Journal of the Merseyside Archaeological Society

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Journal of the Merseyside Archaeological Society Volume 9 1995 (for 1990-91) 5620. MER

EDITORIAL The delay in the production of the Journal has been due to unfor een circumstance and the Editor apologises for this. This volume contains a wide variety of papers, some of which have been waiting to go to pre for a con iderable length of time. One paper by, Chri tine Longworth, ha, unfortunately, had to be delayed until the next volume for technical reasons. We hope to have a colour plate in the next volume. Many thanks to Peter Davey, Susan Nicholson, Jenny Woodcock and Susie White for editorial assistance, to Jen Lewis for doing the index and to Ruth Hurst Vose for organising the cover illustration. We are grateful to Mr Burgoyne of Pilkington Glass Museum, Mr Roy Stevens of the Marc Fitch Fund, Edmund Southworth of Liverpool Museum for arranging the awarding of grants for publication of certain articles in this volume and to the School of Classics Archaeology and Oriental Studies, The University of Liverpool. for the use of computing and photocopying facilities. Contributions to the Journal are welcome in the form of long articles, shorter notes or reviews. Please note that figures and captions should be prepared by the author and submitted with the text. Papers will not be accepted unless they conform to the 'Notes for Contributors'. No extensive re-writing will be allowed once the text is accepted but help and advice on preparing texts will be given, if requested. Please obtain a copy of the 'Notes' from. the Editor, (c/o The Centre for Manx Studies, 6 Kingswood Grove, Douglas, Isle of Man, IM I 3LX) before writing your article. The Society organizes a variety of activities, including: a Newsletter; a lecture series (held in Liverpool Museum on the third Thursday of the month during term-time); specialist courses run in association with the Centre for Continuing Education, University of Liverpool; a series of summer fieldtrips and outings; opportunities to take part in local excavations and fieldwork; and social events. New members are always welcome and membership is open to all. Please write to the Membership Secretary, at the address below, for details and an application fo:-m. Current membership subscriptions are as follows: 8 individual, 5 concessional, 10 family, 2 junior (no journal), 12 institutional. Dr Philippa Tomlinson Honorary Journal Editor Cover illustration: Miniature of a glasshouse from a manuscript of 'Sir John Mandeville 's Travels'. Probably Bohemian: c.1420. British Library London. The main working furnace illustrated has two pots (crucibles) resting on sieges (platforms) on either long side, a fire trench apparently running from end to end, the subsidiary furnace being used for annealing (controlled cooling) of the glass. It follows the northern European tradition of main and subsidiary furnaces on the same level and sharing the same heat from the fire trench. It is probable that the Bickerstaffe glasshouse, Lancashire followed this Northern tradition. Copyright: Individual authors 1995 ISSN 014o-4032 Merseyside Archaeolog1cal Society. c/o Department of Antiquities. Liverpool Museum. William Brown Street, Liverpool. L3 SEN.

CONTENTS Articles: Excavations at the c1600 Bickerstaffe Glasshouse, Lancashire Ruth Hurst Vose....................... Some later prehistoric finds from Merseyside and the North West R W Cowell................................................. 25 Functional determination of projectile point usage in Mesolithic Greasby Shirley Ying Crompton....................................... 45 Radiocarbon dates from Warrington Road, Prescot Jim Innes and Philippa Tomlinson................... 61 A 13th century deed describing the boundaries of the township of Bold, St Helens Mandy North..................................... 65 The site of Overchurch, Upton, Wirral: a survey Dorothy O'Hanlon and K Pealin.................................... 71 Cross bearing grave slabs in Merseyside Charles Williams................................................... 79 Shorter notes: Bridge End, Birkenhead Jim O'Neil.............................................. 96 An inscription at Thurstaston Hill- A re-interpretation of the second and third lines Jim O'Neil........................................... 99 An inscription at Thurstaston Hill- A rejoinder to O'Neil's note John Evans................................................... 100 Reviews: 'Roman Warrington. Excavations at Wilderspool' Roger White........................ 101 'Another Country: A Season In Archaeology' Philippa Tomlinson....................... I 02 Index.................................................................... 103

ILLUSTRATIONS Hurst Vose Frontispiece: Bickerstaffe glass furnace site showing the depression containing the hearth stones... iv Figures: I: Location of the glasshouse in Bickerstaffe, West Lancashire............................. 2 2: Bickerstaffe glasshouse site based on Ordnance Survey 1955 edition....................... 3 3: Bickerstaffe excavations, general plan of trenches and structural remains.................... 5 4A: Bickerstaffe excavations, detailed plan of part A..................................... 6 4B: Bickerstaffe excavations. detailed plan of part B..................................... 7 5: Glass vessels, Nos 1-8...................................................... JO 6: Glass vessels, Nos 9-19..................................................... 11 7: Glass vessels and other objects, Nos 20-28........................................ 13 8: Crucible base............................................................. 17 9: Crucible rim............................................................. 19 Cowell I: Location map showing later prehistoric findspots from Merseyside and the North West......... 25 2: Neolithic stone axes from St Helens District, Nos 1-3................................ 27 3: Neolithic stone axes from Sefton District, Nos 4-5 and Wirral District, No. 6................ 28 4: Neolithic stone axes from Wirral District, Nos 7-10.................................. 30 5: Neolithic stone axes from Wirral District, No. 11 and Cheshire Nos 12-13.................. 31 6: Neolithic stone axes from Cumbria, Nos 14-15..................................... 33 7: Neolithic stone axes from Lancashire, Nos 16-18 and adzehead from Knowsley District No. 19.................................................... 34 8: Bronze Age metalwork from Wirral District, Nos 20-23............................... 37 9: Bronze Age stonework from Liverpool District, No. 25............................... 38 10: Bronze Age stonework fro:n Cheshire, No. 26, and Lancashire, No. 27.................... 39 11 : Bronze Age flint arrowheads from Liverpool District, Nos 28-31 and Wirral District, Nos 32-33.................................................... 40 12: Bronze Age flint dagger from Cheshire, No. 34..................................... 42 Crompton I: Hafted composite artefacts set with microliths and micro-blades......................... 46 2: Single arrow (A), composite arrow (B), composite knife (C)............................ 48 3: Types of fracture initiation................................................... 49 4: Varieties of fracture termination................................................ 50 5: Theoretical model on the formation of spin-off fracture............................... 50 6: Burin-like fracture......................................................... 51 7: All-groups stacked histogram for arrowhead and non-arrowhead activities as classified by the discriminant analysis......................................... 52 8a: Fracture with step terminations on arrowhead A I b................................... 56 8b: Unifacial spin-off fractures on arrowhead Al lb... 56 9: Five mi croliths from the Greasby collection....................................... 59 II

Innes and Tomlinson 1: Location map............................................................ 61 2: Pollen diagram, Warrington Road, Prescot........................................ 62 North I: The pre 1974 boundary of the parish of Bold with suggested locations of the places referred to in the 1254 deed superimposed................................... 66 2: Part of Bold and Rainhill showing a possible location of Bold's Acre and field name evidence for open field agriculture in this area................................. 68 O 'Hanlon and Pealin 1: Location of early Christian sites in Merseyside..................................... 71 2: Survey of Overchurch and adjacent fields......................................... 72 3: Overchurch church site, ground profile survey, 1984................................. 75 4: Carved stone and grave covers from Overchurch.................................... 76 5: The site of Overchurch from the Tithe Map, 8th December 1837......................... 73 6: Overchurch church site, ground detail survey, 1984.................................. 77 Williams 1: Cross slabs Nos 1-3 from Bebington St. Andrew and No. 5 from Birkenhead Priory.............................................. 82 2: Cross slabs Nos 6-9 from Birkenhead Priory....................................... 84 3: Cross slabs Nos 10-13 from Birkenhead Priory....................... 85 4: Cross slabs Nos 14 and 15 from Birkenhead Priory, No. 16 from Williamson Art Gallery and No. 17 from All Saints Childwall................. 86 5: Cross slabs No. 18 from St Thomas's Melling, No. 19 from Overchurch, Nos 20-21 from St Helen's Church Sefton........................................ 89 6: Cross slabs Nos 22-25 from the Dawson Brown Museum, West Kirby..................... 92 7: Cross slabs Nos 26 and 27 from the Dawson Brown Museum and Nos 28 and 29 from Church of the Holy Cross, Woodchurch........................... 93 O 'Neil 1: Illustration of the bridge as it was found in 1845 reproduced from Massie (1850)............................................................ 96 2: Illustration reproduced from Massie (1850) showing a coin of Marcus Aurelius, fragment of beam from the bridge showing a mortice joint and a section of three beams from the bridge......................................... 97 111

102 Reviews tools once again empha i e the industrial nature of the site, and the unu ual find of a good quality Corinthian capital described by Tom Blagg hints at other, higher tatus buildings in the vicinity. All in all, this report is certainly a worthy effort which has perhaps unduly suffered from an over-long editorial gestation of 13 years during which time nothing appears to have been altered. One cannot help feeling that the information would have been of greater value published swiftly in a local journal or in Britannia rather than the relatively lavish treatment accorded it here. What is needed now is a report which can bring together the evidence from all the previous excavations and try to fathom the site's meaning. An excellent opportunity is provided by Gifford and Partner's excavations on the Brewery site in the first half of 1993 which, when combined with all previous data, will perhaps finally establish Wilderspool on the north-western Romano-British map with the prominence it deserves. It is sincerely to be hoped that we might expect such a report to appear before the next millennium. Roger H. White, University of Liverpool References Hingley R. 1989 Rural Settlement in Roman Britain London: Seaby. Another Country: A Season In Archaeology by David Gerard. Published by Elvet Press, 9 Crofters Green, Wilmslow, Cheshire SK9 6AY, (1994) ISBN 0 9510776 4 3. Price 5.50. 133 pages, AS format, paperback. This book provides a witty and crisp account of 'the story of three years spent reading for a degree in archaeology'. The author took early retirement from a career teaching librarianship and turned what had been a 'background fancy for years' into a full-time degree course at Durham University. He describes the process of selection, application, interviews, rejections and acceptances leading him to a place at Durham. There are lively descriptions of his experiences over the three years and his view of the 'youngsters' on the course. It is fascinating to read his descriptions of members of the academic staff, including transcripts of interviews he recorded with two of them. The index provides a useful means of browsing through the book to find snippets on some of these characters. There are some interesting discussions about theoretical archaeology as well as descriptions of the various excavations he worked on. Here is admirable proof that an undergraduate degree in archaeology can be achieved purely for its own sake and not simply as qualifications for a future career. It is never too late to become active in archaeology! Philippa Tomlinson May T. 1904 Warrington's Roman Remains INDEX Arrowe 71 Ashton-in-Makerfield 26 axes 26, 29, 35, 36, 41 axe hammers 35 Barnston 26, 29 Bickerstaffe 1-3, 5-9, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, 22-24 Bidston 29 Billinge 26, 29 Birkenhead 26, 29, 72, 78, 81, 82, 84-87, 94, 95-98 Bold 65-70 boundaries 65, 67, 69, 74 field 65, 67-69 boundary markers 65-67, 69 bridges 96 Birkenhead 96 Bronze Age 97 Roman 97 wooden 96-97 Bronze Age 25, 35-43, 97 arrowheads 25, 35 axe hammers 35 axes 25-31, 33, 34 barrows 35, 43 Beaker 35 burial sites 35 Calderstones 35 Castleshaw 43 hoards 35, 36 metalwork 25, 35-37 pottery 43 stonework 36, 38, 39 Bryn Mawr quarry 47 Burtonhead 69, 70 Burtonwood 65, 69, 70 Calderstones 35 cereals 61, 63, 64 chapels chantry 90 charcoal 1, 4, 20, 22 chert 45, 47-49, 56, 58, 60 Cheshire 2, 16, 20, 23, 25, 26. 31. 32, 35, 36, 39, 41-44, 69, 78, 87. 95, 98 Chester Lane, Bold 65, 67

Index 103 Chester 81 Childwall 35. 41. 86, 88 churches I. 71-74, 76-81, 87-91. 93-95 Bebington, St Andrew 81 Birkenhead, St Mary 78, 81 Childwall, All Saints 86, 88 circular enclosure 71, 72 Landican 94 Melling, St Thomas 88 Overchurch 88-90 Sefton, St Helen iii, 89, 90 West Kirby, St. Bridget 71, 87, 90 Woodchurch, Church of the Holy Cross 71 93, 94 clay tobacco pipes 21 clearance forest clearance 63 coal 2, 8. 16, 18. 21, 26 Cronton 67 Crosby 29 crosses 67, 69, 79, 90, 91 Bold 67 Hilbre 87, 91 West Kirby 87, 90 Cumbria 25, 32, 33, 43 deforestation 64 ditches boundary 65, 67 enclosure 71 Ditton 26 elm decline 63, 64 Eltonhead 2 environmental evidence 61, 64 excavation 1, 2, 4-7, 21-25, 29, 35, 41, 43, 57, 61, 74, 96 Bickerstaffe 1, 2, 4-7, 21 Birkenhead 96 environmental sampling 61 Overchurch 74 prehistoric 25, 29, 35, 41, 43 field systems open field 67 field walking 25 fields 65, 67, 69 Flandrian 63, 64 flint 2, 25, 26, 29, 35, 40-43, 45, 47, 49, 55, 56, 58, 60 flintwork 25, 36, 41 arrowheads 26, 35, 41, 46-49, 51, 52, 55, 56, 57, 58 assemblages 35, 45, 64 blades 46, 54, 55 cores 47 flakes 41, 45 fractures 45, 47-52, 55-58, 60 knapping experiment 47, 56 knife 46-48, 54-56 Mesolithic 25. 26. 43. 45. 47. 60, 64 microlith 45, 51, 58 Neolithic 25-27. 29-31, 33-35, 43. 61. 64 plant harvesting experiment 48 font projectile points 45, 56, 60 quarries 47 craper 41 hooting experiment 47, 48, 51, 53, 54 Wet Kirby 90 geology boulder clay 26, 35, 61 peat 20, 29, 41, 61, 63, 64 soils 2, 61 Shirdley Hill Sand 2, 20 Glass house Bickerstaffe 1-3, 5-9, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21-24 Carr Mill, St Helens 2 Eltonhead Hall, Sutton 2 excavation 1, 2, 4-7. 21-25 field name 1-3 furnace structure 8 Haughton Green, Manchester 2, 8, 12, 14, 16, 24 Liverpool 2 Ormskirk 2 proton magnetometer survey 4, 8, 22 Sutton 2 Thatto Heath, St Helens 2 Warrington 2 Glass makers de Houx family 2, 8 Huguenot I, 2 Glass manufacture analysis of raw materials 8, 9, 16, 20, 21, 45, 47, 49, 51, 52, 54-57' 60, 64 crucible composition I, 3, 4, 8, 16-19, 21 crucibles 1, 2, 4, 16, 18, 21 glass composition 2, 8, 16, 20, 23 raw materials 2, 8, 16, 18, 20, 21, 23, 47 Simonswood Forest 2 vessel glass 1, 2, 8, 12, 14, 23 waste 3, 4, 8, 9, 12, 14, 24, 36, JOI wood-fired I, 4, 8, 18 Glass products 2, 14 alembics 12 amber/black glass 12, 14, 15 flat glass I, 2, 8, 14, 15 green vessel glass 8 tubes/spouts 12, 15 Grave slabs 79, 81, 94 Bebington 29, 81, 82, 95 Birkenhead 81, 82, 84-87 Childwall 35, 41, 86, 88 Overchurch 71-74, 76-78, 88, 89 Sefton 89. 90. 95 symbols 79. 80. 99, 100 West Kirby 78. 87. 90. 92, 95 Woodchurch 72. 93. 94 Greasby 45, 47-49. 57-60, 71

104 Index Greater Manchester 8. 12, 14 Gronant quarry 47 Hardsty, Bold 65. 69 Heswall 36, 74 hunting 26, 35, 45, 48, 57, 58, 60 Huyton 35 Knowsley district 34, 35 in criptions Christian 71, 72, 74, 76, 78, 79, 80, 90 runic 71-72, 90 Thurstaston 99, 100 Lancashire I, 2, 4, 20, 21, 23, 26, 32, 34, 41, 43, 44, 64, 65, 67, 69, 70, 78, 88, 95, 98 land use 67 Little Crosby 29 Liverpool 2, 35, 36, 40, 41, 87 Liverpool district 38, 40, 41 Makerfield 26 Manchester 2, 8. 12, 14, 24, 43, 69 manor Bold 65 Sutton 67 Mesolithic 25, 43, 45, 47 arrowheads 45, 47-49, 51, 52, 55-57, 60 Greasby 45-60 microliths 45-48, 59 metalwork 25, 35-37 monastic houses Abbey of St Werburgh, Chester 81 Birkenhead Priory 81, 82, 84-87, 95, 97 moss lands Bidston Moss 29 Holland Moss 29 Morkel' s Moss 69 Red Moss 64 Neolithic 25-27, 29-31, 33-35, 43, 61, 64 adzehead 35 axes 25-28, 30, 31, 33 Calderstones 35, 43 pollen 61, 64 Sankey valley 26 Sefton district 29 stone axes 25-28, 30, 31, 33, 34 woodland clearance 26 Noctorum 29 Ormskirk 1-3 Overchurch 71-74, 76-78, 88 enclosure 71 grave memorial survey 76 magnetometer survey 4, 8, 22, 76, 78 runes 72 Oxton 36 pannage 65 Parr 65, 69. 70 pasture 65 Pen yr Henblas quarry 47 Pennines 25, 26, 64, 88 place names 69, 78 pollen cereal type 63 diagrams 61 Neolithic 61, 64 weed 63 pottery Bickerstaffe 22 post-medieval 22 Bronze Age 35 Poulton-cum-Spital 36 pre-elm decline 63 Prescot 2, I, 61-65, 67 Quarries, flint and chert 47 radiocarbon dating 61, 63, 64 ridge and furrow 74, 76 roads 67, 79 Runcorn 32 Sankey 26, 65, 67, 70 Sankey valley 26 Sefton district 28, 29 Simonswood 2 St Helens 1-3, 22, 26, 27, 65, 69, 70 standing stone 61, 76, 90 Sutton 2, 65, 67, 69, 70 Thurstaston 41 Thurstaston Hill inscnptjon 99, 100 Trelogan quarry 47 Upton 71, 72, 74, 76, 78 Warrington 2 Wavertree 35, 41 West Derby 36 West Kirby 78, 87, 90, 92, 95 Whittle Brook 65 Widnes 67 Winwick 35, 43, 44 Wirral district 28-31, 36, 37, 40, 41 Woodchurch 72, 93, 94 wooden structures bridge 96-98

CONTE T Excavation at the c1600 Bicker taffe Glasshou e, Articles: Lanca hire Ruth Hurst Vose.......... Some later prehistoric finds from Merseyside and the North West R W Cowell................................................. 25 Functional determination of projectile point usage in Mesolithic Greasby Shirley Yin g Crompton....................................... 45 Radiocarbon dates from Warrington Road, Prescot Jim Inn es and Philippa Tomlin son...... 61 A 13th century deed describing the boundaries of the township of Bold, St Helens Mandy North..................................... 65 The site of Overchurch, Upton, Wirral: a survey Dorothy O 'Hanlon and K Pea/in.................................... 71 Cross bearing grave slabs in Merseyside Charles Williams................................................... 79 Shorter notes: Bridge End, Birkenhead Jim O 'Neil.............................................. 96 An inscription at Thurstaston Hill- A re-interpretation of the second and third lines Jim O 'Neil.......................... 99 An inscription at Thurstaston Hill- A rejoinder to O'Neil's note John Evans................................................... 100 ISSN 0140-4032