
Earthwork survey and excavation at Boys Hall Moat, Sevington, Ashford
Search page
Search within this page here, search the collection page or search the website.
The excavation of a later Bronze Age site at Coldharbour Road, Gravesend
Researches and Discoveries in Kent
Earthwork survey and excavation at Boys Hall Moat, Sevington, Ashford
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BO YS
HALL MOAT, SEVINGTON, ASHFORD*
PAUL BOOTH and PAUL EVERSON
INTRODUCTION
Boys Hall Moat, more correctly historically known simply as 'The
Moat', lies in Sevington parish near Ashford, close to its western
boundary with Willesborough. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument
(Kent SAM 146) centred at N.G.R. TR 0 3004075. The site was
surveyed and described by staff of the Royal Commission on the
Historical Monuments of England in February 1990, fulfilling a
request from Dr J.H. Williams, County Archaeological Officer.1
Subsequently in March-April 1993 the Oxford Archaeological Unit
conducted a two-week excavation on a strip of land approximately
200 m. long (from north-west to south-east) and 4 m. wide, adjacent
to the main Folkestone to London railway line but lying within the
confines of the Scheduled Ancient Monument on its north-east side.
The excavation, which was required as a condition of Scheduled
Monument Consent before development, was commissioned by
British Rail (Network South-East) in advance of construction work
on the railway line. The excavation was directed for the Oxford
Archaeological Unit by Miles Russell. The post-excavation work was
carried out by Paul Booth, who is responsible for parts of the text not
credited to other writers. The site archive and finds are currently
held at the Oxford Archaeological Unit pending a decision on their
ultimate place of deposition.
• Published with the aid of a grant from the Oxford Archaeological Unit.
1 The fieldwork for a survey at 1:1000 scale was carried out by Paul Everson and
Robert Wilson-North from the R.C.H.M.E. Keele office; a full report is deposited in the
National Monuments Record under the reference TR 04 SW 2. The summary below is
derived from the archive report by Paul Everson; Philip Sinton redrew the archive plan
for publication. This account is published by courtesy of the Commissioners.
411
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
LOCATION AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND (Fig. 1)
The site lies some 3 km. south-east of the centre of Ashford on gently
rising ground (between c. 40 and 45 m. above O.D.) on the north-east
side of the river East Stour, in an area surrounded by pasture and setaside
land at the time of the excavation. The underlying geology is
principally Atherfield Clay, at the base of the Lower Greensand
sequence, which outcrops locally in a narrow east-south-east to westnorth-
west band parallel to the line of the river, between the underlying
Wealden Clay cut by the river itself and the later Hythe Beds to the
north-east.
Until recently, knowledge of the archaeological background of the
immediate area was confined to a number of finds of individual flint
and stone implements. Sites now known include an extensive area of
crop-marks, including possible ring ditches, a rectilinear enclosure and
other linear elements of uncertain date, centred only 900 m. due east of
Boys Hall. This complex is associated with field-walking finds of
Neolithic and Bronze Age flint, Iron Age, Roman and medieval
and post-medieval pottery.2 The certain presence of a number of Iron
Age and Roman sites even closer to Boys Hall has also been
demonstrated, in evaluations carried out by the Kent Archaeological
Rescue Unit3 and the Canterbury Archaeological Trust.4 Two
Late Bronze Age-Early Iron Age sites have been found at Waterbrook
Farm, to the south of Boys Hall,5 and a further site assigned to the Late
Iron Age lies immediately north-west of Boys Hall. 6 South-east of Boys
Hall two Late Iron Age-Belgic sites were located in the area of
the Ashford freight terminal.7 The more northerly of these sites may
have extended north-westwards towards Boys Hall. s Belgic to Early
Roman activity occurred to the south-west of Boys Hall and to the
south at Waterbrook Farm.9 In addition, the Roman road which runs in
a west-north-westerly direction from Lympne passes some 1.5 km.
south of the site on the south side of the East Stour. Recent work in this
vicinity has produced more Roman features as well as evidence for
2 Oxford Arch. Unit, P rovisional specialist report on historic and cultural impacts for
Union Railways Limited (1994).
3 KAR., 104 (1991), 74-77; also 'An archaeological evaluation at the Boys Hall
Industrial Area development', unpublished report by J. Willson.
4 Arch. Cant., cvi (1988), 2; Arch. Cant., ex (1992), 375-6.
s Arch. Cant., ex (1992), 375-6.
6 Willson, (op. cit., n. 2), 3.
Arch. Cant., cvi (1988), 2.
Willson, op. cit., n. 2, 3.
9 Ibid., 3-4; Arch. Cant., ex (1992), 376.
412
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
LIA/Belgic
Belgic/early Roman
Fig. 1. The site in its local setting.
413
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
Mesolithic and Neolithic flint working.10 There are no early medieval
finds from the vicinity.
R.C.H.M.E. SURVEY OF 'THE MOAT' Paul Everson (Fig. 2)
The moated site is one of a number of such sites in the area, but,
according to the assessment of the Monuments Protection Programme
in advance of the fieldwork, was reckoned one of the best examples in
the county at large. The results of the survey, by confirming and
documenting more clearly its late medieval status and adding an early
post-medieval phase including the elaboration of associated garden
earthworks, can only have enhanced its archaeological importance. The
garden earthworks may be the first to be formally documented by
archaeological survey and published in Kent of this monument class,
which has been the subject of increasing study elsewhere in the
country.11 They well illustrate the changing expectations of the setting
of a gentry residence in the sixteenth century and the aspirations of
families that formed the backbone of county society of that period.
The distinct manor in Sevington of which 'The Moat' formed the
residential centre is traced by Hasted to Sir John of Sevington in the
time of Henry III.12 It passed by marriage in the thirteenth century to
the Barry family. The evidence for their splendid series of fourteenthand
fifteenth-century brasses formerly in St. Mary's Church at
Sevington certainly supports the belief that they were resident at The
Moat throughout the later Middle Ages. 13 Successive members of the
family held important public office in the county in the fourteenth,
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, including knights of the shire, sheriff,
commissioner of the peace and lieutenant of Dover Castle, and they
intermarried with other leading county families.14 The male line failed
on the death in 1588 of Richard Barry, M.P. for Winchelsea and Dover
10 Canterbury's Archaeology 1992-1993, 41-2.
11 cf. (Ed.) A.E. Brown, Garden Archaeology, C.B.A. Research Report no. 78 (1991),
especially the papers by C.C. Taylor and P. Everson.
12 E. Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, Canterbury
1790, vol. III, 280.
13 H.L. Smith, 'Some account of brasses formerly in the Church of Sevington', Arch.
Cant., iv (1861), 117-22, incl. pedigree p. 122. Also C.R. Councer, 'The medieval
painted glass of Mersham', Arch. Cant., xlviii (1936), 81-90.
14 Hasted, lac. cit. ; W.B. Ellis, Early Kentish Armory, Arch. Cant., xv (1883), 15; J.C:
Browne, Knights of the Shire for Kent from A.D. 1275 to A.D. 1831, Arch. Cant., xx1
(1895), 212; T. Philipott, Villare Cantianum or Kent Surveyed and Illustrated, 2nd ed.
King's Lynn 1776, 317.
414
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
RCHM
lNGLANO
limit of
1993
o• -=::1....01 -= =::--==s,,o.... -= ==--==--.;;100
metres
Fig. 2. Plan of the earthworks with the location of the 1993 trench (R.C.H.M.E. copyright).
415
PAUL BOOTH AND PAUL EVERSON
and Lieutenant of Dover Castle during preparations against a Spanish
invasion, and 'The Moat' passed by marriage to Vincent Boys of
Bekesboume.15 Nevertheless, the estate remained in occupation, until it
returned in the late 1620s by marriage to Thomas Boys of
Willesborough, who belonged to a different branch of the Boys
family. 16 Thomas 'pulled down this ancient seat and removed the
materials of it to rebuild his house at Willesborough', either in 1616
(according to Hasted), or by 1632, 17 thereby creating the house known
as Boys Hall that survives altered but with a seventeenth-century core
at N.G.R. TR 0281 4120.18 The earthworks of The Moat evidently
remained intact until the early 1840s and were labelled as 'site of the
ancient Mote House' .19 The north-eastern periphery of the site was
sliced through by the construction of the Ashford to Folkestone line of
the South Eastern Railway in 1842-43. The site was first referred to in
the archaeological literature in 1880.20
At the time of survey the earthworks were situated in a single field of
old pasture. The moat itself, 'a' on plan, lies at the south-east end of the
pasture field on almost level ground, with natural slopes rising away to
the north and north-west. It is broadly rectangular with overall
dimensions of 55-60 m. by 70 m. and is currently water-filled without
any break or causeway. Early large-scale map depictions also show it
water-filled but in two unequal sections that were separated by sharply
defined breaks, perhaps in origin causeways. These occurred
symmetrically in the north-west and south-east arms, not centrally but
off-set towards the north-east end. The continuous sheet of open water
that the moat now presents in contrast to its earlier depiction raises a
suspicion that it has been dredged. The moat is cut slightly into the
natural slope at its north-east end, and is tapered somewhat so that its
upslope side is some 5 m. longer than the south-west side. The water
sheet of the south-west arm is also markedly broader. The north-west
and south-east arms appear to taper north-east from 13 m. to 9 m. in
width, but this may rather originate in a single constriction in each arm
at the point of the possible causeways.
The moat encloses a rectangular island measuring some 40 m. x
15 P.W. Hasler, The History of Parliament. The House of Commons 1558-1603,
H.M.S.O. 1981; (Ed.) R. Hovenden, The Visitation of Kent 1619-1621, Harleian Society
42 (I 898), 39.
16 Hasted, Kent, vol. Ill, 280.
17 E.P. Boys Richardson, 'A seventeenth-century Kentish proverb', Arch. Cant., xxx
(1914), 81.
1s D.o.E. Listed Building List: Ashford District, TR 04SW 3/137.
19 P.R.O., IR 30/17/323.
20 W.M. Flinders P etrie, 'Notes on Kentish earthworks', Arch. Cant., xiii (1880), 8-16,
esp. 10.
416
EARTHWORK SURVEY AND EXCAVATION AT BOYS HALL MOAT
28 m. lip to lip. No masonry or significant change of levels is visible on
the island to give evidence of the house that stood there, but quantities
of floor- and roof-tile and mortar were observed during the survey and
a few sherds of late medieval pottery were collected. Hasted's
description of the moat as 'filled with water . . . inclosing strictly the
scite only of it