Page 36 - br-sep-2020
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September 2020                                                                      September 2020


       BERE REGIS HISTORY SOCIETY

       The  Archaeology  Section  has  now  found  over  ten
       thousand  things  during  2020  and  one  of  the  most
       extraordinary  things  about  this  concerted  effort  during
       lock-down  is  that  several  unusual  things  are  being
       revealed.
       As well as the continued finds of Romano-British materials
       and the following Anglo-Saxon period pottery, we have found an unusual number
       of post-mediaeval, or mid-16th to early 18th century building materials, bricks and
       tiles,  which  have  definite  evidence  of  soot  or  severe  burning  effects  on  them.
       These have been found in fields not far from the centre of the village.
                                                  We   know    that   there   is
                                                  documentary evidence of severe
                                                  house  fires  at  Bere  from  1633
                                                  onwards  and  probably  many
                                                  more house fires not recorded in
                                                  the press of the times. These new
                                                  finds seem to suggest that after a
                                                  house  fire  in  the  village,  the
                                                  debris  was  carted  away  by  the
                                                  only  people  with  suitable  horse
                                                  and  wagons,  farmers,  and  the
                                                  material was dumped on nearby
                                                  land. They were probably paid a
       fee to carry the material away and simply dumped it in the fields and now it is
       being found.
       It is possible that new evidence will slightly alter this deduction, possibly in years to
       come, but the high proportion of bricks and tiles found this year points at only one
       possibility of how the village coped with these tragedies. The biggest "fire of Bere"
       began on 4th June 1788 which destroyed fifty houses and barns in the centre of
       the village. There was only one death, a blind man, who was buried the next day,
       5th June 1788 and recorded in the parish records.
                                                     John Pitfield, Project Secretary












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