#DebrisDiary time! Week two of sifting debris from beneath the attic floors has turned up some more interesting items for #FindsFriday. So what did we find between 1st and 4th August? @NatTrustArch
This week's debris were taken from the Wallpaper and Tank Attics, the finds found in each room are quite different. This tray shows a typical selection of small objects found in one sifting session from the Wallpaper Attic, which give us an impression of how that room was used.
We have found pins, lead shot, textiles, lovely coloured-glass beads, and some tiny pieces of newspaper, printed books and hand-written documents. We don’t currently have a date for the beads, but we still find ourselves trying to imagine the dresses they might have adorned.
This week we found a tiny fragment from ‘The Naval Chronicle, Volume 19, January-June 1808: Containing a general and biographical history of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom with a variety of original papers on nautical subjects’.
The article describes the ‘Articles of capitulation for the surrender of the Danish island of Santa Croix and its dependencies’. The history of the occupation of Santa Croix makes for interesting and sobering reading in connection with the history of slavery and colonialism.
This appears to be the tooth of a tortoiseshell comb. There are a few examples of similar objects in the collection, with dates ranging between 1700 and 1900.
You can just about still see a pattern on the fabric of these buttons, little hints of a chequered blue.
Finds from the Tank Attic have so far been rather more associated with the history of the construction and decoration of the building; there have been some really nice wallpaper finds from this room, such as this 19th century floral paper which has not been seen before at Oxburgh
As ever, thank you to curator Anna Forrest for these fascinating insights into the finds. Thank you also to @DCMSArts @HeritageFundUK @wolfsonfdn
for supporting our #RaisetheRoof project.
Swing by this time next week for the 3rd edition of our Debris Diary!
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It's #FindsFriday time with week six of our #DebrisDiary. A few interesting finds have emerged out of the dust this week, thanks to the eagle eyes of our volunteers and staff. @NatTrustArch 📷Nicholas Farka
First up we have this curious bell, found under the floorboards of what would have been servant accommodation. Maybe it was part of Oxburgh’s staff bell system. It is metal and the button still moves when pressed…although we doubt anyone is receiving anything now.
Next up we have this delicate little black ribbon and a collection of beads and buttons. Which add to the narrative that these attic spaces were being used as a sewing room. One or two have nice big windows so maybe the abundance of light made it the perfect needlework space.
It's that time again...#FindsFriday! It is week five of our #DebrisDiary as sifting continues, and volunteers have been focusing on bags of debris from the attics which run east from the gatehouse. These attics have an intriguing history. @NatTrustArch
Tree-ring dating of timbers in this area indicates that they were felled between 1551 and 1579. This period of Elizabeth I’s reign was particularly dangerous for Catholics like the Bedingfelds; not the most obvious time for them to have been investing in home improvements.
It has long been suggested that there was a secret chapel in the house, so perhaps this phase of work relates to the covert creation of a discreet place of worship on the top floor of the house. One which was quick dash away from the priest hole. 📷RedZebra
Good morning on this lovely #FindsFriday! It is week four of our #DebrisDiary as we continue to sift through the rubble taken from beneath the attic floors. @NatTrustArch
First up is a bit of an odd find; a chocolate wrapper of some sort. Last year we actually found a mostly complete (sans chocolate) Terry’s Gold Leaf box hidden beneath the floorboards. We wonder if this wrapper may have come from that!
Dating from the 1940s and produced under the rationing restrictions of WW2, perhaps these chocolates were ‘contraband’. Clearly whoever ate them didn’t want anyone else to know about them so hid the evidence. Photo by @mjc_associates
#DebrisDiary time! Week three of sifting debris from beneath the attic floors has revealed some items which differ from those previously found by volunteers working on this project. @NatTrustArch
A delicate glass button, which survived intact despite being both being dropped and hoovered up, was a lovely clean, clear contrast to the brown dust it was found in.
A volunteer also found a tiny piece of gilded, carved wood which could have dropped from a picture frame or piece of furniture.
The first week of sifting debris from under the floors has already yielded some fascinating finds! We will be posting a debris diary here every #FindsFriday to keep you up to date on what we unearth. So what did we find between 26th and 28th July? @NatTrustArch
The bags we sorted this week were all from the ‘Wallpaper Attic’. Last year we found a lot of evidence which pointed to this room being used as a place for sewing, mending and the storage of documents over a long period. The tiny items discovered add further to this narrative.
Many more pins were retrieved, a still-threaded needle, buttons, lumps of sealing wax, fragments of textile and a piece of paper through which had been pricked a design that would have been ‘pounced’ with chalk onto fabric for embroidery.