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Author Archives: sarthure
We’re building a wall and adding a foundation deposit
So, we like gardening, although we’re often neglectful and the plants that thrive do so because they’re hardy. This weekend’s project, in which I played a minor role, was to build a three-course curved wall around the fence that holds … Continue reading
Posted in Excavation, Folk traditions, Foundation deposits, Ireland, Irishness, Material culture, South Australia
Tagged building a wall, City to Bay 2018, Foundation deposits, Irishness, medals
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A short visit to Z Ward
It was a cold and wintry afternoon in Adelaide today. What better time to visit an old lunatic asylum? For nearly 90 years, Z Ward was home to the ‘criminally insane’ patients of South Australia’s health system. Opened in the … Continue reading
Posted in Folk traditions, South Australia
Tagged Glenside, Hexafoils, history, Parkside Lunatic Asylum, South Australian heritage, Witch marks, Z Ward
2 Comments
St Dymphna’s, Booborowie
At the weekend, it was my great privilege to drive to Booborowie for the decommissioning of St Dymphna’s Catholic Church. It’s not every day one gets to go to the deconsecration of a church, and in fact, this was my first. … Continue reading
Posted in Around the world, Folk traditions, Ireland, South Australia
Tagged Booborowie, St Dymphna, St Dympna
2 Comments
Christmas jigsaw puzzle of the ceramic variety
Christmas is an excellent time for jigsaw puzzles. One of my longtime favourite novelists, Margaret Drabble, asserts that ‘jigsaws are a joy at Christmas, the ideal gift, the perfect employment’. Further, she says, they ‘give you an illusion of order and progress when … Continue reading
Posted in Baker's Flat, Cataloguing, Material culture, Research, hmmm
Tagged Baker's Flat, cataloguing, ceramic, jigsaw puzzles, Rhine
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Tales from the trenches – Philomena the digging doll
Recently, I was reading The Archaeology of Time Travel. And I was reflecting on the idea that people who visit historic sites experience them in a more ‘real’ way when they’re presented as living history or re-enactments or historical role play. … Continue reading
Posted in Baker's Flat, Excavation, Field work, Irishness, Museums
Tagged archaeology of time travel, Cornelius Holtorf, excavating, fieldwork, Irishness, Philomena the digging doll, time travel
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