A guest post by Nikola Pelentrides and Sapphire Lynch, work experience students from Marriotts School, Stevenage
Hi, we’re Nikola & Sapphire, and as part of our time doing work experience at The North Herts Museum, we have been asked to share what we believe to be one of our favourite exhibits that spiked our interest during our time here. We hope you will enjoy it as much as we do!
Within the museum, there is a display of the original Perks & Llewellyn’s Apothecary (1783-1961) including the shelving, products in their original containers, an alligator jaw hanging from the ceiling, and even the real door and counter.
Originally owned by the Meers family, it was then later taken over by Mr John Perks and his assistant Charles Llewellyn. This apothecary was a staple of the Hitchin community in its prime, standing on 8 High Street. The apothecary helped many who couldn’t afford the price of doctors/surgeons by assisting in minor medical practices like bleeding by leeches, draining blisters and/or tooth extractions, like that of barber surgeons of the Medieval Era.
The collection features products from the time, such as our favourites:
- Arsenic
Arsenic was a common poison used in killing rats and was also, more sinisterly, for humans too. The Arsenic Act of 1851 restricted its sale due to its use in murder attempts. - Carbolic soaps and toothpowder
These products were made with carbolic acid which can be considered toxic in large quantities and cause severe burns, respiratory issues and vomiting blood. - And most notably lavender water
This chemist’s lavender products, formulated by Edward Perks (the son of John Perks). With fields all over Hitchin, the range of lavender products produced by Perks began to expand. By 1851, the lavender produced in the city was so popular that Queen Victoria went to Hitchin Station to pick up a bottle of essential oil. She was at the station for only a few minutes. Perks used lavender to produce shaving soap, toilet soap, toothpowder, bath powder, bath crystals as well as lavender water. In 1871 Samuel Perks – brother of William Perks – bought the business for £3,500. In 1876, Samuel owned 35-acre lavender fields across the country, which could produce 2,000 gallons of lavender water.
After the deaths of Perks and Llewellyn in 1890 and 1893, respectively, the business was taken over by Anne Sarah Llewellyn. This saw a succession of different owners of the business, none of whom were able to reach the heights of the 1870s.
In the 1960s, a combination of competition from French lavender, higher taxes forcing higher lavender prices, and the location of lavender fields sought for housing development, saw the death of lavender after 180 years.
A large field in the south of Pirton, known as The Bury, was once the site of a medieval castle. Its earthworks enclose the parish church as well as some private houses and the mound of Toot Hill. The mound stands some 6.7 m high and is about 100 m in diameter; a ditch about 2.5 m deep surrounds it. The first record of its name is from the Enclosure Award of 1818, but it is a commonly found name (sometimes spelt Tuthill, as at Therfield) in which toot has the meaning ‘look-out, peep, be prominent, stand out’.
A teacher carried out an excavation with boys from the local school in 1935 on top of Toot Hill. The medieval ceramics expert Paul Blinkhorn examined the pottery, which is now in North Hertfordshire Museum’s store, in the 2000s. He found that most of it dates from the twelfth to fourteenth centuries, with some earlier material. Only one sherd of the fifteenth-century Late Medieval Transitional Ware that is found across the rest of the village is present, showing that use of Toot Hill continued at a low level after 1400.
What was Toot Hill built for? It is a typical Norman castle earthwork known as a motte. The Bayeux Tapestry shows the Norman invaders hastily throwing one up at Hastings in October 1066, and such earth-and-timber castles were important to the military occupation of England and a means of suppressing any possible revolts. They remained popular until about 1200: the stone keeps that we tend to think of as typical castles were mostly a later development. The motte formed a base for a wooden tower, surrounded by a palisade at the top and a ditch (or moat) at the bottom. They were cheap but effective defences. Part of the moat had been infilled before Clutterbuck wrote his history in the 1810s. Hitchin Rural District Council began dumping rubbish there in 1957, until the curator of Hitchin Museum pointed out that it is protected as a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Most mottes had a bailey attached to them. Toot Hill has two, both obscured by later activity in the village. Letchworth Museum’s Field Archaeology team carried out a survey on the earthworks in January and February 1988, covering about 4½ hectares. Before the survey, it was believed that the deep hollow that runs across the middle of The Bury was the outer line of the main bailey. It soon emerged that this was one of the main streets of the village, Lads Orchard Lane, closed some time between 1822 and 1867.
Instead, coprolite digging has obscured the bailey ditch, and the bank inside it thoroughly levelled. Its line is still traceable, though. At the northeastern end of The Bury, Blacksmiths Pond, at the east end of Little Green, follows the line of the ditch, with the reduced bank behind it. It turns to the west and the bank is visible in gardens up to the edge of the churchyard. Another bank begins north of this one just before the churchyard, suggesting that the entrance to the bailey lay here. The edge of the ditch is then visible inside the churchyard as a change in level.
Traces of a second bailey survive east of the motte. A short stretch of ditch runs west from the south side of Toot Hill toward Bury End and it probably joined a pond that once stood in Great Green. Another hollow running northwest from the north end of the moat was still a watercourse in the early nineteenth century.
When was the castle built in Pirton? There are no documents referring to it, so archaeology must be our main source of information. George Evans, then curator of Hitchin Museum, carried out an excavation at The Bury in 1955. He was misled into believing that the former Lads Orchard Lane was part of the defences and confused by the paucity of medieval material and the discovery of a Roman yard surface instead. The pottery from the unrecorded excavation on Toot Hill suggests that it was not built as part of the Norman Conquest in 1066, but dates from the next century. The so-called Anarchy (the civil war between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda between 1138 and 1153) saw the construction of large numbers of castles, which would be an appropriate context for its construction.
Why was the castle built here? This is a more difficult question to answer. We might have expected a castle somewhere like Hitchin, the largest centre of population in this area, but (so far as we know), there never was one there. Pirton is not on a major highway and was not in the Middle Ages. Other castles locally are in predominantly rural locations: Meppershall, Cainhoe, Great Wymondley and Anstey. Perhaps they were designed to control the northern scarp of the Chilterns and routes through it.
Written by Keith Fitzpatrick-Matthews
and they continued to be made and used into the fifth century. Over this time, their styles changed – they were fashion items, after all – and we can use them to help date archaeological sites. Those seen here, all made from bone, were found in excavations at Gravely Road in Great Wymondley during house building in 1937 and date from about AD 150 to after 400.