Up the Street – Memories of Dorchester trades and businesses

Dorchester was, almost within living memory, largely self-sufficient in food and services. Many of the trades reflected the needs of the main occupation – agriculture – and tourism. Very few of these are now in business but the Historical Society is researching the archives for more information about those long-, and recently-, gone. We have so far identified over thirty!

There will be an illustrated talk on the subject on 26th September and, in the meantime, we would love to hear your memories of those shops, pubs and businesses. We know of some that you may not have heard of – for example, did you know that Dorchester once had its own fish and chip shop?

Please contact metcalfe.margot@btinternet.com or denise.line@btinternet.com if you have memories to share. Thank you.

 

Dorchester Historical Society November Meeting

Wednesday 22nd November 2017, 7.30pm, Abbey Guest House (note change of venue) Members free, Visitors welcome (£3)

Ben Ford on: Westgate Oxford: Initial results from Oxfords largest excavation – a prehistoric floodplain, a medieval Friary, Civil War defences and Victorian terraces’ 
 
In 2016 Westgate Oxford won ‘Archaeological Project of the Year’. This richly illustrated talk will bring you up to date with the ongoing work from the  largest archaeological endeavour to have been undertake in the City of Oxford. Ben Ford will discuss the changing landscape on the southern edge of the Oxford promontory, where the city meets the Thames Floodplain and how it was used and changed by human and natural action over the last 3000 years. The talk will touch on possible prehistoric and Late-Saxon activity, deal in depth with the extensive structural and artefactual remains of the Greyfriars complex (1244 – 1538), before revealing evidence from the Civil War, and the more recent Victorian terraces of St Ebbes. 
 
Ben Ford – Director of the Westgate Oxford Excavations is a Senior Project Manager at Oxford Archaeology, who, for the last 20 years, has specialised in the excavation of urban environments, a passion that was first ignited whilst scampering around on the Roman bath-house excavations at an early age in his home town of Dorchester in Dorset. Since then Ben, who graduated from Reading University in 1990, has led many of the largest excavations to have taken place in some of Southern England’s most significant towns and cities including Bristol, Reading, Winchester and Oxford, as well as undertaking large scale investigations at Hampton Court Palace, the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich, and Montpellier in southern France. 

Dorchester Historical Society October Meeting

Wednesday 25th October 2017, 7.30pm, Dorchester Village Hall (back room). Members free, Visitors welcome (£3)

Chris Wardley on: ‘The Great Exhibition of 1851: how and why a quarter of the population visited London in the summer of 1851’

Chris is a retired Chartered Civil Engineer. After graduating from the University of Manchester his career developed into senior roles with large United Kingdom construction contractors. Latterly he ran his own business representing clients of the construction industry.

 After retirement his early interest in industrial archaeology, inspired by living in the northwest and both of his grandfathers having been engineers in the cotton industry in Bolton, developed into an interest in the industrial revolution generally. This led to his developing some illustrated talks on aspects of this of which this is one.

The Digging Dorchester project on the Allotments

We have also been made aware of the new dates for the Dorchester allotments archeology activities.  Please do head on down and take part.

  • Undergraduate field school: Sunday 25th June – Friday 7th July
  • Public field schools: Sunday 9th – Friday 14th July, and Sunday 16th – Friday 21st July.

See www.discoveringdorchester.blogspot.co.uk for information on the project so far. Residents of the village are particularly invited to come and take an active part in the exploration of its history.

For more information please email edward.peveler@arch.ox.ac.uk

Ed is talking about the dig at the May Dorchester Historical Society meeting.
Wednesday 24th May, Village Hall, 7.30, members free, guests £3

Speakers for historical society meetings announced for April and May 2017

We have just received the Historical Societies list of speakers for April and May, and certainly wanted to share with you all.  Whether you are interested in the local excavations or the differences between Nouveau and deco, there should be something of interest.

Schedule of speakers:

  • May 24th 2017: Ed Peveler, ‘Discovering Dorchester: an update on recent progress during the excavation’
  • April 26th 2017: Robert Kidner, ‘Art Nouveau and Art Deco: how do they differ?’

Members free, visitors £3

Village Hall 7.30pm

See full event page for up to date details: https://www.dorchester-on-thames.co.uk/posts/event/historical-society/