005], that in turn overlaid the terrace gravels [1006] - the only feature was a single tree bole, [1003] / [1004] that was recent in date.
5.3 The land divisions (Fig. 2/3) 5.3.1 Although outwith the remit of the project, it was considered to be of use to
the overall investigation to record the southern wall, and note the locations or absence of north-south dividing walls.
5.3.2 The southern wall showed the clear evidence of a structure in the east
section, with a set of quoins clearly visible, and further investigation on the south facing elevation clearly showed wall features and a fireplace, that must relate to the structure noted on the 1856 OS map (fig 4). The two further walls to the west, are of the same size and may represent equal divided backlot plots extending to the south.
Figure No. 4: Map regression, with site highlighted in red
The Old Schoolhouse, Ormiston
Adair - 1680
Gen. Roy- 1755 1st Ed OS 1856
Adair print version - 1736
The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston – June 2009
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5.3.3 The stump of a north-south division wall was
noted as a truncated feature that would have originally extended into the development area, but had been removed in the late 20th century by the later garage buildings.
5.4 Artefacts 5.4.1 A single artefact was recovered from a secure context, a handblown
bottleneck of clear 18th century date. This correlates to the construction of the new village and the creation of new backlots.
6.0 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The programme of investigation has shown that no significant archaeological deposits are to be encountered in the development area. The recommendation to the East Lothian Council Archaeology Officer is that no further work will be required. It is clear from standing remains that structural activity has taken place in the area, and therefore archaeological deposits may be present in the immediate vicinity.
South facing elevation of southern boundary (east end) showing features including fireplace)
The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston – June 2009
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Appendix 1 Context Register
Context List – 00S_09 - Ormiston Old Schoolhouse 09 Context Description
1000 Recent Topsoil 1001 Redeposited natural with mixed orange brown silty clay and gravels 1002 Buried Topsoil 1003 Cut from small tree 1004 Dark brown soil infill 1005 Orange brown silty clay with few gravel inclusions 1006 Gravel and water worn cobbles in a gritty clay sand matrix.
Appendix 2 Photo Register - Digital
Photo Record List – 00S_09 - Ormiston Old Schoolhouse 2009 Photo
ID Site Code Description Direction to Date
1 00S09_001 Record shot of Area – pre-excavation N 01/06/2009 2 00S09_002 Record shot of Area – pre-excavation E 01/06/2009
3 00S09_003 South boundary wall (east-west) record S 01/06/2009 4 00S09_004 South boundary wall (east-west) record S 01/06/2009 5 00S09_005 South boundary wall (east-west) record S 01/06/2009 6 00S09_006 South boundary wall (east-west) record S 01/06/2009 7 00S09_007 South boundary wall (east-west) record S 01/06/2009 8 00S09_008 South boundary wall (east-west) record S 01/06/2009 9 00S09_009 South boundary wall (east-west) record S 01/06/2009
10 00S09_010 Stump wall of central plot division NE 01/06/2009 11 00S09_011 East facing section on extreme west trench W 01/06/2009 12 00S09_012 East facing section on extreme west trench W 01/06/2009 13 00S09_013 East facing section on extreme west trench W 01/06/2009 14 00S09_014 East facing section on extreme west trench W 01/06/2009 15 00S09_015 Record shot of Area – post-excavation NE 01/06/2009 16 00S09_016 Record shot of Area – post-excavation E 01/06/2009 17 00S09_017 Record shot of Area – post-excavation SE 01/06/2009 18 00S09_018 South boundary wall (east end) record of south
facing section showing blocked wall features N 01/06/2009
Appendix 3 Artefact List
Artefact Record List – 00S_09 - Ormiston Old Schoolhouse 09
Trench Context Description 1 1002 1 bottleneck and shoulder - handblown
Site Photos
The Old Schoolhouse, Ormiston
The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston – June 2009
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References Maps: •1682 - John ADAIR - East Lothian authore Johanne Adair. (manuscript) •1736 - John ADAIR - A Map of East Lothian survey'd by Mr J. Adair. •1799 - William FORREST - Map of Haddingtonshire. •1821 - John AINSLIE - Ainslie's Map of the Southern Part of Scotland. •1747-55 - William ROY - Military Survey of Scotland •1856 - ORDNANCE SURVEY - One-inch 1st edition maps of Scotland Bibliography Martine, John 1883/2008 ‘Reminiscences of the Royal Burgh of Haddington and Old East Lothian’ Charleston , Bibliolife p259 McWilliam, Colin 1975. ‘Scottish Townscape’ London, Collins p95 Ormiston 2006, http://www.ormistonvillage.com/history.htm
Ormiston, County of Haddington. Statistical Accounts of Scotland of 1791-99, volume 4, page 166-171
Ormiston, County of Haddington. Statistical Accounts of Scotland of 1834-45, volume 2, page 135-142
OASIS reference: connolly1-60865
The Old Schoolhouse, Main Street, Ormiston – June 2009
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Discovery and Excavation Scotland
LOCAL AUTHORITY: East Lothian
PROJECT TITLE/SITE NAME: Old School House, Ormiston
PROJECT CODE: OOS09
PARISH: Ormiston
NAME OF CONTRIBUTOR: David Connolly
NAME OF ORGANISATION: (Connolly Heritage Consultancy)
TYPE(S) OF PROJECT: Monitored Strip / Trenches
NMRS NO(S): -
SITE/MONUMENT TYPE(S): 18th century – 20th century
SIGNIFICANT FINDS: none
NGR (2 letters, 8 or 10 figures) NT 41548 69295
START DATE (this season) 1st June 2009
END DATE (this season) 1st June 2009
PREVIOUS WORK (incl. DES ref.) -
MAIN (NARRATIVE) DESCRIPTION:
An archaeological investigation in the rear garden of Ormiston Old School House was conducted to establish the presence of archaeological deposits. No Archaeological deposits were encountered.
PROPOSED FUTURE WORK: none
CAPTION(S) FOR ILLUSTRS: -
SPONSOR OR FUNDING BODY: Mr K. Herd
ADDRESS OF MAIN CONTRIBUTOR:
Connolly Heritage Consultancy Traprain House Luggate Burn Whittingehame East Lothian EH41 4QA
EMAIL ADDRESS: info@chcheritage.co.uk
ARCHIVE LOCATION (intended/deposited)
RCAHMS (intended)
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