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Archaeological Evaluation

Date 10 January 2011 - 13 January 2011

Event ID 962097

Category Recording

Type Archaeological Evaluation

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/962097

NO 6260 4000 (centred on) An evaluation was undertaken 10–13 January 2011 on open ground to the W of the Red Lion Caravan Park. The area was considered sensitive as it is adjacent to the SW corner of the scheduled grounds of Hospitalfield House. These grounds probably formed part of the lands of the medieval hospital of St John the Baptist, which first appears on record in 1352. In 1861 and 1889 burials and building foundations, which were thought to be part of the chapel and burial ground, were found to E of the grounds (NO64SW 10), within the current caravan site. The W boundary of the hospital lands that may have been marked by Geordie’s Burn also passes roughly N–S through the centre of the proposed development. On the basis of this data it was considered that outlying buildings, enclosures and/or burials associated with the hospital may have been located in the area.

A total of 16 trenches of between 7–30m in length were machine excavated. A major deep sewer was located to the W of Geordie’s Burn and its placement had effectively destroyed any archaeological deposits, reducing the evaluation area by about half in this area. A sequence of topsoil and made ground was recorded overlying a former ground surface. The remains of 19th-century lodge and a driveway leading to Hospitalfield House were also located. An earlier cobbled surface/driveway was found to the W of the driveway noted above.

A sequence consisting of previously buried topsoil, overlying deep deposits of a thickly banded natural silty sand and clayey silt subsoil, which bottomed onto yellow orange sand, was also recorded. Early 19th-century cobble field drains and three 19th-century rubbish pits had been cut into the subsoil deposits. A large 19th-century soakaway with side drains was found in a trench on the W side of Geordie’s Burn. No remains relating to the Hospital of St John the Baptist were recorded.

Archive: RCAHMS (intended)

Funder: Loch Earn Caravan Parks Ltd

Alder Archaeology Ltd, 2011

People and Organisations

References