More information : Centred at SS 68084060 are settlement earthworks lying in two permanent pasture fields.
The site lies some 1.3 kms to the west of Challacombe village and immediately east of the isolated Challacombe parish church (SS 64 SE 36). The only surviving settlement around the church consists of Barton Town farmhouse: a late 19thc building (local information) which replaced an earlier dwelling to its immediate south at SS 68004055. This still survives but as an outbuilding. To the west of the church is a group of cottages which appear to be contemporary with the farmhouse.
The settlement occupies the head of a narrow valley running north-south to join the valley of the river Bray. Close to the confluence, some 250m to the south, is the site of Challacombe mill (SS 64 SE 50).
In the fields to the north and east are the remains of strip cultivation or lynchetting (SS 64 SE 58).
The earthworks, in a good state of preservation, appear to represent former farmsteads and cottages. The two fields in which they lie are divided by a west-east sunken unmetalled track called "Town Lane". The field to th enorth contains the best preserved earthworks. The sites of three buildings or groups of buildings are clearly visible at (a), (b) and (c). Earthworks at (a) consist of a crew-yard terraced into the natural hill slope; the amorphous remains of platforms are visible on the northern or upslope side. To its north-east is a rectangular enclosure or yard defined by broad banks on its northern and western sides. At (b), in the north-eastern corner of the field, is an 'L'-shaped scarp, 0.5m high, defining a rectangular platform measuring approximately 10m by 9m. At (c) are the turf-covered footings of a stone structure measuring approximately 13m by 7m. A platform scarp, 0.6m high, on its southern side builds the platform out of the hillside.
Other earthworks within the field comprise paths and tracks associated variously with rights of way across the field and farm access. There are also a number of drains and several springs which have been capped, but which have presumably lead to disturbance of the earthwork in the past due to puddling, erosion and so on.
In the southern field, are further settlement earthworks comprising at least three rectangular platforms arranged west-east, and fronting a former way on their southern side. This way has been obscured by a field boundary running within it, and by a leat which obliquely cuts it at its western end. A former field boundary, marked only by a north-west to south-east ditch, runs across the middle of the field, and clips the most easterly of the three platforms. It is shown on the Tithe Map of 1839 (1) with a track running beside it on its eastern side. (1)
To the east of the former boundary is another slight platform (d) fronting the former way on its southern side. A spread north-south bank runs up the eastern side of the field and is perhaps associated with cultivation predating the existing eastern field boundary. At its northern end is a well defined platform marked by an "L"-shaped scarp defining an area measuring 10m by 9m. A plot is shown here on the Tithe Map and the Apportionment names it "Home Ground".
The earthwork described here appear to consist of at least two farmsteads with associated cottages and ways nucleated around the church and forming a small hamlet. The earthworks are bounded to the north and east by cultivation remains visible on air photographs (SS 64 SE58). The date of the earthworks and time of desertion has not been pursued.
Surveyed at 1:1000 scale, Sept. 1993.
Further traces of earthworks are visible in the fields to the immediate south and east of those described here, but were considered too fragmentary to be included in the survey. (2) |