Photos, articles and places from "Around Bamford" Rochdale from Victorian times up to the 1970s and the present day.
Wednesday, 10 February 2021
Blackheath Circle, Near Todmorden, West Yorkshire
About 1 mile north of Todmorden, west Yorkshire, near the southern edge of
Todmorden Golf Course at (SD 94339 25434) there is a Bronze Age cairn circle,
ring cairn or round barrow. This is usually referred to as Blackheath Circle,
but locally it is called Frying Pan Circle, because of its circular shape. It
has also been called Roman barrow in the past. It also sometimes goes under the
name 'Blackheath Ringbank Cemetery'. This quite large circular feature is now
incorporated into the level part of the golf-course, however at ground-level it
is hardly noticeable today apart from a slight raised bank at either side of the
circle; the north side being very denuded. The grass is often a brownish colour
where the cairn's outer raised ring shows up after being mowed. Blackheath cairn
circle is situated at over 900 feet above sea-level. When it was excavated in
1898 nineteen burial cists were discovered along with a number of cremation
urns, food vessels and grave-goods. Very sadly, though, this ancient site is now
part of the golf-course - of all things!
Blackheath Circle is best reached from Kebs Lane, Eastwood Road and then Hey
Head Lane, which goes past the golf course. About halfway down the lane on the
right-hand side there is a wall-stile and a footpath running west beside a wall
at the eastern edge of the course. The Bronze Age cairn circle is 350m along
this path through the trees and, at the far end, just in front of the large gap
in the wall running across.
The following information is taken from 'Life In Bronze Age Times - A Resource
Book For Teachers'. It says of the site: "Blackheath is a Prehistoric cemetery
situated at 940 feet (287) O.D., on a south facing slope. On excavation it was
found to comprise a circular bank of earth 3 feet (1m) high in which large
stones were regularly arranged. The circle was 100 feet (30m) in diameter. There
was no obvious entrance. A circular area with a floor of beaten clay was
enclosed by the bank. There were cairns both inside the circle and in the earth
bank. These revealed pits and cists containing cremation burials. Nineteen were
found in all. Some of the cremations were found in urns. The urns were all
upright and buried just below the surface. A characteristic feature of the urned
cremations was the use of a small inverted vessel placed upside down in the urn
and serving as a lid. The central urn is 11 inches (20 cm) high. The collar
shows impressions made by twisted cord. As well as bones, the urn contained a
small decorated pygmy vessel . In this vessel there was a bronze dagger, a bone
pin and a bronze pin.
Another urn also contained a pygmy vessel together with beads of faience, amber,
jet and shale, two bone pins, flint flakes and a leaf shaped arrowhead. Two of
the urns were covered by other vessels, one of which may have been a food
vessel. With the exception of the two urns in the bank, all the finds were in
the eastern half of the circle. In the rest of the circle there were areas where
the floor showed evidence of being baked by a great heat. These were covered
with a layer of charcoal 1-2 inches thick. It was suggested that these may have
been the areas where the bodies were cremated. Two deep pits were also found,
possibly the holes where clay was dug out of the ground for making the pots.
Areas of coarse sandstone were discovered. This could have been used for
grinding down and mixing with the clay. There was at least one (possibly four)
kilns. These were cist-like structures surrounded by baked floors where the
pottery was fired."
There is another "possible" circular feature just to the east of the large cairn
circle at SD 94454 25507. However, this almost destroyed circle is smaller and
very difficult to make out as it is now, sadly, incorporated into a raised
golfing barrow, but the outer ring of this circle often shows up at one end as
brownish grass in the summer months, especially where the golfing barrow slopes
down to ground level.
Sources & Related Websites:-
Bennett, Paul, The Old Stones of Elmet, Capall Bann Publishing, Milverton, Somerset, 2001.
Thomlinson, Sarah & O' Donnell, John, Life In Bronze Age Times - A Resource Book For Teachers, Curriculum Development Centre, Burnley.
https://thejournalofantiquities.com/2017/02/10/blackheath-circle-near-todmorden-west-yorkshire/
http://www.calderdale.gov.uk/v2/residents/leisure-and-culture/local-history-and-heritage/glimpse-past/archaeology
http://www.pastscape.org.uk/hob.aspx?hob_id=46095
Copyright © RayS57, 2021.
Labels:
Eastwood Road,
Kebs Lane,
Todmorden
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