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The following page contains useful information about working on the Thames Foreshore, especially on The COLAS Early Dockland Project for Wapping, Shadwell and Radcliff. NEW VOLUNTEERS Please read these notes carefully. If, having done so, you think you would like to become actively involved in the current season, please look on the Website for the Latest Bulletin for details of current activities. You are welcome to come along one day to see what it is like. Please Note: If you wish to be put on our mailing list to be posted future 'Foreshore Bulletins', you must become a COLAS member - See Membership.
COLAS has been involved with the Thames Archaeological Survey since its beginning. Because the foreshore in the City of London is relatively well known, COLAS’s main area of work has been on the north bank of the Thames in the Wapping, Shadwell and Ratcliff districts of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. These areas were among the first outside the City to specialise in shipping and allied trades. Our preliminary survey of the Thames foreshore noted a very large number of features that relate to the uses made of the foreshore in the past. These include barge-beds, remains of docks, anchorages, watermen’s stairs and other access points, ships’ timbers and fittings, land drains, water intakes, and deposits of waste material from local trades, such as ship repair, coal handling, pottery making, and sugar refining. THE COLAS EARLY DOCKLANDS PROJECT FOR WAPPING, SHADWELL AND RATCLIFF Following on from our earlier discoveries COLAS is undertaking a thorough recording and research exercise in Wapping, Shadwell and Wapping that is known as The COLAS Early Docklands Project. COLAS is making a complete and systematic recording of historic features on the Thames foreshore in our study area. This will provide comprehensive information for the Greater London Sites and Monuments Record, which will have to be taken into account in future planning and development decisions. It will also provide important ‘benchmark’information by which the future state of preservation of these features may be monitored. In addition to our archaeological fieldwork and of equal importance will be an investigation of the relationship between man-made features and artifacts to early topography, local history and past transport, industrial or recreational practices. Background work on the study area had been begun by members of our ‘Research Group’. It is planned that the archaeological findings and historical research will be published both in the archaeological press and in forms accessible to the local authority and community. WORK ON THE THAMES FORESHORE - WHATS INVOLVED. The River Thames in the Greater London area is tidal. Our area for archaeology is the foreshore exposed at low tide. The river’s current and the tide is generally eroding the foreshore near the low tide line but depositing material on the upper part of the ‘beach’. The aim of our work is to record features of historic interest on the foreshore, which are often being eroded by the river. Most of our fieldwork will therefore consist mainly of cleaning features and making measurements, photographs and drawings. Fieldwork takes place at weekends, between April and October, when there are suitable low tides and key personnel are available. Because of the tides we have only a 2-3 hour ‘window of opportunity’ for work each day, with suitable low tides occurring about twice a month. Fieldwork on the Thames foreshore is not excessively physical, but it can be mucky. COLAS will provide buckets, shovels, brushes and recording equipment. Useful work can be done by volunteers of all ages and the techniques used can be easily learnt. It is general best to take only a minimum of belongings onto the foreshore and to carry personal gear in a back-pack rather than in the hand.
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