MHG63072 - Mailers cottage, abandoned mailers settlement - Tarradale

Summary

Survey and limited excavation of a late 18th and early 19th c. mailers settlement; House No 4.

Type and Period (2)

  • ENCLOSURE (18th Century to 19th Century - 1780 AD? to 1872 AD?)
  • FARM LABOURERS COTTAGE (18th Century to 19th Century - 1780 AD? to 1872 AD?)

Protected Status

  • None recorded

Full Description

The post-medieval abandoned mailers’ settlement (cottagers who rented one of two acres of arable land along with a share of the common moorland) near Tarradale Mains Farm is the most recent historic site investigated by the wider 'Tarradale Through Time' project examining landscape history of Tarradale from the earliest occupation 6000 years ago to the early 1800s. The settlement lies in an area of rough grazing and regenerated native woodland to the north of Tarradale Mains Farm but is not recorded on any maps from the 1st Edition Ordnance Survey 1873 and onwards or in any archaeological records. The area is no longer in agricultural use and it was decided to make a record of the remains as they continue to disappear beneath the vegetation and tree cover. The principal aim of this sub-project of Tarradale Through Time was to survey and record the traces of building in uncultivated ground to the north of Tarradale Mains Farm.

Dr Kenneth Murchison, the owner of the Tarradale estate, appears to have done just that at a group of mailers' holdings described on the 1788 Aitken map as "improvements … in 19 separate fields possessed by 11 mailers lying just north of the Mains". The cluster of mailers houses is clearly delineated on the 1788 map but little survives above the surface today. This group of houses was somewhat unusual as it was fairly regularily laid out, paralleling what was the old main road at the time. This strongly suggests that it was a settlement planned by Kenneth Murchison for his poorest tenants who were allowed to take over and improve an area of heavy undulating land underlain by boulder clay.

The sites of six houses were identified, some of them with outbuildings. A limited amount of excavation was undertaken, principally on House No. 2. The trench was extended outside the house across a cobbled yard and into a stone and earthen bank which probably enclosed a kailyard. The investigations suggested that the houses were not built of stone all the way up with subsequent courses constucted from boulders held together with clay or the walls were mainly contructed of turf. Although our excavations were relatively limited, we were surprised at the lack of artefactual remains. There were only a few fragments of pottery, several pieces of cast iron representing the remains of cooking pots for hanging over an open fire, as well as a number of pieces of glass. The settlement had clearly been abandoned at some stage and it may be that the tenants took their few possessions with them, but even so, the dearth of rubbish that would normally been left behind suggests an impoverished material culture.

Why the cluster of mailers' houses was abandoned is not obvious from the archaeology but it does appear as if it was abandoned all at the same time, suggesting that the mailers, or possibly the landowner, felt it was no longer economically viable to continue cultivating the tiny plots on poor quality land. <1> <2>

House 4. The building is depicted on the Aitken map and has the name Norman Glass across it. The
structure sits on a rise above the surroundingground and is c. 20m northeast southwest and c. 5.5m wide. The walls are visible on all sides except the southeast. Generally, the walls are made of small stones and earth with a possible outer wall face on the northwest side. Where the turf over the walls was disturbed during the vegetation clearance, there are small patches of clay bonding visible between the stones as in House 2. The southeast wall is very wasted and only discernible by the
slightest change in level. There appear to have been two main compartments in the upper longstructure, however the division is insubstantial and survives as a slightly raised area c. 1m wide and c. 0.20m high across the centre of the structure. At the northeast end there is a small compartment c. 1m below the main part of the structure. It is c. 5m northeast southwest, with slight walls with little visible stone and the appearance of earth banks with c. 1.5m spread and a central hollow. There does not appear to have been a south wall to this part of the structure. It is likely that this area was used for storage or for animals.

On the northwest side of House 4 there is a drop of c.2.5m to a hollow like that to the south of structure 2. It appears to be lined with cobbles which were felt just below surface. It is c.4m north south and the ground rises c.2m on the northwest side of the hollow. This structure sits in the slope to the north of the hollow 4.2. It is c. 5m northeast southwest by c. 3m and has the appearance of a quarried area but has a bank on the open southeast face and could have been used for storage or for animals. <1>

NGR adjusted based on site map (p.74.) <2>

Sources/Archives (2)

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred NH 5548 4950 (70m by 53m) (2 map features)
Map sheet NH54NE
Geographical Area ROSS AND CROMARTY
Civil Parish URRAY

Finds (0)

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Investigations/Events (2)

External Links (1)

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