Monument record 719/3/0 - Condate - Roman Building on Waterloo Road

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Summary

Walls and floor to a building discovered during construction work on Waterloo Road Northwich. The concrete floor, stone walls and a fragment of flue tile, with the site's situation towards the edge of Northwich's civilian settlement (vicus), suggest a Roman date. This is a significantly higher status building than most in the vicus (to date no other stone buildings from the period are known in the Northwich vicus) and may have included a hypocaust (Roman central heating). It is possible that this is either a Mansio (accomodation for travellers) or the house of a Roman offical. However, there is the possibility that this is part of a bath house.

Map

Type and Period (2)

Full Description

<1> Cheshire Historic Environment Record, Various, Historic Environment Record Site Visit Record, ECH5897 - Edwards, R 05/05/2014 (Unpublished Document). SCH5294.

Observations undertaken following the reports of a wall and floor being discovered during the excavation of foundations for a single storey house extension. The present house is a classic inter-war semi and historic maps would seem to indicate that the site was undeveloped prior to that date (see 3 and 4).

Two walls were observed, comprised of a grey mud stone with a strong mortar in sizable quantities. Although unusual, the mudstone probably derives from the local Triassic geology. The western wall of the structure was located in the southern foundation trench and was aligned approximately North-South. It was c.640mm wide and the wall survived within the trench to c.300m, though it was clear from the trench section that a further c.300mm had been removed during the excavation of the trench. The removed material included some sandstone. The wall was described by the excavators as being “very hard to shift” despite the relative friability of the mud stone. The wall seemed to have been disturbed at its southern end by a what is possibly a later feature and a construction trench with infill was observed on the western side of the wall. The second wall, probably the Northern wall of the structure, was located at the northern end of the eastern foundation trench was of a near identical construction and aligned West-North-West to East South East. It was c.600mm wide and surviving to one course above the floor level.

Between the walls and making up the majority of the base of the eastern foundation trench was a concrete floor surface at c. 1.6m BGL. A small inspection hole had been excavated through the concrete to reveal clean brown sandy clay (natural). The floor surface was approximately 50mm thick. The make-up of the concrete floor, with many CBM inclusions and aggregate (the latter was only visible in the small inspection hole), is strongly suggestive of opus signinum.

The material infilling/overlying the site, brown loose sandy clay, contained significant quantities of CBM, one fragment of which has been identified by specialists at Cheshire West’s Historic Environment Team as a parietales. The tile was probably produced at the Holt tile works in the 1st to 2nd centuries AD and would have formed part of a hypocaust, fulfilling a similar role to a box tile. The sections were too unstable to adequately investigate in the time available.

This is the first evidence for a stone building found within the vicus of the Roman fort at Northwich and the evidence suggests that this may be the house of the Procurator or a mansio. There is the further possibility that this may be part of a bath house

<2> Various, Written Communication to the HER, Heke, A 12/05/2014 (Written Communication). SCH3756.

If the pinkish concrete floor from the interior of the room is indeed Roman opus signinum (a type of waterproof concrete), it is also interesting to note that opus signinum was generally used in rooms which required waterproofing (eg baths buildings).

<3> Ordnance Survey, 1871-1882, Ordnance Survey County Series (Epoch 1) 25 inch to 1 mile - Cheshire, SJ6573 - 1910 (Maps and Plans). SCH2462.

<4> See map for surveyor, c.1837-51, Cheshire Tithe Maps and Awards, EDT 306/2 1850 (Maps and Plans). SCH3266.

Sources/Archives (4)

  • <1> Unpublished Document: Cheshire Historic Environment Record. Various. Historic Environment Record Site Visit Record. ECH5897 - Edwards, R 05/05/2014.
  • <2> Written Communication: Various. Written Communication to the HER. Heke, A 12/05/2014.
  • <3> Maps and Plans: Ordnance Survey. 1871-1882. Ordnance Survey County Series (Epoch 1) 25 inch to 1 mile - Cheshire. 25 inches to 1 mile. SJ6573 - 1910.
  • <4> Maps and Plans: See map for surveyor. c.1837-51. Cheshire Tithe Maps and Awards. EDT 306/2 1850.

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Related Events/Activities (1)

External Links (0)

Location

Grid reference Centred SJ 655 734 (10m by 15m) (2 map features)
Map sheet SJ67SE
Civil Parish NORTHWICH, VALE ROYAL, CHESHIRE WEST AND CHESTER
Historic Township/Parish/County CASTLE NORTHWICH, GREAT BUDWORTH, CHESHIRE

Protected Status/Designation

Record last edited

Apr 5 2024 1:17PM